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“It has to matter. It has to matter.â€
For gunshot survivors, ER trauma staff and even gun owners, each new incident is a reminder of how their lives have been changed by gun violence.
“After Monterey Park: The Impact of Gun Violence on our Communities†is an hourlong special airing on “L.A. Times Today†on Spectrum News 1. The show explores the repercussions of the Jan. 21 shooting in Monterey Park that left 11 people dead and nine wounded in a popular dance studio on the eve of the Lunar New Year. The special will also examine the toll of gun violence across several decades in Southern California and what the public can expect moving forward from its elected officials. These are their stories.
Why fear is driving Asian Americans to buy guns
2:54
They live with the trauma of gun violence, years after shootings. Here are their stories
7:08
For these doctors and nurses, treating Monterey Park shooting victims was another Saturday night
4:38
Monterey Park artist uses Tabiji eggshells to bring healing after mass shooting
4:13
In 2007, Rose Smith was paralyzed from the waist down after being shot by a stray bullet.
‘I was thinking, I’m only 23 years old. I can’t die yet.’
Twenty-three-year-old Marco Vargas grew up in South Los Angeles. He’d like the same attention given to the everyday gun violence in his neighborhood that mass shootings receive.
‘The first time I saw a gun was when I was 5 years old. My biological father threatened to kill my mom.’
On Aug. 10, 1999, Loren Lieb got a call at work. A gunman had opened fire at a Jewish community center where her 6- and 8-year-old boys were attending summer camp. One of her sons was shot but survived. The other was uninjured.
‘The ranks of this club that nobody wants to be in, it’s getting bigger.’
Fourteen-year-old Nathalia Jackson knows the grim details of her father’s homicide. He was shot in the head at his cellphone business during what police believe was a botched robbery. She’s now an advocate for those affected by gun violence, especially children.
‘Police do believe that he was on his knees when he was shot and killed.’
Ruett Foster was leading prayer at his church when he got the call there had been a shooting at a local park. When he arrived, police told him his 7-year-old son had been shot and killed by gang-related gunfire.
‘It’s so important that survivors be seen. … It may not be the thing that you champion, but you have to care. It has to matter.’
After the Monterey Park and Half Moon Bay shootings, we asked experts how to reclaim the joy and take care of your community.
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