DANBURY, CT (NEWS1130) – It’s been an exhausting day for reporters covering the nightmare in Newtown.
News1130 tracked down a newspaper reporter who was dispatched to cover what was initially a simple shooting.
“The enormity of the event still hasn’t sunk in,” says Libor Jany, a breaking news reporter with the News -Times paper in Danbury, about 15 miles from Newtown.
He says their newsroom was first alerted to a shooting from a Tweet issued by someone who monitors emergency scanners.
He was quickly dispatched, then spent the rest of the day talking with children who survived, their parents, and Tweeting updates.
He says he’s exhausted but is driven to find some answers and so will back in Newtown throughout the weekend.
“As tired as we are, I don’t think there are any reporters who want to walk away from the story. There questions out there,” he explains.
“That instinct kicks in when you’re covering a tragic story, and I’m still in that mindset.”
And the coming days will bring more challenges for reporters.
“Once we find out the names of the victims, the more difficult task for us reporters begins. We start knocking on doors to piece together their life stories.”
People are comforted near Sandy Hook Elementary School, Friday, Dec. 14, 2012 in Newtown, Conn. A man killed his mother at home and then opened fire Friday inside the elementary school where she taught, massacring 26 people, including 20 children, as youngsters cowered in fear to the sound of gunshots echoing through the building and screams coming over the intercom. (AP Photo/The Hour, Alex von Kleydorff)
Newspaper reporter says massacre hasn’t sunk in
Libor Jany is a breaking news reporter with the News-Times paper in nearby Danbury
Renee Bernard
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