Ten Years After the Isla Vista Killings (2024)

Table of Contents
Related Posts Car Crashes Through 7-Eleven Window in Goleta Santa Barbara County Supervisors Approve Funding for 12 New Mental-Health Beds Distracted Driving Sweep in Goleta Nets 142 Review | Melanie Martinez’s The Trilogy Tour Caruso Moves Ahead with Miramar Housing and Retail Project Hundreds of Gaviota Coast Watchdogs Oppose Newest Naples Project Isla Vista Cliff Victim Identified Ambulance Monopoly Trial Postponed in Santa Barbara Superior Court On Eternal Patrol How UC Santa Barbara Marine Science Institute Researchers Helped Solve the 2021 Huntington Beach Oil Spill Arnoldi’s Café Down but Not Out Caruso’s Creative Solutions ON the Beat | In and On the Red Piano, and Out On the Town Premier EventsSat, May 2510:00 AMSanta BarbaraSB Permaculture Participles in IMadonarri 2024Sun, May 2611:00 AM93103, Santa Barbara, CAMemorial Day Weekender PJ Brunch!Sun, May 2612:00 PMSanta BarbaraMarket at Pali Wine CoMon, May 2711:00 AMSanta BarbaraPCVF Memorial Day CeremonyWed, May 297:00 PMSanta BarbaraOne Night Only San Marcos H.S. JazzThu, May 307:30 PMSanta BarbaraEnsemble Theatre Presents “Alice: Formerly of Wonderland”Thu, May 307:30 PMIsla VistaUCSB Wind Ensemble Spring ConcertFri, May 319:00 PMSanta BarbaraFILM Screening: “Point Break”Sat, Jun 019:00 AMSanta BarbaraInaugural Walk to End Epilepsy Santa BarbaraSat, Jun 014:00 PMSanta BarbaraS.B. Zoo BrewSat, Jun 016:30 PMSanta BarbaraState Street Ballet Academy Presents: Tina the BallerinaSee Full Event Calendar

Richard Martinez sits against a background of colorful art — tissue paper squares, vibrant crayon, and blended pastels. It’s a gallery of creations by his only child, Christopher Michaels-Martinez, made when he was in elementary school.

Chris was shot and killed in Isla Vista on May 23, 2014, when he was 20 years old. He and two fellow undergraduates at UC Santa Barbara were fatally shot by Elliot Rodger, a 22-year-old former Santa Barbara City College student who stabbed three students to death, injured seven people with his car, and shot and wounded seven others before killing himself.

In the 10 years since, the Isla Vista massacre has galvanized three local lawmakers to pass gun safety laws — including one of the first at the federal level. And Martinez has become a relentless advocate for gun safety in memory of his son.

Ten Years After the Isla Vista Killings (1)

California became the first state to pass a red-flag law that allowed a family member to petition for gun removal. Assembly Bill 104, co-sponsored by Berkeley’s Nancy Skinner and Das Williams, Santa Barbara’s assemblymember in 2014 and now a county supervisor, allows relatives and law enforcement to ask a judge to remove firearms from a family member or member of the public for up to five years if the individual poses a threat to themselves or the community. And Hannah-Beth Jackson, a state senator at the time, passed a bill that required law enforcement to make a search of the state gun purchase database a part of welfare, or well-being, checks.

In Santa Barbara County, the red-flag law has been used to obtain an emergency order 21 times in 2023, according to the California Department of Justice. This was up from nine times in 2016, the first year the law was in effect. In all of California, the law was used 1,909 times in 2023, up from 85 times in 2016.

Martinez advocates as a member of the group Everytown for Gun Safety. He is supportive of the red flag laws, but updates and expansions of gun safety legislation are always needed, he said.

“Let me give you this example — airplanes. When they crash, we don’t say, ‘Airplane safety measures don’t work; throw them all out,’” Martinez said. “We find the black box, we study the crash, we figure out what went wrong, and then we improve the regulations. No single law or regulation is going to end gun violence.”

Ten Years After the Isla Vista Killings (2)

At the federal level, Congressmember Salud Carbajal’s Extreme Risk Protection Order legislation supports state efforts to enact red-flag laws. Attempting a law since reaching D.C. in 2017, Carbajal succeeded in 2022. He joined forces with Senator Dianne Feinstein to get a law through Congress that enables states to create, implement, and administer red-flag laws. They now exist in 21 states and the District of Columbia, according to a White House briefing.

The Bipartisan Safer Communities Act of 2022 was the first piece of legislation to expand gun control on the federal level in more than 30 years.

As a result of the Safer Communities Act, California received $29 million, the most received by a single state for red-flag laws, to improve the process of Gun Violence Restraining Order (GVRO) laws. Additionally, this year, crucial updates to the GVRO laws are being considered by the California Legislature.

“I will always say, yes, it can be improved. We have to study what happens and figure out ways to improve it now,” Martinez said. “There’s a bill pending right now in the California Legislature to do exactly that, to improve on what’s been done — AB 2621.”

AB 2621 would update California’s Gun Violence Restraining Order laws to include hate-crime training for law enforcement. AB 2917 is a related piece of legislation that would allow law enforcement to look at more risk factors when issuing a gun restraining order, including whether an individual has made hate-based threats or may engage in violence for political reasons.

Kendall Pata, the group lead of Santa Barbara’s Moms Demand Action chapter, highlighted the law in relation to Isla Vista.

“Given that the Isla Vista shooting was hate-based — the perpetrator was a misogynistic, woman-hating incel who had a clear mission — I think it’s really important that laws like this are coming to fruition, because some of these acts are hate-based and we have to look at that,” Pata said.

Moms Demand Action focuses on education. Pata says that each time new legislation is being considered or is passed, her group wants to make sure people know about it.

“The more bills there are, we have to educate the community about the GVRO and how to use it, and update law enforcement, updating parents, guardians, loved ones — it’s just such an important tool,” Pata said of ensuring people are educated about options related to gun violence restraining orders.

Ten Years After the Isla Vista Killings (3)
Ten Years After the Isla Vista Killings (4)
Ten Years After the Isla Vista Killings (5)
Ten Years After the Isla Vista Killings (6)
Ten Years After the Isla Vista Killings (7)
Ten Years After the Isla Vista Killings (8)

Reporter Mark Follman with Mother Jones has investigated the killings extensively, culminating in a new book on the incident. It includes the first public conversation with the killer’s mother, Chin Rodger. She had called the Santa Barbara County Sheriff’s Office for a welfare check on her son a month before the murders, but he succeeded in convincing deputies all was fine. Follman discussed the warning signs Chin Rodger noticed prior to the violence of May 23, 2014.

“Chin came to believe that that prevention would have been possible with different circ*mstances, namely, having more prevention policy in place and a behavioral threat assessment program in the community,” he said.

Through his reporting, conversations with Chin Rodger, and investigators involved with the case, Follman has learned that red-flag laws and threat-assessment policies are instrumental in violence prevention.

Ten Years After the Isla Vista Killings (9)

“The leader of the team there at the Sheriff’s Office, Dr. Cherylynn Lee, as well as her colleague, Lieutenant Joe Schmidt — who was involved in the case 10 years ago as the lead homicide detective — both told me that [red-flag laws have] become a, really, an essential tool for threat-management cases, stepping in with people where there’s significant concern of violent planning, and removing firearms using that law that now exists in California,” Follman said.

Across the past 10 years and into the future, Martinez remembers Chris through his advocacy work, through sharing memories, through his artwork that hangs proudly on display, through the UCSB basketball jersey that reads “Michaels-Martinez” and is emblazoned with Chris’s high school basketball number: five.

“I don’t want to get over it,” Martinez said. “And I don’t want to forget my son. He was the most important thing in my life. But I also feel an obligation to live with my life because he can’t and to do it in a way that honors his memory. It’s a way of moving forward after you’ve been to the bottom.”

A memorial ceremony will be held at noon on Thursday, May 23, at the Isla Vista Love and Remembrance Garden (977 Embarcadero del Norte) to remember the six who died 10 years ago: George Chen, Weihan “David” Wang, Chen Yuan “James” Hong, Katie Cooper, Veronika Weiss, and Christopher Ross Michaels-Martinez. For more information, see ivstrong.as.ucsb.edu.

Correction: The original version of this story listed California as the first state to pass red flag laws; in fact, California was the first to pass a law that allowed family members to petition for gun removal for safety reasons.

Related Posts

Car Crashes Through 7-Eleven Window in Goleta

By Jean Yamamura | Thu May 23, 2024

Santa Barbara County Supervisors Approve Funding for 12 New Mental-Health Beds

By Nick Welsh | Tue May 21, 2024

Distracted Driving Sweep in Goleta Nets 142

By Jean Yamamura | Thu May 09, 2024

Review | Melanie Martinez’s The Trilogy Tour

By Kat Sophia | Thu May 23, 2024

Caruso Moves Ahead with Miramar Housing and Retail Project

By Tyler Hayden | Thu May 23, 2024

Hundreds of Gaviota Coast Watchdogs Oppose Newest Naples Project

By Callie Fausey | Tue May 21, 2024

Isla Vista Cliff Victim Identified

By Margaux Lovely & Jackson Friedman | Mon Apr 22, 2024

Ambulance Monopoly Trial Postponed in Santa Barbara Superior Court

By Nick Welsh | Tue May 21, 2024

On Eternal Patrol

By Brad Proffitt | Sun May 26, 2024

How UC Santa Barbara Marine Science Institute Researchers Helped Solve the 2021 Huntington Beach Oil Spill

By Sonia Fernandez, UCSB's 'The Current' | Sat May 25, 2024

Arnoldi’s Café Down but Not Out

By Nick Welsh | Fri May 24, 2024

Caruso’s Creative Solutions

By Carol Anne Werner, Montecito | Fri May 24, 2024

ON the Beat | In and On the Red Piano, and Out On the Town

By Josef Woodard | Fri May 24, 2024

Premier Events

Sat, May 2510:00 AM

Santa Barbara

SB Permaculture Participles in IMadonarri 2024

Sun, May 2611:00 AM

93103, Santa Barbara, CA

Memorial Day Weekender PJ Brunch!

Sun, May 2612:00 PM

Santa Barbara

Market at Pali Wine Co

Mon, May 2711:00 AM

Santa Barbara

PCVF Memorial Day Ceremony

Wed, May 297:00 PM

Santa Barbara

One Night Only San Marcos H.S. Jazz

Thu, May 307:30 PM

Santa Barbara

Ensemble Theatre Presents “Alice: Formerly of Wonderland”

Thu, May 307:30 PM

Isla Vista

UCSB Wind Ensemble Spring Concert

Fri, May 319:00 PM

Santa Barbara

FILM Screening: “Point Break”

Sat, Jun 019:00 AM

Santa Barbara

Inaugural Walk to End Epilepsy Santa Barbara

Sat, Jun 014:00 PM

Santa Barbara

S.B. Zoo Brew

Sat, Jun 016:30 PM

Santa Barbara

State Street Ballet Academy Presents: Tina the Ballerina

See Full Event Calendar

Ten Years After the Isla Vista Killings (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Fredrick Kertzmann

Last Updated:

Views: 5994

Rating: 4.6 / 5 (46 voted)

Reviews: 85% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Fredrick Kertzmann

Birthday: 2000-04-29

Address: Apt. 203 613 Huels Gateway, Ralphtown, LA 40204

Phone: +2135150832870

Job: Regional Design Producer

Hobby: Nordic skating, Lacemaking, Mountain biking, Rowing, Gardening, Water sports, role-playing games

Introduction: My name is Fredrick Kertzmann, I am a gleaming, encouraging, inexpensive, thankful, tender, quaint, precious person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.