GOLETA, Calif. (AP) — A man whose son was among the victims killed in a shooting rampage near a California university quaked with grief and rage Saturday as he described his “lost and broken” family and the proliferation of guns he believes led to his son’s death.
“Our son Christopher and six others are dead,” Richard Martinez told reporters gathered outside a sheriff’s station for a news conference the day after the shootings near the University of California, Santa Barbara, where the 20-year-old son was a sophomore. “You don’t think it’ll happen to your child until it does.”
Christopher Ross Michaels-Martinez, of Los Osos, Calif., was the last of six people killed by suspect Elliot Rodger before the gunman apparently shot and killed himself, authorities said.
Martinez choked back tears as he spoke, then grew angrier as he talked about gun laws and lobbyists.
“The talk about gun rights. What about Chris’ right to live?” Martinez said. “When will enough people say: ‘Stop this madness! We don’t have to live like this! Too many people have died!”
He then punctuated his words as he said, “We should say to ourselves: ‘Not! One! More!'” before dissolving into tears and falling to his knees as he stepped from the podium.
Martinez said he talked to his son just 45 minutes before he died inside the IV Deli Mart, where bullet holes and blood could still be seen on Saturday. After already killing five others at his apartment and outside a sorority house, Rodger walked into the deli and shot Michael-Martinez, authorities said.
Michaels-Martinez was an English major who planned to go to London next year and to law school after graduation, his father said.
He pulled out a photo of his son as a small child in Chicago Cubs baseball uniform and said they used to call him “mini-Sammy Sosa,” referring to the former Cubs star.
“Chris was a really great kid,” Martinez said. “Ask anyone who knew him. His death has left our family lost and broken.”
Friends said Michaels-Martinez, who served as residential adviser at a dorm last year, was the kind of guy who welcomed strangers into his home.
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It’s not clear whether Rodger knew Katherine Cooper and Veronika Weiss, but they were standing outside a sorority house he was targeting and square in the path of his rampage, authorities said. They became the first ones fatally shot.
Rodger had stabbed and killed three male victims at his apartment already, then drove to the Alpha Phi sorority house, where he fired from across the street and shot three women who were nearby. One of them, whose name has not been released, was injured. Cooper, 22, and Weiss, 19, both UC Santa Barbara students, were killed.
Cooper, who was from Chino Hills, Calif., was about to graduate with a degree in art history. Her friend Courtney Benjamin said Cooper was a painter with an outgoing side.
“She was a self-proclaimed princess and I love her for that,” Benjamin said. “And I know she has a crown on her head today.”
Weiss was first-year student from Westlake Village.
“She was always a happy person,” said Eric Pursley, who worked with Weiss at a Target store in Thousand Oaks last year.
A pile of flowers grew on the lawn Saturday as crying students wandered up to the spot, shook their heads and hugged each other.
UCSB senior Kyley Scarlet, who lives next door and has served as president of her own sorority, said all three who were shot are sorority members, but neither of Alpha Phi nor her own.
Scarlet said she was very disturbed by the video describing his anger at sorority girls.
“It’s hard thinking my actions, being part of a sorority, led him to do this,” she said. “When I saw that video I was shaking and crying.”
Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Those 2 gun-totin’‘Chipotle’ boyz from Tejas last week should be first in line for a psychiatric evaluation.So when do we start profiling young white males with self-esteem and anger management issues?
Anyone crazy enough to carry a rifle in public is crazy enough to fire it in public.
If I saw a young man toting a rifle in a public place, I’d hit him in the head with something very hard and ask questions later. Isn’t that standing your ground?
Or, of course, I’d just run without paying my bill or picking up my groceries, or saying, “pardon me!” As I pushed my way out.
Well said!
I am not usually one to take issue with news photos, but this one in particular bothers me.His father might be a well known individual in his craft. but this photo intrudes on a level of grief which cannot be measured by anyone outside the event.
I take no issue with using a photo to headline the story, but I would have gone to any length needed NOT to use this one, out of simple respect, if nothing else.
I say this with all respect to you and you heartfelt feelings: He was addressing a press conference and criticized gun laws.
I fully agree with him, and I see nothing inappropriate about the picture. It drives home the message of the real cost, could even help very slightly.