When Ohio Governor Mike DeWine tried to speak at a candlelight vigil less than 24 hours after last year's mass shooting in Dayton, he was shouted down by a crowd chanting, "Do Something!"

In the days that followed, stories of victims and heroes flooded the news. National media outlets set up tents on the brick streets of the Oregon District.
Nicole Duke, who was shot in the head but managed to survive, says it was all over in a matter of seconds.
"My sister heard the shots, and she yelled out, 'Run! Gun shots!' And that鈥檚 all I remember. My sister wasn't hurt. She fell to the ground with me and never left. She laid over top of me," Duke says.
While she lay on the sidewalk, employees at Ned Pepper鈥檚 were hustling people into the bar away from the gun fire.
Jeremy Ganger is the bouncer who pushed people inside, then stood in the bar鈥檚 open doorway as the shooter came running toward him.
"At that point in time, what was going through my head was, 'I hope the cops get him before he gets me.' Because I wasn鈥檛 going to let him in. I didn鈥檛 want him to hurt anyone else," Ganger says.

And the shooter didn鈥檛 hurt anyone else. Dayton Police on duty that night shot and killed him. He stopped moving just a few feet from the bar鈥檚 open doors.
It was all over in just 32 seconds. Nine people were killed. Dozens more were injured. And people started wondering how many would have been murdered that night if those police officers hadn鈥檛 been on the block 鈥 and if they hadn鈥檛 been specifically trained in how to stop a mass shooting in that nightclub area. Six Dayton police officers received the law enforcement Medal of Valor at the White House.
And all across the Miami Valley, yard signs with the slogan 鈥淒o Something!鈥 started sprouting up. Governor DeWine unveiled a 17-point plan to stop gun violence. At that meeting, DeWine talked about that crowd who shouted him down back in Dayton.
"Some of the crowd were angry. In fact, I鈥檓 sure everybody was angry," he said. "Some chanted, 'Do Something!' and they were right. We must do something, and that is exactly what we are going to do."
But, so far, one year later, nothing has been done. And DeWine isn鈥檛 the only Ohio politician who has tried and failed to pass meaningful gun reform.

Peggy Lehner is a Republican state senator who represents some of Dayton鈥檚 largest suburbs. After the shooting she came out in favor of what she called common sense gun reform, and she co-sponsored new legislation.
She says the majority of her constituents are in favor of simple changes, like universal background checks, but the gun lobby in Ohio is just too strong.
"I think it鈥檚 tragic. I feel like we鈥檝e let the community down, because the community as a whole was very supportive of getting something done this time," she says.
Lehner, who has been a state senator for almost a decade, says some radical gun rights advocates tried to intimidate her during senate proceedings after she stood up for reform.
"When I sat down in one of my hearings, a couple members of Ohio Gun Owners were sitting behind me and whispering threats," she says, and she says she's never been threaten at work.
"No. It has not happen to me before, but then again, I haven鈥檛 sponsored gun legislation in the past. Maybe it鈥檚 been happening to people all along."
Lehner says she doesn鈥檛 see any gun reform legislation passing in Ohio this year.
And in Dayton, most of the 鈥淒o Something!鈥 yard signs that sprouted up last year have been taken down.
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