Honor ‘smiles and laughter,’ not horror

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(NewsNation) — As demolition began on the building at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School where his daughter and 16 others were killed in 2018, Tony Montalto said their legacies should be the smiles and laughter they shared on campus – not the horror of how they died.

Montalto, whose 14-year-old daughter Gina was among the victims of the Valentine’s Day massacre six years ago in Parkland, Florida, hopes a memorial at the site can honor the slain students with something like a water feature visible from the road.

“Their legacy should be the smiles and the laughter that…



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