Newtown shooting victims' parents intend to sue, documents show
Sunday marks 2nd anniversary of deadly shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School
The parents of some children killed in the 2012 Newtown school shooting have filed court documents indicating they plan to file wrongful death lawsuits, but it's not clear who would be sued.
Parents of half the 20 first-graders shot to death at Sandy Hook Elementary School have filed papers in probate court seeking to create estates for their children, a move that would allow the parents to file such lawsuits.
The documents, however, don't say who would be targets of such actions.
Eight of the estate filings were made this month, another was filed in late 2012 and the 10th was filed last year, according to probate court records. The Hartford Courant first reported the filings late Monday.
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Sunday is the second anniversary of the shootings. The statute of limitations to file most civil lawsuits in Connecticut is two years.
Several parents who filed the estate documents didn't immediately return messages seeking comment Tuesday.
The probate court filings involve 10 children killed in the massacre: Charlotte Bacon, Daniel Barden, Dylan Hockley, Jesse Lewis, Ana Márquez-Greene, Grace McDonnell, Jack Pinto, Jessica Rekos, Avielle Richman and Benjamin Wheeler.
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On Dec. 14, 2012, 20-year-old Adam Lanza shot his way into the school with a Bushmaster rifle and killed 20 children and six educators, then shot himself to death with a handgun.
The school shooting came after Lanza killed his mother, Nancy, at their Newtown home.
State investigations into the shooting indicated that Lanza was interested in mass killings, played violent video games and had books that dealt with death.
State police reports also included descriptions of Lanza's disturbing childhood writings, his access to his mother's legally owned guns and his mental health troubles and sporadic treatment.
Days after the killings, lawyer Irving Pinsky asked a state agency for permission to sue the state for $100 million on behalf of an unnamed six-year-old survivor of the massacre, saying state officials failed to shield his client from foreseeable harm. Pinsky withdrew the request days later.