Return to Washington Examiner Homepage
May 18, 2013 | 10:02 AM
politics
Washington D.C. weather
Politics

Dem Senator: Video games gave Sandy Hook shooter a ‘false sense of courage’

January 24, 2013 | 12:09 pm | Modified: January 24, 2013 at 12:15 pm
Leave a comment
Photo -

Sen. Christopher Murphy D-Conn. gave an emotional speech during Sen. Dianne Feinstein’s press conference introducing a new bill that would ban so-called assault weapons.

Murphy insisted that if an assault weapons ban had been in place, many of the children shot at Sandy Hook “would be alive today.”

He also blamed video games for influencing the Sandy Hook shooter Adam Lanza.

“I think there’s a question as to whether he would have driven in his mother’s car in the first place if he didn’t have access to a weapon that he saw in video games that gave him a false sense of courage about what he could do that day.”

Lanza reportedly played Call of Duty – the popular series of first-person shooter video games.

From WeeklyStandard.com

  • Ideological Revenue Service

    With three different scandals threatening to consume the White House last week—the Benghazi cover-up, the Justice Department’s seizure of the phone records of dozens of Associated Press...

    Read More...

  • The Real Scandal

    Everyone in Washington, except those in the crosshairs, likes a good scandal, and THE WEEKLY STANDARD is no exception. What’s more, in the case of the Obama administration, comeuppance is well...

    Read More...

  • When It Rains, It Pours

    There is no curse on the second term of presidents. When presidents lose credibility, when trust vanishes and their word is no longer accepted, they have only themselves to blame. That was true...

    Read More...