Tag Archives: hook

Nationally known comedian-led PSA sends Sandy Hook Promise message to take school shooting threats seriously – Hartford Courant

  1. Nationally known comedian-led PSA sends Sandy Hook Promise message to take school shooting threats seriously Hartford Courant
  2. Big-Name Comics Tell Disturbing ‘Jokes’ About School Shootings in Sandy Hook Promise PSA Cracked.com
  3. Here’s Why Star Comedians Are Making Grim “Jokes” About School Shootings – Mother Jones Mother Jones
  4. Punchline of Sandy Hook group’s Billy Eichner PSA is to stop taking school shooting threats as jokes Danbury News Times
  5. Comedians say threats are not jokes in new Sandy Hook Promise gun violence PSA ABC News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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PacifiCorp could be on the hook for billions after jury verdict in devastating Oregon wildfires – The Associated Press

  1. PacifiCorp could be on the hook for billions after jury verdict in devastating Oregon wildfires The Associated Press
  2. Jury finds PacifiCorp owes more than $73 million for causing 2020 Oregon wildfires Oregon Public Broadcasting
  3. Oregon jury finds PacifiCorp utility responsible for causing devastating 2020 wildfires in civil law KOIN 6
  4. PacifiCorp verdict finds utility negligent in four Labor Day wildfires; jury awards victims nearly $72 million OregonLive
  5. Berkshire Unit’s Payout for Oregon Fires Could Grow to Billions Yahoo Finance
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Jude Law as Captain Hook in ‘Peter Pan & Wendy’ triggers backlash – New York Post

  1. Jude Law as Captain Hook in ‘Peter Pan & Wendy’ triggers backlash New York Post
  2. ‘Peter Pan & Wendy’ trailer sparks Disney nostalgia with live-action update of animated classic CNN
  3. ‘Peter Pan & Wendy’ star says production hired team to fix franchise’s ‘problematic’ Native American depiction Fox News
  4. ‘Peter Pan and Wendy’ Trailer Stars Jude Law, Jim Gaffigan Vulture
  5. Disney Enlisted ‘Cultural Consultant’ Team For ‘Peter Pan & Wendy’ Depictions Of Native Americans The Daily Wire
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Jude Law Is Captain Hook in Disney’s ‘Peter Pan & Wendy’ Trailer – CNET

  1. Jude Law Is Captain Hook in Disney’s ‘Peter Pan & Wendy’ Trailer CNET
  2. Peter Pan & Wendy Trailer: See Jude Law’s Captain Hook, Yara Shahidi’s Tinker Bell and More PEOPLE
  3. ‘Peter Pan & Wendy’ trailer sparks Disney nostalgia with live-action update of animated classic CNN
  4. ‘Peter Pan & Wendy’ star says production hired team to fix franchise’s ‘problematic’ Native American depiction Fox News
  5. Peter Pan & Wendy will show you what pixie dust looks like — for real Polygon
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Buccaneers vs. Panthers score: Tom Brady, Mike Evans hook up for three TDs as Tampa Bay clinches NFC South

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers clinched the NFC South for the second-straight year with their 30-24 win over the Carolina Panthers in Week 17. The Buccaneers haven’t looked like legitimate Super Bowl contenders for most of the season, but that changed on Sunday, as Tom Brady and his team exploded for 478 yards of total offense.

Brady completed 34 of 45 passes for 432 yards and three touchdowns — all three of which went to Mike Evans. The star wideout caught 10 passes for 207 yards and the three scores, while Chris Godwin also impressed with 120 receiving yards on nine catches. 

The Panthers jumped out to a 14-0 lead in the second quarter, but managed just 10 points in the second half while Tampa Bay dropped 20 points in the fourth quarter alone. Sam Darnold completed 22 of 36 passes for 316 yards, three touchdowns and one interception, while D.J. Moore caught six passes for 117 yards and a score.

Check back soon, as this article will be turned into a takeaways piece which dives into what went down in Tampa on Sunday.

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Sandy Hook parents continue to push for changes in the decade since the school shooting

Editor’s Note: Watch CNN’s Special Report “Sandy Hook: Forever Remembered” with Alisyn Camerota tonight at 10 p.m.



CNN
 — 

They were living ordinary and full lives in the small New England town of Newtown, Connecticut, unprepared for the devastation that would unfold and occupy the rest of their days.

Mark Barden was a professional musician. Nicole Hockley had recently arrived in Newtown after a corporate marketing career in the United Kingdom.

On the morning of December 14, 2012, after killing his mother, an isolated and violence-obsessed 20-year-old with unfettered access to firearms shot his way into Sandy Hook Elementary School. Over the course of 10 minutes, he shot and killed 20 first-graders and six adults before ending his own life.

The lives of Daniel Barden, 7, and Dylan Hockley, 6, were among those cut painfully short that day. But in the long decade since, their spirit and memory have lived on in their parents’ devoted advocacy for safer communities.

A month after the shooting, Mark Barden, Nicole Hockley and other parents who lost children that day launched Sandy Hook Promise, an organization dedicated to protecting children from gun violence.

“I didn’t know what the change would be, but we would be part of it,” Hockley recently told CNN’s Alisyn Camerota for the CNN Special Report “Sandy Hook: Forever Remembered” airing on the 10-year anniversary of the tragedy.

The Sandy Hook Promise group first set its sights on gun reform. Along with other families, they sought bans on AR-15 assault-style weapons and high-capacity magazines, both of which were legally purchased by the shooter’s mother and used in the Sandy Hook attack.

“There were a lot of guns that our shooter could have chosen,” Hockley said in February 2016. “He chose the AR-15 because he was aware of how many shots it could get out … (and) that it would serve his objective of killing as many people as possible in the shortest time possible.”

Barden, Hockley and other Sandy Hook families found a sympathetic partner in John McKinney, their state senator and the highest-ranking Republican in Connecticut politics at the time.

“My immediate thoughts in terms of my role in the aftermath was, ‘I need to do, and I will do, anything humanly possible to help these families,’” McKinney said. “[I] met with all of the other Republicans in our caucus, and I was very honest with them. I said, ‘I’m going to go negotiate and work with the Democrats.’”

After months of meetings with victims’ families, town halls in the Newtown community and consultations with experts, McKinney and his colleagues unveiled their proposed legislation on April 1, 2013.

When then-Governor Dannel Malloy signed the bipartisan bill three days later, Connecticut had enacted some of the most sweeping gun legislation in the country. The new law expanded the state’s assault weapons ban and banned the sale of high-capacity ammunition; required a state-issued permit to purchase any rifle, shotgun or ammunition; and created the country’s first registry of individuals convicted of an offense with a deadly weapon.

Since 2013, Connecticut is the most populous state without a mass shooting of four or more fatalities, according to a CNN analysis of the Gun Violence Archive.

The Sandy Hook Promise parents set their sights on Washington, DC, to see if their home state’s success could be replicated on the federal level.

“We approached the Connecticut legislature with love and logic, and they listened,” Hockley said in a 2013 speech introducing President Barack Obama. “I believe that with that same approach of love and logic, Congress will be persuaded to act.”

In April 2013, National Rifle Association-endorsed senators Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., and Pat Toomey, R-Penn., proposed a joint recommendation that would have required criminal background checks on people purchasing firearms at gun shows and online. The policy, known as universal background checks, was supported by more than 80% of Americans, according to a Pew Research poll taken at that time, giving the newly minted leaders of the gun reform movement reason for hope.

“I just thought, ‘OK,this is pretty simple. This is basic. This is what everybody wants. Let’s just get that done,’” Mark Barden said.

Most Republican senators and five Democrats saw things differently, however, and the bill fell six votes short of the threshold needed to break a filibuster.

The bill’s failure struck the families as a disappointment and a betrayal: Barden and Hockley both say multiple senators claimed to stand with them, then voted against the bill. But the two advocates found lessons in defeat and vowed that day to double down on gun violence prevention.

“We’ve always known this will be a long road, and we don’t have the luxury of turning back,” Barden said in the White House Rose Garden. “We will keep moving forward and build public support for common sense solutions in the areas of mental health, school safety, and gun safety.”

Barden and Hockley returned to Connecticut with a deeper passion for their work.

“If that were to have passed, I think there would have been maybe a sentiment of like, ‘OK, we’re done. We’ve got that fixed,’” Barden said. Recalling the words of fellow gun control advocate Sarah Brady, “‘Sometimes you need a good defeat.’ It kind of mobilizes people, catalyzes people. They know what’s going on. It did for me.”

After studying other mass shootings and gun violence, they developed expansive programming to avert tragedies before they begin. That work has produced Know the Signs, a range of programs that train students and educators to identify, report and respond to behaviors that suggest someone might harm themselves or others.

“100% of school shooters give off warning signs before they carry that out,” Barden said. “What if that person giving off those warning signs were surrounded by people who understood how to look for those warning signs, and then had the training and the tools to actually do something?”

That straightforward premise has yielded profound success. Sandy Hook Promise says it has presented Know the Signs to more than 23,000 schools and 18 million people. The training programs have helped districts and students avert threats of violence in West Virginia, California, Massachusetts and other states — not to mention nearly 2,700 students in need of intervention that the organization has connected with crisis counselors.

Hockley credits some of the organization’s success to its early defeat on the Manchin-Toomey bill.

“To fail so quickly was just horrifying to me,” Hockley said. “But when you have a failure, sometimes that makes you look at things in a different way.”

Sandy Hook Promise remains a persistent force in the arena of gun legislation. Barden leads the organization’s policy side and has been active in every major effort for federal gun reform for the last decade.

Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., a leading voice for gun reform, has known Barden’s commitment since he walked off the Senate floor following the universal background check vote in 2013.

“I felt mortified. I felt like a failure. I went out of the chamber and there was a group of the families there,” including Barden, Murphy said. “He said to me something along the lines of, ‘Chris, I’m not an advocate for four months. I’m an advocate for 40 years. This is my child. I’m never giving up.’”

Barden and Murphy have teamed up on countless failed policies over their decade of work together: extended waiting periods, extreme risk protection orders that would remove guns from people in crisis, a requirement on gun manufacturers to incorporate technology allowing only the owner to fire and a repeated pursuit of universal background checks.

“We were building a movement that needed time,” Murphy said. “I gave the same speech a million times over the last 10 years to advocates. I tell them every great social change movement in the country’s history failed a million times before it succeeded.”

In May, another young man armed with an assault-style rifle murdered children in another elementary school, this time in Uvalde, Texas. Once again, the families consoled the new members of a lifelong club as they grappled with their own frustration and grief.

Once again, Murphy took to the Senate floor, begging his colleagues to do anything.

But this time, the “social change movement” was stronger, the gun lobby was weaker and something shook loose. Working with a bipartisan coalition of senators that include Minority Whip John Cornyn, a Texas Republican, Murphy helped pass compromise legislation accepted as the first major federal victory for gun reform advocates in nearly three decades.

Signed by President Joe Biden in June, the law gives authorities 10 days instead of three to conduct background checks on gun purchasers and requires federal agents to ask local law enforcement if purchasers under 21 have a juvenile criminal or mental health history. It also incentivizes states to pass red flag laws like the one Connecticut passed in 1999, the first state in the country to do so.

It’s far from comprehensive and lacks the strength Murphy would have preferred. But he describes the legislation as both the culmination of a hard-fought decade and the opening of a new era in gun policy.

“While this was just the beginning, man, it was a pretty important beginning,” Murphy said.

The long-toiling advocates saw other victories in 2022: In February, insurers for the gun manufacturer Remington Arms agreed to pay $73 million to victims’ families to settle a lawsuit centered on the company’s aggressive marketing of the assault-style rifle used at Sandy Hook.

More important to the families than the payout is access to Remington’s internal communications, including its advertising strategies, and the right to release the documents.

“I’m very much looking forward to understanding what was going on behind the scenes, underneath the veil,” said Barden who, along with the other families party to the suit, plans to release the documents in early 2023.

More recently, a Connecticut judge ordered right-wing broadcaster Alex Jones to pay $473 million in punitive damages to victims’ families and a first responder in a case evaluating damage done by Jones’ repeated lies about the Sandy Hook shooting, including claims that it was staged and the grieving parents were “crisis actors.”

That order increases Jones’ tab across multiple cases to nearly $1.5 billion, a number that the families hope discourages other conspiracy theorists from spreading harmful lies that lead to harassment.

“My focus was getting the truth out there and stopping that bad behavior,” said Scarlett Lewis, a party to one of the cases, whose 6-year-old son Jesse was killed at Sandy Hook. “And I think with bullying behavior, you first try to ignore it, and then when it doesn’t stop, you have to find the courage to stand up to it.”

But for the coalition of parents who have spent 10 years standing up to misinformation, powerful lobbies and the seemingly endless march of American tragedy, victories are simply followed by more work.

Jones has publicly rebuked the idea of paying “any money” to the families he has mocked and vowed to appeal his ruling. Since the bipartisan gun bill became law, 332 people have died in mass shootings in the United States, according to data from the Gun Violence Archive.

But Barden and Hockley show no signs of slowing down. In between their separate interviews for this report, they excused themselves for a conference call. They discussed the guest list for an upcoming gala. They eagerly tended to the details of their no-longer-new and not-by-choice careers, persistently maintaining the momentum they have drawn from the worst day of their lives.

“I used to laugh that we’re going to put ourselves out of business, but there will always be a need for people to feel acknowledged and visible, and to know that there are others around them that are going to be keeping an eye out,” Barden said. “There will always be a need for that, and so there will always be a need for this beautiful little, little project of ours.”

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Newtown marks 10 years since Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting killed 20 children, 6 adults

Back on Dec. 14, 2012, 20 children and six staff members did not return home after a gunman walked into Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn. and opened fire. 

“We try to avoid kind of the pressure around the big milestones and the annual day of remembrance for us. But the 10 years is significant. There’s no way around that,” parent Michele Gay told CBS2. 

Those who survived were forever shaped by what they saw, heard, and lost that tragic day. 

Gay said her 7-year-old daughter Josephine left behind a legacy of joy when she was taken from her 10 years ago. 

“I think we have learned as a family that it’s very much a journey and you do have to take stops along the way, take care of yourself along the way. And sometimes you’re doing better than other times, but we are moving forward,” she said. “We’re never moving on. We’re always keeping our little girl, our little sister with us.”

The tragic day was half a lifetime ago for those who were students, such as Liv Doscher. 

“I feel like the further and further we move away from it, the more I feel I’m scrambling to just remember. So I really do think that the way I’m going to cope with that is just making, through people, kind of making sure I’m staying close to my best friend, making sure when I come home for breaks that I meet up with old teachers that I’m close with,” she said. 

Nicole Hockley lost her 6-year-old son Dylan. She says she’s proud to have turned her grief into advocacy. Through her organization Sandy Hook Promise, Hockley says they have prevented 11 school shootings and hundreds of suicides by training students and educators to report early warning signs of violence. 

“It has to become better with fewer shootings. I think it’s in the last ten years one of the numbers I’ve seen is that we’re at 1 million people impacted by gun violence. This year alone, I think we’re already over 40,000 deaths,” she said. “It’s the number one cause of death for children under the age of 19. We’re averaging two mass shootings a day.”

Last month, Newtown opened a new $3.4 million memorial to the 20 first graders and six educators killed. It’s located near the rebuilt Sandy Hook Elementary School. 

Former Gov. Dannel Malloy was in office at the time and is now reflecting on the way the town has moved forward since 2012. 

“The other children were their child’s classmate, the other teacher or teachers’ aide was their spouse’s friend. Just compounds itself, making it extraordinarily difficult to overcome,” he told CBS2. “But I think so many of these parents have done such an outstanding job of trying to care for a broader society. It really is quite impressive.”

Later this morning, U.S. Senators from Connecticut Richard Blumenthal and Chris Murphy are set to honor the memory of those lost on the Senate floor. They also plan to call on Congress to take further steps to address America’s gun violence epidemic. 

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Fire in Brooklyn Today Destroys NYPD Evidence Warehouse in Red Hook – NBC New York

An untold amount of “biological evidence” linked to New York City crimes dating back decades was destroyed or damaged in a raging inferno that devoured an NYPD warehouse off the Brooklyn waterfront Tuesday, authorities say.

The fire, which broke out around 10:40 a.m. at the Erie Basin Auto Pound in Red Hook, a sprawling warehouse on Columbia Street, left a half-dozen first responders and two civilians hurt — and sent up towering black smoke plumes so thick some confused New Yorkers thought the blaze had started in Manhattan.

It escalated to three alarms within about 30 minutes, and roughly 150 fire department members were at the scene through early afternoon.

It wasn’t immediately clear what sparked the blaze, and the investigation could take some time. Firefighters were forced to withdraw from the interior early because of the intense flames and combustible material, as well as the threat of collapse. One section of the warehouse, which may have had hundreds of e-bikes in it, did fall, officials said.

A total of eight people — three firefighters, three EMS members and two civilians — were hurt in the fire, but all are expected to be OK, FDNY Chief of Department John Hodgens said.

There was no estimated cost of the damage early. It wasn’t clear how many vehicles were in the lot at the time the fire broke out, but there appeared to be dozens of cars, trucks and motorcycles, along with ATVs, parked on the pier area.

NYPD officials said the vehicles included some historic ones as well as e-bikes, though a full inventory needed to be conducted to determine what was in the warehouse at the time of the fire. Biological evidence from past crimes, including burglaries and shootings — some of it going back 20 or 30 years — was kept at the location, the NYPD said.

Sandy property evidence was there as well. Rape kits, however, were not stored at that facility. Police plan to do a full accounting of the contents to determine if anything can be salvaged, and the extent of the overall damage, but the deep-seated volume of the fire, the building structure and limited access are problematic, officials say.

Chopper 4 was over the multi-alarm fire.

The FDNY appeared to be using boats as part of its firefighting effort during the worst of the fire — and top fire department officials say drones will be used in the coming days to identify any hard-to-see hotspots.

The city’s Office of Emergency Management advised people in the area close their windows to limit smoke exposure. Traffic delays mounted in the area through the morning.

Chopper 4 was over the scene through some of the most ferocious fire, hovering over a row of dirt bikes at one point as a nearby pickup truck burst into fire. The lot appears to be the same one where NYPD Commissioner Keechant Sewell and Mayor Eric Adams crushed illegal dirt bikes as part of a crackdown this summer.

Erie Basin is one of several lots the NYPD uses to store vehicles that have been seized for reasons other than parking violations. Those might include the arrest of the vehicle owner, investigative purposes or legal reasons, the city says.

The federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) New York branch responded to assist.

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Ukraine’s allies are letting Russia off the hook

For months, energy analysts have been fretting about what might happen on Dec. 5, when two things were due to occur. First, a European ban on seaborne imports of Russian oil would go into effect. Second, the world’s advanced economies would impose a price cap on Russian oil.

December 5 has arrived, and … nothing much has changed. That’s good news for oil purchasers, since markets are not registering any unusual concern about supply disruptions. But business-as-usual in energy markets also suggests the West’s latest effort to curtail Russia’s war-making ability is a dud. Russia seems likely to continue earning billions from oil sales, providing crucial funding for Russian President Vladimir Putin’s illegal war in Ukraine.

Europe agreed back in June to ban Russian oil imports, starting in December, with the lag providing a window to secure oil from other sources. The boycott is meant to make it harder for Russia to sell its most valuable export and dent the oil revenue that accounts for 30% of Russia’s federal budget.

But Russia can sell that oil elsewhere, and it has been finding new buyers while Europe has been finding new sellers. The United States developed the concept of a price cap on Russian oil, or a maximum amount participating nations would pay, as a way to depress Russia’s oil revenue no matter who’s buying it. If enough big nations abide by the cap, in theory, it will force down the price every buyer pays for Russian oil, and reduce Russia’s oil revenue. Even nations not participating in the price cap, such as China and India, will demand lower prices for Russian crude if the price cap lowers the benchmark price.

[Follow Rick Newman on Twitter, sign up for his newsletter or sound off.]

Making this work depends on getting the price ceiling right—and that’s where the scheme appears to be faltering. On Dec. 2, the Group of Seven nations—Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the UK and the United States—plus Australia set the cap at $60 per barrel. Ukraine and some of its allies wanted a cap as low as $30. Russian oil already sells at a discount to market prices because of existing sanctions that make those purchases more complicated. Buyers demand compensation for the added risk in the form of a lower price.

The discount on Russian oil is about $25 relative to the price of Brent crude (BZ=F) the European benchmark. The current price of Brent is around $83 per barrel. So the G-7 price cap of $60 equates with the price buyers are already paying for Russian oil, and that is plenty high for Russia to turn a profit.

“We’ve been reluctant to hit Russia where it hurts,” Robin Brooks, chief economist at the Institute of International Finance, wrote on Twitter on Dec. 3. “That’s why we … set the G-7 price cap at $60. This is the path of least resistance in the short term, but we are giving Putin the means to fight a ‘forever war’ in Ukraine.”

Poland and other Eastern European nations that border Russia initially lobbied for a $30 price cap, as did Ukraine itself. Brooks speculates that Greek shipping tycoons whose ships carry more than half of Russia’s oil exports pressed for a higher cap, and won out, for now. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky criticized the $60 cap and basically said it won’t accomplish anything.

Before the war, it cost Russia about $40 to produce a barrel of oil, on average, according to research firm Energy Intelligence. So Russia makes money at any price above $40. That explains why hawks wanted a price cap of $30, which would force losses on Russia, depending on how widely the price cap were imposed.

There are several wild cards with the price-cap regime, and it’s possible the G-7 coalition prefers to wade in gently rather than risk a reckless plunge. Russia has said it won’t comply with any price cap, which raises the question of how Russia might respond if the cap really does start to hurt. The most destabilizing thing Russia could do is stop exporting oil altogether, which would send global prices soaring, given that Russia provides 10% of the world’s supply. That would cause Russia itself a lot of damage, beyond just lost revenue. Russia doesn’t have the storage facilities to bank an indefinite amount of oil, and shutting down rigs and other oil infrastructure can wreck equipment. But Putin is increasingly desperate as his disastrous war in Ukraine drags on and Russia’s military suffers devastating losses.

The G-7 group can also lower the price cap whenever it wants, and it may do so on a gradual basis that squeezes Russia slowly. “There is an inherent tension between (1) meaningfully curtailing Russia’s export revenue and (2) avoiding physical shortages in the global oil market,” analysts at investing firm Raymond James wrote in a Dec. 5 report. “Policymakers are mindful of the current inflationary pressures and political complications arising from that.”

Western sanctions on Russia following its Feb. 24 invasion are straining the economy there, which could shrink by 5% or 6% this year. But it could be a lot worse for Russia. “They have managed the impact of sanctions much more effectively than most international observers anticipated,” Mark Galeotti of Mayak Consulting, said recently on the Geopolitics Decanted podcast. “We can’t write the Russian system off by any means.”

Ukraine’s economy, by contrast, could shrink by 30% this year, as Russia repeatedly attacks the energy infrastructure and levels entire cities. Reconstructing Ukraine once the war ends could cost $750 billion, which is three times as much as all the energy revenue Russia normally earns in a year. Ukraine clearly feels more urgency than some of its allies to bring Russia to its heels, while leaders in the United States and other places, barely affected by the way, want to help Ukraine as long as it doesn’t cause political disturbances at home. The shooting war, meanwhile, goes on, as incrementalism fails to turn the tide one way or the other.

Rick Newman is a senior columnist for Yahoo Finance. Follow him on Twitter at @rickjnewman

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Sandy Hook memorial opens to public, nearly 10 years after 26 killed in elementary school shooting



CNN
 — 

A memorial honoring the 20 first graders and six educators killed in the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting opened to the public on Sunday, nearly a month before the 10-year commemoration.

The Sandy Hook Permanent Memorial, designed by Dan Affleck and Ben Waldo, was unveiled publicly in Newtown, Connecticut where the mass shooting took place on December 14, 2012.

The memorial consists of a “circling network” of paths that lead visitors through woodland, across ponds and meadows to the center – a fountain that sits in a granite basin engraved with the names of the victims, according to its description on the designers’ website.

“Water flows spiral inwards towards a planter at the center, where a young sycamore is planted to symbolize the young age of the victims. The motion of the water embraces the tree and captures the energy, form, and cycle of the landscape around it,” the website says.

“Visitors are encouraged to give a candle or a flower to the water, which will carry the offering across the space in an act of bridging the deceased and the living,” it continues.

The design was selected out of 189 submissions by the Sandy Hook Permanent Memorial Commission after a five-year process.

Jennifer Hubbard, whose daughter Catherine Violet Hubbard was six years old when she was killed in shooting, told CNN on Sunday that she first viewed the memorial a few weeks ago and then again on Saturday for the memorial’s official dedication for the victims’ loved ones.

“I’m grateful that Catherine is a part of the memorial because it is a shared and sacred loss of 26 families,” Hubbard told CNN.

Hubbard said she appreciates the Newtown Memorial Commission and those involved for creating the tribute.

She describes the quiet space as “beautifully appointed” to reflect on the lives taken and affected by the shooting.

“This memorial goes beyond being a marker of all that we’ve been through,” Hubbard said.

“It’s a reminder of all that we as a community have come together to accomplish. This is a collective space for reflection where all who visit are reminded of the healing, love and compassion we’ve sought to bring to the world,” she continued.

Hubbard founded an animal sanctuary in her daughter Catherine’s honor. She hopes projects such as hers and that of the public memorial may show “humanity and human[s] are good.”

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