Our hearts are broken for the family and loved ones affected by the horrific murders that recently occurred in Livonia, Michigan. No words can adequately express the grief that follows the loss of parents, a brother, and a young woman whose lives were cut short by an act of unimaginable violence.
As details continue to emerge, one fact remains clear: this was a devastating family tragedy. It was an act of murder committed by an individual who chose violence against those closest to him.
In the aftermath of such events, emotions understandably run high. We search for answers. We look for ways to prevent similar tragedies from occurring again. Those are worthy goals. But if we truly want to address violence, we must begin by accurately identifying its causes.
Many media outlets have labeled this incident a "mass murder" or "mass shooting." While those descriptions, based on the number of victims, may be technically accurate, they can also obscure the underlying reality of what occurred. This was not a random attack on strangers. It was not terrorism. It was not gang violence.
This was a domestic violence homicide.
That distinction matters because different forms of violence have different causes, risk factors, warning signs, and solutions.
When a drunk driver causes a fatal crash, we focus on impaired driving. When a gang-related shooting occurs, we focus on criminal organizations. When a family member murders relatives during a domestic dispute, we should focus on the factors that contributed to that domestic violence situation.
Lumping all forms of violence together under a single political narrative does little to help future victims. In fact, it often distracts from the interventions that might actually save lives.
Unfortunately, tragedies involving firearms are frequently followed by calls for broader restrictions on the constitutional rights of millions of Americans who have done nothing wrong. Yet no new law could have restored the lives lost in Livonia after a murderer made the decision to kill.
Yet Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer will use this incident to further her legislative goals for 2026. The Governor and her gun control lobby partners believe firearm ownership is a public health problem to be “managed.”
The report created by the Governor’s Michigan Gun Violence Prevention Task Force reads like a blueprint for the gun control lobby’s wish list in 2026 and beyond. This wasn’t written by neutral “public-health experts.” The Michigan Department of Health and Human Services (MDHHS) is an organization packed with activists, bureaucrats, and gun control lobbyists.
And buried in the middle of their so-called “recommendations” is a call for sweeping new gun control, including the groundwork for a ban on so-called “assault weapons,” magazine bans, and stricter purchase restrictions.
Michigan's responsible gun owners, including countless women, mothers, fathers, veterans, first responders, and community leaders, are not responsible for the actions of a violent criminal. They should not be treated as such.
As women, my fellow Women For Gun Rights members and I understand the importance of personal safety. Many of us became firearm owners because we refused to outsource our protection to chance. We carry firearms not because we seek confrontation, but because we value life, including our own and that of our families. As women, we do not own firearms to take life, we own them to protect life.
The overwhelming majority of firearms owners will never commit a violent crime. They store their firearms responsibly. They follow the law. They train regularly. They are among the most law-abiding citizens in our communities. The fact is that the average police response time in the State of Michigan is 14.5 minutes. Twenty-five minutes in rural areas and as much as an hour in the Upper Peninsula. When seconds count, the police are minutes away. The reality is that you are your own first responder, and the state should not deny law-abiding citizens the right to own and operate effective self-defense tools.
When a murderer commits an atrocity, justice demands that we hold the murderer accountable. It is wholly inappropriate for anyone to suggest that we strip rights from people who had nothing to do with the crime.
If this tragedy teaches us anything, it is that violence begins with violent individuals - not with inanimate objects. We should be willing to have difficult conversations about domestic violence, family conflict, mental health crises, and warning signs that loved ones may be spiraling toward violence. Those discussions may be uncomfortable, but they are far more productive than assigning blame to millions of responsible citizens.
The victims of Livonia deserve more than political talking points. They deserve honest conversations about what happened and how similar tragedies might be prevented. The Governor’s Task Force focuses on tools instead of perpetrators. Indeed, it is Education, not Legislation, that is the key to gun safety.
As we mourn with this family and community, let us commit ourselves to seeking solutions grounded in facts rather than fear. Let us support victims, hold criminals accountable, and protect the constitutional rights of the responsible citizens who continue to make our communities stronger and safer every day.
Our deepest condolences remain with all those whose lives have been forever changed by this terrible loss.
Marcy Jankovitch is the Michigan Director for Women for Gun Rights. Marcy had a distinguished career as an Executive Paralegal and now serves as firearms instructor and operations manager for Michigan Combat Dynamix, LLC, and is also a certified Well Armed Woman Instructor and volunteer co-leader of the local Armed Women of America, Jackson Chapter.
Editor’s Note: The radical Left will stop at nothing to enact their radical gun control agenda and strip us of our Second Amendment rights.
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