Trigger Points: Inside the Mission to Stop Mass Shootings in America

Trigger Points: Inside the Mission to Stop Mass Shootings in America

by Mark Follman

Narrated by Mark Deakins

Unabridged — 7 hours, 44 minutes

Trigger Points: Inside the Mission to Stop Mass Shootings in America

Trigger Points: Inside the Mission to Stop Mass Shootings in America

by Mark Follman

Narrated by Mark Deakins

Unabridged — 7 hours, 44 minutes

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Overview

""An urgent read that illuminates real possibility for change.” -John Carreyrou,*New York Times*bestselling author of*Bad Blood

For the first time, a story about the specialized teams of forensic psychologists, FBI agents, and other experts who are successfully stopping mass shootings-a hopeful, myth-busting narrative built on new details of infamous attacks, never-before-told accounts from perpetrators and survivors, and real-time immersion in confidential threat cases, casting a whole new light on how to solve a grievous problem

It's time to go beyond all the thoughts and prayers, misguided blame on mental illness, and dug-in disputes over the Second Amendment. Through meticulous reporting and panoramic storytelling, award-winning journalist Mark Follman chronicles the decades-long search for identifiable profiles of mass shooters and brings readers inside a groundbreaking method for preventing devastating attacks. The emerging field of behavioral threat assessment, with its synergy of mental health and law enforcement expertise, focuses on circumstances and behaviors leading up to planned acts of violence-warning signs that offer a chance for constructive intervention before it's too late.

Beginning with the pioneering study in the late 1970s of ""criminally insane"" assassins and the stalking behaviors discovered after the murder of John Lennon and the shooting of Ronald Reagan in the early 1980s, Follman traces how the field of behavioral threat assessment first grew out of Secret Service investigations and FBI serial-killer hunting. Soon to be revolutionized after the tragedies at Columbine and Virginia Tech, and expanded further after Sandy Hook and Parkland, the method is used increasingly today to thwart attacks brewing within American communities.

As Follman examines threat-assessment work throughout the country, he goes inside the FBI's elite Behavioral Analysis Unit and immerses in an Oregon school district's innovative violence-prevention program, the first such comprehensive system to prioritize helping kids and avoid relying on punitive measures. With its focus squarely on progress, the story delves into consequential tragedies and others averted, revealing the dangers of cultural misunderstanding and media sensationalism along the way. Ultimately, Follman shows how the nation could adopt the techniques of behavioral threat assessment more broadly, with powerful potential to save lives.

Eight years in the making, Trigger Points illuminates a way forward at a time when the failure to prevent mass shootings has never been more costly-and the prospects for stopping them never more promising.

Supplemental enhancement PDF accompanies the audiobook.


Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

01/10/2022

Mother Jones journalist Follman debuts with an engrossing and surprisingly hopeful look at the field of behavioral threat assessment and how it is being used to prevent mass shootings. Drawing on interviews with mental health experts and criminologists seeking to identify the “warning behaviors” perpetrators exhibit before an attack, Follman spotlights clinical psychologist Robert Fein, who in 1976 began working with inmates at Bridgewater State Hospital for the Criminally Insane near Boston. Following the assassination of John Lennon, the U.S. Secret Service turned to Fein and his mentor, psychiatrist Shervert Frazier, to produce the “definitive study on mentally ill assassins.” Detailing their findings and those of other threat assessment practitioners, Follman discusses how heavy media coverage of mass shootings and high-profile assassinations fosters “emulation behavior” among potential assailants, documents how the spread of “entrenched political and ideological views” online fuels violent extremism, and explains how “early intervention and a less outwardly harsh response” can stop disgruntled employees from killing their coworkers. He also delves into the legal and logistical complications of trying to identify and thwart would-be assailants and speaks with victims of mass shootings. Full of intriguing case studies and examples of the “promise and limitations” of threat assessment, this is an optimistic take on one of America’s most distressing problems. (Mar.)

From the Publisher

In a fascinating new book...the journalist Mark Follman makes the case that despite our intractable political and cultural differences, mass shootings don’t have to be inevitable.” — New York Times

"An engrossing and surprisingly hopeful look at the field of behavioral threat assessment and how it is being used to prevent mass shootings...an optimistic take on one of America’s most distressing problems." — Publishers Weekly

“A strong argument for a more proactive approach to the American pandemic of bullets.” — Kirkus Reviews

“With the politics of gun control forever gridlocked, we seem powerless to halt the sinister American ritual of mass shootings. But Mark Follman offers us remarkable hope: Stopping would-be shooters before they strike, it turns out, isn’t just possible, it’s happening with regularity. This fascinating deep dive into averted shootings and the true nature of these attacks is an urgent read that illuminates real possibility for change.”
John Carreyrou, New York Times bestselling author of Bad Blood

“If there’s any way of stopping the plague of mass shootings in America, it will be due to the imaginative efforts of the professionals Follman profiles in this valuable book. Filled with investigative insights, Trigger Points is a gripping narrative of major tragedies and others prevented.”
Lawrence Wright, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Looming Tower, Going Clear, and The Plague Year

“Extraordinary and captivating…with his deep research and analysis and artful prose, Follman compels us to get past our political stalemate on gun violence. We get to know experts who are revolutionizing the work of behavioral threat detection, courageous shooting survivors who are helping them, and the truth about what leads so many perpetrators down a “pathway to violence.” It’s an epic story and an absolute must for all who want to know how we can make our nation safer." — Juliette Kayyem, Chair of the Homeland Security Project at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government and former Assistant Secretary of DHS

“Mark Follman's Trigger Points exposes America's long misunderstood mass shootings and how a generation of failed policies have made these recurring disasters “everyone's problem,” as he writes. In this wide-ranging and compelling account, he makes sense of what we too often explain away as "senseless tragedies," revealing the many missed warning signs and opportunities to intervene. Elegiac and eye-opening—but even more so nonpartisan and hopeful—this book is a vital contribution to understanding how we can seek real answers that save lives.” — Garrett Graff, New York Times bestselling author of The Only Plane in the Sky

“[An] important and incisive new book.” — David Grann, author of The Wager and Killers of the Flower Moon

“Important work on a subject that couldn’t be more timely.” — Margaret Sullivan, Washington Post media columnist and author

Garrett Graff

Mark Follman's Trigger Points exposes America's long misunderstood mass shootings and how a generation of failed policies have made these recurring disasters “everyone's problem,” as he writes. In this wide-ranging and compelling account, he makes sense of what we too often explain away as "senseless tragedies," revealing the many missed warning signs and opportunities to intervene. Elegiac and eye-opening—but even more so nonpartisan and hopeful—this book is a vital contribution to understanding how we can seek real answers that save lives.

Juliette Kayyem

Extraordinary and captivating…with his deep research and analysis and artful prose, Follman compels us to get past our political stalemate on gun violence. We get to know experts who are revolutionizing the work of behavioral threat detection, courageous shooting survivors who are helping them, and the truth about what leads so many perpetrators down a “pathway to violence.” It’s an epic story and an absolute must for all who want to know how we can make our nation safer."

John Carreyrou

With the politics of gun control forever gridlocked, we seem powerless to halt the sinister American ritual of mass shootings. But Mark Follman offers us remarkable hope: Stopping would-be shooters before they strike, it turns out, isn’t just possible, it’s happening with regularity. This fascinating deep dive into averted shootings and the true nature of these attacks is an urgent read that illuminates real possibility for change.”

Lawrence Wright

If there’s any way of stopping the plague of mass shootings in America, it will be due to the imaginative efforts of the professionals Follman profiles in this valuable book. Filled with investigative insights, Trigger Points is a gripping narrative of major tragedies and others prevented.”

New York Times

In a fascinating new book...the journalist Mark Follman makes the case that despite our intractable political and cultural differences, mass shootings don’t have to be inevitable.

Kirkus Reviews

2021-12-22
The national affairs editor of Mother Jones ponders whether the carnage will ever end.

The most salient solution to the complex problem of mass shootings in America is stricter gun control laws, which “would help diminish an overall national toll of nearly 40,000 shooting deaths and 115,000 injuries annually.” Given the absolutist opposition to any regulation of firearms, however, such laws are unlikely to emerge. Follman, who created a mass-shootings database a decade ago, proposes that communities must take a closer look at their members to predict who might go off and why, studying behavioral warning signs (which range from bitter grievances to stalking and actively planning attacks, amassing ammunition, and other matters), and telling others about their concerns. “What if there existed a community-based model for intervening constructively with troubled people well before they armed themselves and went on a rampage?” Follman asks. Positive results have already emerged from efforts to institute such a model. After the Virginia Tech shootings of 2007, Virginia mandated that each school create a crisis-response team that would not only develop plans for defense, but would also attempt to forecast attacks. Libertarians may voice alarm about the potential Big Brother–ism inherent in such approaches, by which “a teacher notices something disturbing about a student’s comments or notebook marginalia, for example, and alerts a principal. Or an office worker gets freaked out by a colleague’s odd or vaguely menacing behavior and tells a supervisor.” Still, since it’s nearly impossible to predict who is going to commit mass violence without behavioral clues, Follman concludes in a book for both policymakers and attentive citizens, it’s almost all we have to go on. Other signature features, such as the desire for fame or to outdo last week’s shooter in the number of victims, and other triggers, such as rejection or bullying, announce themselves in “concerning behavior” that is too often dismissed, particularly by family members.

A strong argument for a more proactive approach to the American pandemic of bullets.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940173191984
Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
Publication date: 04/05/2022
Edition description: Unabridged
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