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Who’s Responsible for a Mass Shooting?

You are here: Home / Archive / Feature Stories / Who’s Responsible for a Mass Shooting?
Published: March 27, 2022 by RHJ Producer

Even as many students switched to virtual learning, school shootings didn’t stop. One recent school shooter used his parents’ gun, and now they are facing charges for their role in the incident. Experts discuss how the accountability of mass shootings doesn’t always just fall on the shooter.


Guest Information:

  • Shavaun Scott, psychotherapist, author
  • Dr. Joyce White Vance, Professor, University of Alabama School of Law, Former U.S. Attorney, Northern District of Alabama

Links for more info:

  • Joyce Vance | University of Alabama School of Law 
  • Joyce Alene (@JoyceWhiteVance) / Twitter 
  • #SistersInLaw
  • Shavaun Scott
  • Shavaun Scott (@shavaunscott) / Twitter 
  • Shavaun Scott – Home | Facebook
FILE – Jennifer Crumbley, left, and James Crumbley, right, the parents of Ethan Crumbley, a teenager accused of killing four students in a shooting at Oxford High School, appear in court for a preliminary examination on involuntary manslaughter charges in Rochester Hills, Mich. on Feb. 8, 2022. The Crumbleys return to court, Tuesday, March 22, for a pretrial hearing on involuntary manslaughter charges. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya, File)
Program #: 22-13Segment Type: Feature StoriesTopics: Children and Youth at Risk| Crime and Criminal Justice| Ethics| Government and Legislation| Gun Violence| Guns and Gun Control| Mass Shootings| Philosophy and Ethics| Prevention| Prosecution| Public Health and Public Safety| Public SafetyGuests: Dr. Joyce White Vance| Shavaun ScottInstitutions & Organizations: University of Alabama| University of Alabama School of LawHost: Reed PenceProducers: Jason Dickey| Kristen Farrah
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About RHJ Producer

Since 1992, Radio Health Journal has been bringing listeners useful, verifiable information they can trust and rely on in the fields of medicine, science & technology, research, and the intersection of health & public policy. Both Radio Health Journal and sister show Viewpoints Radio are AURN productions.

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