Responses U.S. President
Barack Obama said he was heartbroken over the murders. Virginia Governor
Terry McAuliffe said on Twitter that he also was heartbroken over the shooting, and he reasserted his support for
gun control. His remarks drew criticism from
Republicans who charged that he was politicizing the tragedy. Staff members for Senator Kaine explained that he had not contacted the victims' families at the time "out of respect for their space and privacy during this difficult time of grieving". The same reasoning was cited by Warner on August 29, who said he did not immediately contact Parker's family out of respect to the family's privacy "at a time of unimaginable grief".
Media response Delayed releases In the immediate wake of the shooting, various media productions were either delayed or pulled from television outlets.
USA Network postponed the first-season finale of the series
Mr. Robot one week from its originally scheduled air date (the day of the murders) because the episode included a scene with similarities to the incident.
IFC delayed broadcasting an episode of its satirical series
Documentary Now! which involved two journalists who are killed on-camera as they track down a Mexican
drug cartel leader.
Warner Bros. Records decided to pull a television commercial for
Disturbed's album
Immortalized, as it depicted an incident similar to the killings.
Use of the murderer's video Writing about news coverage of the incident,
ThinkProgress noted, "There isn't broad consensus about how to handle this type of coverage." The
New York Post, New York's
Daily News, and British tabloids
The Sun and
The Daily Mirror were criticized for their decision to publish still frames from Flanagan's phone video of the murders on their front pages.
ABC World News Tonight did not show any part of Flanagan's video;
NBC Nightly News broadcast a still frame; and
CBS Evening News showed a 25 second segment of the video. On the day of the shooting,
CNN repeatedly aired the footage on an hourly basis. The
gun control lobbying group Everytown for Gun Safety shared the broadcast video with a three-second discretionary warning.
Viewer harm Christine Courtois, chairwoman of the
American Psychological Association's
post-traumatic stress disorder guidelines development panel, warned that anyone watching the footage was likely to be upset, possibly resulting in
acute stress disorder.
The Guardian journalist
Catherine Bennett criticized the media's use of frame shots and footage as "helping Flanagan achieve his vanity script".
Ebony writer
Jamilah Lemieux and Dexter Thomas of the
Los Angeles Times wrote that the American mainstream media were too selective about rebroadcasting the footage of Parker and Ward's deaths to white audiences, but have frequently shown content of many black people being killed.
Los Angeles Times writer
Mary McNamara wrote that reluctance to watch or share the graphic footage in order to prevent the fulfillment of "a killer's wish is not just absurd, it's agreeing to adopt a murderer's way of thinking". She said that people should watch the footage, not for entertainment, but to realize how brutal the murders were. New York
Daily News writer Linda Stasi said that media criticism of showing footage contradicted frequent media decisions to publish other violent content.
Police censorship The Virginia State Police ordered
BBC journalists to delete the station's copy of the video of Flanagan crashing his car during the police chase, before he committed suicide.
Analyst comments Attorney and legal analyst
Philip A. Holloway argued that employers and
HR personnel need to recognize they are "putting lives at risk" when they fail to warn subsequent employers about the dangerous behavior of their former employees.
Battling online material In sworn testimony before Congress in July 2019, Andy Parker credited the
HONR Network in assisting him to combat offensive online material and hoaxes spread after the tragedy, saying: the HONR Network who worked long hours flagging videos so that I was spared. When finding offensive content, HONR volunteers would click the report button below each video and check the appropriate box explaining how the video violates
YouTube's
Community guidelines. Although hundreds of videos have been taken down due to their diligence, they are often stymied, even with an enforceable copyright. He also added: I have engaged in direct communications with
Google regarding the proliferation of these videos, but while they profess a desire to help, in reality they do nothing ... [I met with] Google Director of Global Human Rights regarding specific content and our attempts to have it removed. Their response was, 'We're really trying'. Since that meeting, there has been nothing but silence. Thanks to
Section 230, Google has complete immunity and therefore no incentive to respond. In October 2021, Parker filed a similar complaint to the FTC about Facebook. In February 2022, it was reported that Parker had created a
non-fungible token from the video material recorded by Ward's camera in an attempt to claim copyright as a means of pressuring social media platforms to remove the video.
Lawsuit against WDBJ In 2017, Vicki Gardner filed a $6 million
civil suit against
WDBJ for being "negligent in hiring Flanagan". On June 26, 2020, a Franklin County Circuit Court dismissed the case.
Memorials After the murders, Patrick Henry Community College and the PHCC Foundation created the Alison Bailey Parker Memorial Scholarship to remember Parker, who graduated from the college in 2009. The scholarship is awarded annually to a student studying in a Media Design and Production program. In 2017, JMU dedicated a
soundstage and control room in Harrison Hall to Parker, naming it the Alison B. Parker studio. JMU's Media Arts & Design School also established the Alison B. Parker Memorial Fund in her honor. The Salem Educational Foundation and Alumni Association established the Adam Ward Scholarship fund to remember Ward. He had previously attended
Salem High School where his father, Buddy, had also worked as a guidance counselor. ==See also==