26 and 20 of them young children. michelle s daughter was the oldest among them. my oldest daughter couldn t accept it. it couldn t be. she was sure it was a misunderstanding. reporter: a month affidavits a group of sandy hook parents unsuccessful pushed for sweeping gun control legislation. gay pushes schools to be safer but doesn t push gun control. if we go in and start mentioning hot button issues or political arguments, we suddenly divide the room in half. reporter: when the president says arming teachers is something to look at you don t dismiss him? i don t. we should look at everything. we should put everything on the table. we can t ever count on any one thing. reporter: there is most one single magic wand that will solve school shootings? i believe if there was, we would have found it and waved it by now. reporter: after the sandy
soon the shannons became six, with the birth of their two boys. and in 2000, david took the family south to fayetteville, when he was transferred to ft. bragg. david loved the military. he loved being the soldier. you talk about somebody having a first love or something they loved more than anything. he loved that uniform. and the military had been good to david. he was major shannon by now, well on his way to becoming a colonel. and that was the phone call the shannon family was really looking forward to from ft. bragg. not the one they got that devastating morning in july 2002. they said david s been shot. he s been murdered. it couldn t be, he was in special forces, he must have been into something odd, there must have been something with what he was doing at work that, you know, this must have been a hit.
he loved them, definitely. soon the shannons became six, with the birth of their two boys. and in 2000, david took the family south to fayetteville, when he was transferred to ft. bragg. david loved the military. he loved being the soldier. you talk about somebody having a first love or something they loved more than anything. he loved that uniform. and the military had been good to david. he was major shannon by now, well on his way to becoming a colonel. and that was the phone call the shannon family was really looking forward to from ft. bragg. not the one they got that devastating morning in july 2002. they said david s been shot. he s been murdered. it couldn t be, he was in special forces, he must have been into something odd, there must have been something with what he was doing at work that, you know, this must have been a hit.
he was major shannon by now, well on his way to becoming a colonel. and that was the phone call the shannon family was really looking forward to from ft. bragg. not the one they got that devastating morning in july 2002. they said david s been shot. he s been murdered. it couldn t be, he was in special forces, he must have been into something odd, there must have been something with what he was doing at work that, you know, this must have been a hit. we felt that something had gone wrong, that he found out something that he was not supposed to have known and they got rid of him. because it was so execution style. somebody came in with the intent to kill him. with the intent of killing him. but here was an odd thing. there wasn t any sign of an
soon the shannons became six, with the birth of their two boys. and in 2000, david took the family south to fayetteville, when he was transferred to ft. bragg. david loved the military. he loved being the soldier. you talk about somebody having a first love or something they loved more than anything. he loved that uniform. and the military had been good to david. he was major shannon by now, well on his way to becoming a colonel. and that was the phone call the shannon family was really looking forward to from ft. bragg. not the one they got that devastating morning in july 2002. they said david s been shot. he s been murdered. it couldn t be, he was in special forces, he must have been into something odd, there must have been something with what he was doing at work that, you know, this must have been a hit. we felt that something had gone wrong, that he found out