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Parkland School Tragedy Survivors Reach Tallahassee, Vocal in Push for Gun Laws

The students plan to hold a rally Wednesday in hopes that it will put pressure on the state's Republican-controlled Legislature to consider a sweeping package of gun-control laws

NBC 6’s Ari Odzer is in Tallahassee after traveling with about 100 students to the state capital to push lawmakers to push for gun reform.

What to Know

  • A hundred students are busing 400 miles to Florida's capital Tuesday to urge lawmakers to act to prevent a repeat of the massacre.
  • The students plan to hold a rally Wednesday in hopes that it will put pressure on the state's Republican-controlled Legislature.
  • Shortly after the shooting, several legislative leaders were taken on a tour of the school to see the damage first hand and appeared shaken.

Students who survived the deadly mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland last week are mobilizing with a message: never again.

"Not that we want to take people's gun's away, but we want to protect ourselves from the violent weapons of mass destruction that are not necessary in civilian life,” said Emma Gonzalez, a senior at the school who made an impassioned speech this weekend at a Fort Lauderdale rally that went viral.

A hundred Stoneman Douglas High School students bused 400 miles to Florida's capital Tuesday to urge lawmakers to act to prevent a repeat of the massacre that killed 17 students and faculty last week. They reached their destination Tuesday night.

However, hours before the students reached Tallahassee, news disseminated that Florida's House voted down a motion to take up a bill that would ban assault rifles.

“I’m just absolutely mortified right now. That’s kind of just like a big screw you. They know that multiple kids are coming up to the state capitol just to talk to them. And they’re just not even considering the bill to stop things like this," student Daniel Bishop told MSNBC while aboard a capital-bound bus. "The NeverAgain hashtag has been going around and it’s like they don’t even care that we don’t want this to happen again. Why should anyone else have to live through this? I just don’t understand.”

The students plan to hold a rally Wednesday in hopes that it will put pressure on the state's Republican-controlled Legislature to consider a sweeping package of gun-control laws, something some GOP lawmakers said Monday they would consider. Shortly after the shooting, several legislative leaders were taken on a tour of the school to see the damage first hand and they appeared shaken afterward.

"We are going to make sure that this doesn't happen,” Gonzalez said. “We are going to be the people who decide this change. It's not going to be anybody else. It's not going to be people further down the line, it's going to be us."

Gonzalez and the others who escaped the same terror that killed so many others at their own school want tougher background checks. They want state laws that would stop someone like 19-year-old Nikolas Cruz from legally buying an automatic rifle.

"It’s unbelievable and the fact that we are high school students of a generation that has grown up with this, I think that we don’t' want to continue watching something we've grown up with all our lives." Said Jaclyn Corin, who organized the bus trip to Tallahassee.

Other classmates agree the time is now, and the opportunity is unique.

"I really think they are going to hear us out," said Chris Grady, a 19-year-old senior who is going on the trip. He said he hopes the trip will lead to some "commonsense laws like rigorous background checks."

While students will be traveling, those from other schools are making their voices heard as well - with protests Tuesday in front of two Broward County school and a mass walkout from a high school in Boca Raton, where students and staff walked 11 miles to the site of last week's tragedy.

The attack last Wednesday seemed to overcome the resistance of some in the state's leadership, which has rebuffed gun restrictions since Republicans took control of both the governor's office and the Legislature in 1999. However, there is still strong resistance by many in the party to any gun-control measures, leaving the fate of new restrictions unclear.

"We're high schoolers, we're the age where we think we know everything and we can speak up. Sandy Hook, that was little kids," said junior Cameron Kasky, who has been a vocal presence at rallies and protests since the shooting. "We're going to start at a state level and move our way up, and just hopefully change the way this nation functions."

Students also have vowed to exert pressure on Congress as the aftermath of the rampage resonates beyond Florida and from coast to coast. Hundreds of chanting protesters converged Monday on a downtown Los Angeles park, demanding tougher background checks and other gun-safety measures after the shooting. Some signs held up by the California demonstrators read, "Your Children Are Counting On You."

Sen. Bill Galvano, a Republican and the incoming Florida senate president, said the state Senate was preparing a package that would include raising the age to purchase any firearm to 21, creating a waiting period for purchasing any type of firearm, banning bump stocks that can allow semi-automatic guns to spray bullets quickly and creating gun-violence restraining orders.

Authorities said suspect Nikolas Cruz, 19, had a string of run-ins with school authorities that ended with his expulsion. Police also were repeatedly called to his house throughout his childhood. Cruz's lawyers said there were repeated warning signs that he was mentally unstable and potentially violent. Yet he legally purchased a semi-automatic rifle.

"We need to make sure everything is working and to learn from the experience," said Galvano, who was among those who visited the school.

The Senate is also considering boosting spending on mental health programs for schools and giving law-enforcement greater power to involuntarily hold someone considered a danger to themselves. The body will also look at a proposal to deputize a teacher or someone else at school so they are authorized to have a gun.

Galvano said senators want to examine ways to protect schools that do not have resource officers — often armed law enforcement officers — on site.

State House leaders and Gov. Rick Scott also are considering possible changes to firearms rules but have not given any details. Scott planned meetings Tuesday on school safety, and said he would announce proposals on mental health issues later in the week.

Still, some Republicans questioned whether additional gun restrictions are the answer.

"I really don't want to see this politicized into a gun debate," Republican Sen. Dennis Baxley.

Referring to gun-control advocates, he said: "Sometimes I wish they were right, that this would fix it, but it won't ... We have a terrible problem with obesity, but we're not banning forks and spoons."

Democrats believe raising the age limit and creating a waiting period to buy rifles isn't enough.

"That's unacceptable. That's a joke," said Democratic Sen. Gary Farmer of Broward County. "I don't see that as a restriction. It never should have been that an 18-year-old could buy an assault weapon. No Floridians should be able to buy an assault weapon."

Cruz legally purchased at least seven long guns, including an AK-47-style rifle he bought less than a month ago, a law enforcement official said Monday. The official is familiar with the investigation but isn't authorized to discuss it and spoke on condition of anonymity.

Federal law allows those 18 and over to buy rifles, and Cruz passed background checks necessary to obtain the weapons.

Cruz made his first appearance in court Monday. Wearing a prison jumpsuit, he kept his head down and did not appear to make eye contact with the judge or others in the courtroom, though he responded briefly to someone on the defense team. A previous appearance was by a video connection from jail.

His lawyers have said he will plead guilty if prosecutors agree not to pursue the death penalty. No decision has been made on that.

Since the attack, students from the school have become increasingly vocal in their demands for gun-control measures. Many have pointed out politicians who take financial support from the National Rifle Association, and some have lashed out at President Donald Trump, saying he was busy blaming Democrats for failing to pass gun restrictions while taking no action of his own.

After staying largely mum in the last few days about the massacre and the escalating debate about weapons, Trump said Monday that he was supportive of a bipartisan effort to strengthen federal background checks for gun purchases.

Students are also calling for anti-gun violence demonstrations in Washington and other cities March 24.

Organizers behind the anti-Trump Women's March called for a 17-minute nationwide walkout by teachers and students on March 14, and a gun-control group was calling for a rally to ban assault weapons Wednesday at the Florida Capitol.

Copyright The Associated Press
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