US newsrooms fall silent to honour 5 slain at Maryland paper
ANNAPOLIS, Md. — Newsrooms usually abuzz with approaching deadlines fell oddly silent as journalists nationwide paused to honour five people shot dead a week before at a Maryland newspaper.
At a temporary office of the Capital Gazette, where the massacre occurred, survivors gathered somberly at 2:33 p.m. Thursday. Editor Rick Hutzell rang a bell and the staff lit candles for each person who died exactly seven days earlier, The Baltimore Sun reported.
At the New York headquarters of The Associated Press, dozens paused to reflect as Manhattan streets kept humming below. At The Virginian-Pilot in Norfolk, Virginia, voices cracked as a moment of silence was accompanied by the names of the five victims being read aloud.
“It was incredibly quiet,” said reporter Jane Harper, 55, who once worked at the Annapolis paper. “Not a cellphone rang. Not a desk phone. Not a single sound.”


