SALT LAKE CITY, UT -- James T. Hodgkinson unleashed 60 shots with a rifle this month at a GOP practice for the Congressional Baseball Game. Bullets found four individuals, as one, House Majority Whip Steve Scalise (R-La.), was hospitalized. This was the response from Rep. Mia Love (R-Utah):

"It is unbelievable that someone would open fire on the GOP baseball practice today. My prayers go out to Whip Steve Scalise, those who were shot and those who were injured. Some people wonder why I get so concerned when people are stalking my home and taking pictures of me and my children. Or why some members of Congress refuse to put themselves in harm's way, allowing hundreds of people to yell at them with no real dialogue taking place. The hatred is so bad, it only takes one person to take a mother or father away from their children. As Americans, we can not accept this behavior. It is unacceptable." Love district is Utah Congressional District 4. Utah's CD4 Coalition, after first condemning Hodgkinson's actions, suggested that Love's remark about people's questions about members of Congress was her offering why she hasn't held an in-person town hall since it asked for one 137 days ago as of June 28. (The date also marked 158 days since the presidential election of Donald Trump.) It also suggested that Love's comment was directed at the grassroots organization and proposed a handful of reasons why she shouldn't worry that it would act that way.

It added that Rep. Gabby Giffords said: "To the politicians who have abandoned their civic obligations, I say this: Have some courage. Face your constituents. Hold town halls." (Here's the full statement.)

Giffords made the statement about the meetings, in-person in American history, on Feb. 23. That's when a Republican lawmaker who has refused to hold a town hall invoked an assassination attempt that left Giffords, a centrist in Congress as a "blue dog," with a severe brain injury. Six others were killed and 13 injured in Giffords' meeting with constituents. Love has also failed to hold an in-person town hall since the presidential inauguration of Donald Trump. And as of June 27, there had been five full weeks of consecutive days of recess since the Jan. 20 inaugurations, aside from several other days off, according to the House Majority calendar.

Love apparently held three "tele town halls," on March 1, 18 and 23, according to her official website. But as of June 28, audio could be played for only one of them. (I've checked each audio four times since March 30.) And Love's audible one, on the 1st, was announced just hours before it occurred and saw Love host it with Rep. John Ratcliffe, a bill co-sponsor from Texas.

Constituents have said that Love district director Laurel Price told them that Love would meet in person only with "four to five people at a time," with no recording devices or media allowed. Love won two relatively narrow elections to kick off her career in Congress, by 5.1 and 11.5 percent, according to Ballotpedia.