Parkland Community Worried After 2 Survivors’ Suicides
By TERRY SPENCER and KELLI KENNEDY Associated Press
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) — The community of Parkland, Florida, is focusing attention on its suicide prevention programs after two survivors of the Florida high school massacre killed themselves in a week.
Parkland Mayor Christine Hunschofsky said Monday that community leaders, government officials, parents, police and others held an emergency meeting Sunday after a second Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School student apparently killed himself over the weekend. That came a week after a recent graduate, who was close friends with victim Meadow Pollack, killed herself after her family said she suffered from survivor's guilt.
The Feb. 14, 2018, shooting at the 3,200-student school killed 14 students and three staff members and wounded 17 others. Some students have begun counting the two suicides among the victims of the shooting.
Also Monday, police in Connecticut said the father of one of the 20 children slain at the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting in 2002 was found dead in an apparent suicide. Newtown police say the body of 49-year-old Jeremy Richman was found inside Edmond Town Hall, where he had an office. Richman was the father of first-grader Avielle Richman. He and his wife had created The Avielle Foundation, a group dedicating to preventing violence by seeking a better understanding of brain health.
In Florida, getting urgent counseling resources to students could be more difficult because the school is on spring break this week.
Hunschofsky said the biggest push will be to alert parents that they need to talk to their children about whether they are having suicidal thoughts and outline the danger signs for them, such as personality changes or a preoccupation with death. The groups also want students to talk to and look out for each other, and note that programs already are in place — community counseling and resource centers opened after the shooting — where they can seek help.
"There are lots of resources out there, but everyone is in a different place with different levels of trauma and grief. It is our job to get the right resources to them," she said. "There can never be enough resources, but the challenge is connecting people."
Hunschofsky said that while there is concern the two suicides could lead to more, it is more dangerous not to discuss what happened.
"We cannot be afraid of talking — the only way we are going to identify people who need help is to talk about it," she said.
In neighboring Coral Springs, where about half of Marjory Stoneman Douglas students live, spokeswoman Lynne Martzelle said the city will host a community anti-suicide prevention forum on Wednesday.
"The tragedy of Marjory Stoneman Douglas didn't end on the 14th," she said.
Cara Aiello told WFOR-TV last week that her daughter Sydney had been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder and struggled to attend college because she feared being in a classroom, but never asked for help. Aiello killed herself last week.
Coral Springs police officer Tyler Reik confirmed Monday that a student apparently killed himself Saturday, but said an official determination has not been made. That should happen later Monday.
Copyright 2018 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.