Skip to main content

A Murdered VA Tech Student's Parent Speaks Out

Doctor Toms Rant - Blogged
Immediately after the Virginia Tech massacre, a few of the families of the Virginia Tech victims anointed themselves as the official spokespersons for all of the Virginia Tech victims and victim's families.  They are cocksure that they have the solution:  more gun control. Forget that guns were banned on campus back in 2007.  Forget that Cho passed a background check TWICE.  Forget that Cho followed the One Handgun A Month law to the letter.  Forget that massacres always seem to happen at gun-free-zones, like schools and malls, but not a places like gun shows.

One mother, Holly Adams, whose daughter, Leslie, was murdered by Cho, has chosen to speak out against the insanity of the continued banning of guns at universities and colleges.  I have met Holly and seen the pain in her eyes.  She knows in her heart that the only way her daughter could have been saved on that horrible day was for someone to have been able to shoot back at Cho.  She doesn't want to have another parent go through what she did because she did not speak up about the dangers of gun control.

Here is her statement:

"On April 16, 2007, my child, Leslie Sherman, was killed by Seung-Hui Cho during the Virginia Tech massacre.  Today is the fifth anniversary of her death.  Always in my memories, every day I wish that this tragedy was a nightmare and I could wake up to hold my daughter even if it is just one more time.  That opportunity might have been possible if someone been able to defend and protect my daughter in her classroom before Cho took 30 precious lives.

There is an unfortunate drive for more gun control and the continuation of preventing guns on campus by parents whose children lived or survived during that fatal day.  Several family members of those victims have actively voiced their support for increased gun control measures.  As result, it has been assumed that they speak for all families of the Virginia Tech victims.  I am writing this to make it clear that this is not the case.  They do not represent me and my views.

Speaking for myself, I would give anything if someone on campus; a professor, one of the trained military or guardsman taking classes or another student could have saved my daughter by shooting Cho before he killed our loved ones.  Because professors, staff and students are precluded from protecting themselves on campus, Cho, a student at Virginia Tech himself, was able to simply walk on campus and go on a killing rampage with no worry that anyone would stop him.

I ask a simple question:  Would the other parents of victims be forever thankful if a professor or student was allowed to carry a firearm and could have stopped Seung-Hui Cho before their loved one was injured or killed?  I would be. I also suspect that the tragedy may not have occurred at all if Cho knew that either faculty members or students were permitted to carry their own weapons on campus.  Cho took his own life before campus police were able to reach him and put a stop to his killing spree.

A sad testament to this anniversary date is the number of similar killings in schools and public places that have taken place afterwards as if nothing has changed to help prevent such needless and heartbreaking events.  That is why I fully support the VCDL, Virginia Citizens Defense League, Inc.,  in their outstanding efforts to help prevent this type of tragedy and loss from occurring in the future."

My Statement:

 "I'd rather explain why an intruder has a hole in his chest than have others giving my eulogy!"

Comments