Sandy Hook violence-prevention commission meets for first time

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A 16-member commission, appointed in Connecticut to examine last month’s shooting rampage at an elementary school, kicked off its deliberations Thursday, even as the nation continued to wrestle with finding policies on how to deal with gun violence.

The Sandy Hook Advisory Commission was appointed to review a variety of gun issues including school safety and mental health questions. It is expected to issue preliminary recommendations by mid-March.

The advisory commission was created by Gov. Dannel P. Malloy on Jan. 3, just weeks after the attack by Adam Lanza on the Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn. Using an assault weapon, Lanza killed 20 children and six adults in the school. He began his spree by killing his mother in the home they shared and ended it by killing himself.

The lead prosecutor in the case, Danbury State’s Attorney Stephen Sedensky III, told the panel that the State Police investigating the attack may not issue its report on the crime’s details until June. He said he would work with the panel, but noted that there are confidentiality issues involving Lanza’s mental state at the time.

With the massacre still fresh in people’s minds, many policy-makers already have begun focusing on two areas: mental health issues and access to weapons and ammunition.

There is a constitutional right to bear arms, Malloy told the commission on Thursday but “that right cannot come at the expense of public safety.”

Malloy has made clear his commission’s mandate.

“Shortly after the initial horror and the immediate grief over what occurred at Sandy Hook Elementary School on Dec. 14, there was one question on the lips of many of our residents: How do we make sure this never happens again,” the governor has said.

“This commission will look for ways to make sure our gun laws are as tight as they are reasonable, that our mental health system can reach those that need its help and that our law enforcement has the tools it needs to protect public safety, particularly in our schools,” he said, setting out the panel’s agenda.

The first meeting came after President Barack Obama announced his package of gun-control measures, including a renewed ban on assault weapons and on high-capacity ammunition magazines; he also called for more money for mental health diagnoses and treatment and school safety preparedness.

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