Too many guns in the wrong hands? Are they insensitive to life, considering the violence on our television screens day in and day out...whether the news or series. A question was posed, "Where are their parents?" Shouldn't our parents also incude our politicians and lawmakers we elect to help do what is right? Instead, they fight amongst themselves exchanging slurs, slinging the most vile I have ever heard. And then we wonder what is wrong with these boys? Let's start at the top. Civility and respect must return to our Senate, House of Representatives and corporations. We must care more for every human being!
CNN) -- A random act of violence has left a promising 22-year-old college baseball player dead, a family devastated and two countries half a world apart rattled.
Christopher Lane, who's from
Australia, was gunned down in Duncan, Oklahoma, while he was out jogging last
week. The motive, police say? Three teens who had nothing better to do.
"They witnessed a young man run
by on the street. Chose him as the target," Police Chief Danny Ford told CNN affiliate KSWO.
When police eventually arrested
the three teens -- ages 15, 16 and 17 -- one of them offered up a motive that
made clear that Lane, who attended East Central University on a baseball
scholarship, was chosen at random.
"He said the motive was, 'We were
going to kill somebody,'" Ford told Australian radio station 3AW.
"They decided all three of them
were going to kill somebody."
Police say the teens shot Lane in
the back in the town of about 24,000 and sped away in their car.
"There were some people that saw
him stagger across the road, go to a kneeling position and collapse on the side
of the road," Ford told KSWO.
Attempts to revive Lane
failed.
Police caught the teens a few
hours after the shooting. Thanks to security cameras from local businesses,
police saw their car speeding down the street.
Nearly 10,000 miles away in
Australia, Lane's family struggled to cope with the news.
"He's left his mark as we know,
and you know there's not going to be any good come out of this, because it was
just so senseless," Christopher's father, Peter Lane, said. "It's happened. It's
wrong, and we're just trying and deal with it the best we can."
Lane's girlfriend Sarah Harper
posted an emotional tribute on Facebook, saying "you will always be mine and in
a very special and protected place in my heart."
1 comment:
Wholeheartedly agree Petra!
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