Peter Lanza, the father of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooter, spoke out for the first time since his son’s rampage and suicide in Newtown, Conn., more than a year ago.
In a lengthy interview with the New Yorker’s Andrew Solomon, Peter Lanza opened up on the upbringing, mental health struggles, and relationships that his son had in the years leading up to the murder of 27 students, educators, and Adam’s mother.
By speaking with the media, Lanza said he hopes to help other families avoid the horrible end his own son’s mental illnesses found.
“I need to get some good from this. And there’s no place else to find any good. If I could generate something to help them, it doesn’t replace, it doesn’t—” he tells Solomon, struggling for words.
He says he’s offered to meet with the victim’s families; two have taken him up on it.
“It’s gut-wrenching,” he said. “A victim’s family member told me that they forgave Adam after we spent three hours talking. I didn’t even know how to respond. A person that lost their son, their only son.”
“But I would trade places with them in a heartbeat if that could help,” he adds.
The interview contrasts early reports that Lanza was an absentee father amidst a child’s mental health crisis, depicting a persistent and attentive father pushed away by his son. Lanza said he saw the estrangement as a natural part of adolescence.
“I had to give him space,” Lanza said. “He’ll get more mature; I’ll just keep doing what I can, staying involved.”
But now, with hindsight, he said he can see how far his son’s mental state—and their relationship—had deteriorated.









