Tucson Shooting: Remembering the Dead
Dorwan Stoddard shielded wife; Christina-Taylor Green was 9/11 baby.
Jan. 9, 2011 -- When bullets started flying Saturday outside a Safeway grocery store in Tucson, Ariz., in an assassination attempt on Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords, Dorwan Stoddard and his wife Mavy Stoddard hit the ground trying to save themselves from the gunman's frenzy.
"He did what any loving husband would do, dive on a grenade for his wife," Michael Nowak, a pastor at Mountain Avenue Church of Christ in Tucson and a friend of the couple, said.
Dorwan Stoddard, 76, lay on top of his wife, Mavy, protecting her from the torrent of bullets. Mavy Stoddard thought her husband was hurting her by lying on top of her, not realizing that she'd been shot three times in the legs, Nowak said.
Dorwan Stoddard was fatally wounded, dying at the scene of the mass shooting that's left six dead and 14 injured.
The two had known each other all their lives but had only fallen in love 15 years ago after each had lost their spouses, Nowak said. Now Mavy Stoddard is preparing to bury a husband for the second time.
"It's a shock," Nowak said. "She has moments of breakdown, but is always positive that he's in heaven. When she comes to church here next week, it's really going to hit her very hard."
The Stoddards are an integral part of the 140-member congregation at Mountain Avenue. Dorwan Stoddard volunteered as the head of the benevolence ministry and the maintenance ministry.
"He was a teddy bear, he didn't have a mean bone in him," Nowak said. "He couldn't say no to anybody inside the church, outside the church. ... He was always reaching into his wallet to give people money."
The retired construction worker had a history of heart attacks but didn't let his health stop him. He was known to drive his truck to help people move.
Today, at church services, the congregation remembered Dorwan Stoddard and prayed for Mavy Stoddard's health. She is still in the hospital, Nowak said.
Church members also prayed for the other dead victims: John Roll, Gabriel Zimmerman, Phyllis Schneck, Dorothy Morris and Christina-Taylor Green.
Christina-Taylor Green: 9/11 Baby
Christina-Taylor, just 9 years old, was the youngest victim of Saturday's shooting. She was born on Sept. 11, 2001.
Christina-Taylor had just been elected student council president at Mesa Verde Elementary School.
Roxanna Green, Christina-Taylor's mother, said her daughter had attended the event to learn "more about the political process."
Christina-Taylor is the granddaughter of former Phillies manager Dallas Green. Her father is John Green, a scout for the Los Angeles Dodgers.
Christina-Taylor was taken to Giffords' informal town hall meeting by a neighbor, said her mother.
The girl had recently received communion at St. Odilia Parish in Tucson, where she also sang in the choir. Christina-Taylor was the only girl on an all-boys little league baseball team.
"She was a beautiful girl inside and out," Green said. "She was wonderful and very intelligent."
The oldest victim in the tragedy, Phyllis Schneck, 79, was remembered by friends on Facebook today.
"She was a member of our church and of our craft group. I will miss her great disposition, her laugh, and smile. She was always a helper, such a sweetheart. Our prayers go out to her children and grandchildren," Julie Crane posted on her Facebook wall.
Crane told ABC News that she attended Norminster Presbyterian Church with Schneck and was on the crafts committee with her. Members of the church remembered her at services today.
"There were a lot of tears today," Crane said. "We're going to miss Phyllis a great deal."
Schneck was a widow who spent part of the year in Tucson and her summers in her native New Jersey. She was a mother of three and a grandmother, Crane said.
Crane had received a robo-call from Giffords and went to the political gathering to see Giffords speak, Crane said.
"She was very interested in what our government is doing," Crane said.
The grandmother was known for her ability to bake sweets like almond cookies and brownies with mint chips in them. She also was a talented seamstress, sewing beautiful quilts, Crane said.
Also lost in the shooting was U.S. District Court Judge John Roll. Roll, 63, had served on the U.S. District Court for the District of Arizona since 1991.
"He was a good judge," said retired Chief Judge Thomas Zlaket, who sat on the bench with Roll. "But first and foremost he was a good human being."
Tucson Bishop Gerald F. Kicanas recalled that Roll often attended early morning mass before work.
"Judge Roll was a person of great faith and great integrity," Kicanas said in a statement. "He lived his faith as a servant of our nation for the cause of justice."
Roll leaves behind a wife, three sons and five grandchildren.
Gabriel Zimmerman, a staffer for Giffords, also died. Zimmerman, 30, was the director of community outreach for the congresswoman.
He was a former social worker and leaves behind a fiancee.
Emily Friedman and Ariane DeVogue contributed to this report.