Records from 2 mass shootings released at same time - WHAT A COINCIDENCE!

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May 11, 2007
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One set SCREAMS that the Sandy Hook shooter was not alone!

Sandy Hook Killer’s Home Contained Large Cache of Weapons
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/29/n...-at-adam-lanzas-home.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0

An astounding assortment of ammunition and weapons, including rifles, knives and samurai swords; damaged computer equipment; journals, a newspaper clip of a school shooting at Northern Illinois University, a report card from the time Adam Lanza attended Sandy Hook Elementary School.

Those were among a chilling inventory of items the police found in the home where Mr. Lanza plotted one of the deadliest school shootings in the nation’s history, according to search warrants of the home unsealed on Thursday for the first time since the Newtown massacre in December.

Mr. Lanza, 20, killed his mother, Nancy Lanza, on Dec. 14 in the spacious yellow home they shared in Newtown. He then drove to Sandy Hook Elementary School, which he attended as a child, and killed 20 first graders and 6 educators before killing himself as police officers arrived.

The search warrants, which a judge agreed to partially redact at the request of prosecutors, shed a glimmer of light on Mr. Lanza’s inner world that, more than three months after the tragedy, has largely remained a mystery.

Since the shootings, vague portraits of the gunman and his mother have emerged, showing a young loner who spent hours in a darkened basement room playing violent video games, and a woman who had collected numerous weapons, including powerful handguns and a semiautomatic rifle that she and her son enjoyed shooting.

The police say Mr. Lanza used a Bushmaster XM15-E2S semiautomatic rifle with several 30-round magazines in the attack at the school and also carried two semiautomatic handguns, one of which he used to kill himself. The police also found a 12-gauge shotgun in the car he drove to the school. Officials have said he fired more than 150 rounds in the school.

The police also discovered numerous books related to autism, including one titled “Born on a Blue Day – Inside the Mind of an Autistic Savant.” Another book was called “Train Your Brain to Get Happy.”

Neighbors and classmates of Mr. Lanza have said he had an autism variant known as Asperger syndrome, though investigators have never confirmed that he had such a diagnosis. Even so, his association with the disorder have raised alarms among parents of children with the diagnosis, fearing it may be associated with violence.

Experts say individuals with autism spectrum disorders are often bullied in school and the workplace, and frequently suffer from depression, anxiety and suicidal thoughts. But the experts also say there is no evidence that they are more likely than any other group to commit violent crimes.

As the police combed through his home after the shooting, they discovered Ms. Lanza lying dead in a bed in a second-floor bedroom with a gunshot wound to her forehead and a rifle nearby.

They also found hundreds of rounds of ammunition and a host of weapons in a brown safe and in bedroom closets.

The police also found a certificate from the National Rifle Association bearing the name Adam Lanza, a receipt from a shooting range in Oklahoma, an N.R.A. guide to the basics of pistol shooting and training manuals on the use of a variety of firearms, including a Bushmaster.

Among other items police officers found were seven journals written by Mr. Lanza, along with several of his drawings. The contents of the journals or the nature of the drawings was not disclosed. They also found three photographs of what appeared to be a dead person covered with plastic and what appears to be blood, and a New York Times article dated Feb. 18, 2008, about a school shooting at Northern Illinois University in DeKalb, Ill. In that shooting, Steven Kazmierczak killed 5 people and injured 21 on Valentine’s Day before he killed himself.

The day of the Newtown shooting, agents with the Federal Bureau of Investigation interviewed a person who said Mr. Lanza rarely left his home. The person, whose name is redacted, considered Mr. Lanza to be a “shut-in and an avid gamer who plays Call of Duty, amongst other games,” a law enforcement affidavit accompanying the warrants stated.

The documents’ release comes as state lawmakers in Hartford have been meeting on a daily basis in an effort to write a bipartisan bill that addresses gun violence and mental health issues.

Lawrence Cafero Jr., the minority leader of the Connecticut House, and others have been sharply critical of the State Police, the lead investigative agency, for refusing to turn over preliminary details of the investigation even as some information has been leaked to reporters and shared at law enforcement conventions.

Last week, The New York Daily News, quoting someone who had attended a convention in New Orleans, revealed that Mr. Lanza compiled a very large spreadsheet of mass killings and the weapons used in them.

The Hartford Courant previously reported that investigators had found news articles about the Norwegian mass murderer Anders Behring Breivik in one of two bedroom he used in the home. Mr. Breivik killed 77 people in two attacks in July 2011, most of them teenagers who were attending a summer camp.

Some lawmakers have complained that the information withheld by the State Police could help in the drafting of legislation. Under pressure from Gov. Dannel P. Malloy and various lawmakers, the Chief State’s Attorney’s Office is expected to release additional information from the investigation soon, possibly Thursday, though the State Police say a full report may not be complete until June.

The search warrants, and reports of what the police found in their searches, were initially sealed for two weeks after the shootings, but the Danbury state’s attorney, Stephen Sedensky III, received a 90-day extension, which expired on Wednesday. Mr. Sedensky wrote in his court motion that the search warrant affidavits contained information that “is not known to the general public and any potential suspect(s), the disclosure of which would jeopardize the investigation and chances of successfully solving any crime(s) involved.”

The documents released include inventories from searches of the Lanzas’ home at 36 Yogananda Street in Newtown and of the 2010 black Honda Civic Mr. Lanza drove to the school. Prosecutors redacted the names of witnesses cooperating with the police, emphasizing in particular one “citizen witness.” Identifying the witness, Mr. Sedensky wrote in his motion to redact, “could jeopardize” the person’s safety.

^^SECOND SHOOTER!

Whether the documents prove beneficial to lawmakers as they negotiate a gun-control package remains to be seen.

Mr. Lanza’s assault put Connecticut squarely in the center of a national debate over gun violence and firearms restrictions. But some Democrats and advocates of gun control in the state are concerned over how long the lawmakers are taking to introduce a bill, while other states like New York and Colorado have already enacted new limits on assault rifles or ammunition.

Time, some gun control advocates fear, is an enemy, even in a state traumatized by the killings and with widespread support, according to opinion polls, for new restrictions. But the state is also home to several gun manufacturers that have in the past successfully argued that restrictions would cost local jobs. And gun rights supporters have turned out in force at hearings and rallies to urge legislators not to use the Sandy Hook deaths to curtail what they regard as their constitutional rights.

In the wake of the attack, legislative leaders set up a bipartisan task force to study gun control and mental health issues and hoped to introduce legislation by the end of February. When that deadline passed, they set a new goal to have a package within three months of the attack, but that deadline passed, too.

Now lawmakers hope to have a bill introduced as early as next week. Democrats and Republicans agree on many of its elements, including expanded background checks, enhanced safe-storage requirements and additional regulations on buying ammunition. People close to the negotiations say that the list of assault weapons under an existing ban could be expanded and that the bill could restrict the sale of magazines that hold more than 10 bullets.

Gun-control advocates and some of the families of Newtown victims want a sterner bill that would also make it illegal to possess larger magazines, even those already owned.

====

Warrants reveal arsenal of weapons found in Newtown, Conn. shooter's home
http://www.ctvnews.ca/world/warrant...ound-in-newtown-conn-shooter-s-home-1.1214846



NEW HAVEN, Conn. -- Warrants released in the investigation of the Newtown school massacre reveal that an arsenal of weapons including guns, a gun safe with shotgun shells, a bayonet and several swords were found in the home of the gunman.

Investigators also found articles on other shootings and a holiday card containing a check made out to Adam Lanza for the purchase of a firearm, written by his mother, Nancy Lanza. And investigators found books about living with autism and Asperger's syndrome, as well as a National Rifle Association guide to pistol shooting.

Twenty-year-old Adam Lanza killed his mother inside their Newtown home on Dec. 14 before driving to Sandy Hook Elementary School and killing 26 people, including 20 first-graders. He killed himself as police arrived.

-t
 
Records provide new look at Ariz. shooting spree
http://www.kansascity.com/2013/03/28/4148560/records-provide-new-look-at-ariz.html#storylink=cpy

An erratic Jared Loughner walked into a convenience store with an urgent message for the clerk: "I need a ride to Safeway."



It was Saturday morning, and then-Rep. Gabrielle Giffords' meet-and-greet started at 10 a.m. As he waited for his taxi, Loughner nervously paced around the store and made several trips to the bathroom, gazing anxiously at a clock. "Nine twenty-five. I still got time," he said.

Loughner arrived and got in line with others waiting to meet the congresswoman. He opened fire about 10 minutes later as screams of "gun" rang out through crowd. Within moments, Giffords lay bleeding on the sidewalk with 11 others who were wounded. Six people were killed.

Almost everyone who crossed paths with Loughner in the year before the shootings described a man who was becoming unhinged.

He got fired from a clothing store and thrown out of college, shaved his head and got tattoos of bullets on his shoulder. He showed up at the apartment of a boyhood friend with a Glock 9 mm pistol, saying he needed it for "home protection." He made dark comments about the government, and, according to one acquaintance, appeared suicidal.

His spiral into madness hit bottom on that Jan. 8 day in 2011.

The information about Loughner's mental state - and the fact that no one did much to get him help - emerged as a key theme in roughly 2,700 pages of investigative papers released Wednesday. Still, there was nothing to indicate exactly why he targeted Giffords.

The files also provided the first glimpse into Loughner's family and a look at parents dealing with a son who had grown nearly impossible to communicate with.

"I tried to talk to him. But you can't," his father, Randy Loughner, told police. "Lost, lost and just didn't want to communicate with me no more."

His mother, Amy Loughner, recalled hearing her son alone in his room "having conversations" as if someone else were there.

Despite recommendations from Pima Community College that Loughner undergo a mental evaluation after the school expelled him, his parents never followed up.

In a statement released by the gun control advocacy group she started with her husband, Giffords said that "no one piece of legislation" would have prevented the Tucson shooting.

"However, I hope that commonsense policies like universal background checks become part of our history, just like the Tucson shootings are - our communities will be safer because of it."

While such checks may keep those with mental illnesses from obtaining guns, the 24-year-old Loughner had never been diagnosed with any conditions, meaning it's doubtful much would have stopped him from legally purchasing a weapon.

Friends and family interviewed by law enforcement after the shooting painted a picture of a young man who was deeply troubled in the weeks before the shooting.

Loughner visited Anthony George Kuck, who had known him since preschool. Kuck said he was alarmed to find he had shaved his head and was armed.

"I kicked him out of my house because he showed me his gun," Kuck said.

Kuck told police he had seen Loughner's mental state deteriorate over time, starting with drinking problems in high school, trouble with authorities and being kicked out of college.

"I know he has some crazy thoughts where he ... just believes the government is corrupt, and he has all these assumptions on things, that he doesn't really know what he's talking about," Kuck told investigators.

While he never heard him mention Giffords "he just seemed to have some kind of ... hate for government," Kuck added.

Kuck's roommate, Derek Andrew Heintz, who has known Loughner since he was about 12, said he was cooking when Loughner showed up with a gun and removed it from his belt. It was loaded with 32 rounds.

He asked Loughner why he had the weapon.

"I just want to show you,'" Loughner replied.

Loughner then left Heintz with a souvenir - one bullet.

His parents grew alarmed over his behavior on several occasions - at one point submitting him to drug-testing. The results were negative, said Amy Loughner, who was particularly worried that her son might have been using methamphetamine.

The father said his son kept journals, but they were written in an indecipherable script. Loughner bought a 12-gauge shotgun in 2008, but his parents took it away from him after he was expelled from college and administrators recommended he not own weapons.

On the day of the shooting, he and his father got in an argument, and he chased Jared Loughner away from their house. Friend Bryce Tierney told investigators Loughner called him early in the morning that day and left a cryptic voice mail that he believed was suicidal.

"He just said, 'Hey, this is Jared. Um, we had some good times together. Uh, see you later.' And that's it," Tierney said.

Onetime Loughner friend Zachary Osler explained how he worked at a sporting goods store where Loughner bought the handgun used in the shooting. He was questioned about seeing Loughner shopping there sometime before Thanksgiving and described an awkward encounter with the man.

"His response is nothing. Just a mute facial expression. And just like he, he didn't care," Osler told authorities.

News organizations seeking the records were denied access in the months after the shooting and the arrest of Loughner, who was sentenced in November to seven consecutive life sentences, plus 140 years, after he pleaded guilty to 19 federal charges.

Last month, a judge cleared the way for the release of the records after Star Publishing Company, which publishes the Arizona Daily Star in Tucson, joined by Phoenix Newspapers Inc., which publishes The Arizona Republic, and KPNX-TV, sought their release. The judge said Loughner's fair-trial rights were no longer on the line now that his criminal case has resolved.

Loughner's guilty plea enabled him to avoid the death penalty. He is serving his sentence at a federal prison medical facility in Springfield, Mo., where he was diagnosed with schizophrenia and forcibly given psychotropic drug treatments to make him fit for trial.

Loughner's attorney, Judy Clarke, didn't return a call seeking comment Wednesday. There was no listed telephone phone number for Randy and Amy Loughner.

Arizona's chief federal judge and a 9-year-old girl were among those killed in the rampage. Giffords was left partially blind, with a paralyzed right arm and brain injury. She resigned from Congress last year.

Giffords intern Daniel Hernandez described how constituents and others were lining up to see Giffords on the morning of the shooting. He helped people sign in and recalled handing the sheet on a clipboard to Loughner.

"The next thing I hear is someone yell, 'Gun,'" said Hernandez, who rushed to tend to Giffords' gunshot wound to the head.

"She couldn't open her eyes. I tried to get any responses from her. It looked like her left side was the only side that was still mobile," Hernandez told authorities. "She couldn't speak. It was mumbled. She was squeezing my hand."

Hernandez explained how he had some training as a nurse and first checked for a pulse.

"She was still breathing. Her breathing was getting shallower," he said. "I then lifted her up so that she wasn't flat on the ground."

When he was arrested at the scene, Loughner was wearing peach-colored foam earplugs and had two loaded magazines in his left front pocket for the Glock he used in the shootings.

Hours later, he was polite and cooperative as detectives began their initial interview.

As Loughner sat in restraints in an interview room, the conversation was confined mainly to small talk. Little was said over the first four hours. Loughner asked if he could use the restroom, then at one point complained he felt sore.

"I'm about ready to fall over," he said.

Today, Giffords is still recovering. She struggles to speak in complete sentences and often walks with the help of her husband.

In a January interview on ABC News, she said "daggers" to recount her tense, face-to-face encounter with Loughner at his sentencing. When asked to describe his mental illness, she said one word: "sad."

-t
 
Records from 2 mass shootings released at same time - WHAT A COINCIDENCE!
OzzyOsbourneSpeakOfTheDevil.jpg
 
Add to that a possible guilty plea for James Holmes so no evidence will come out in trial on that one.
 
Wow. This went over my head. I didn't even see where Obama gave an anti-gun speech today. Well, as they say, timing is everything.
 
Wow. This went over my head. I didn't even see where Obama gave an anti-gun speech today. Well, as they say, timing is everything.

Yeah - and Obama and the governors of NY and MD have been touring the country to promote gun control and the MD gun control law is being voted on in committee tomorrow.

This is anything but random...

-t
 
Also from today:

Guns, knives, ammo and gear: Adam Lanza's arsenal, item by item

Search warrants released Thursday laid bare the extent of Newtown school massacre suspect Adam Lanza's arsenal. Here is a catalog of the weaponry found at the school where 20 children and six staffers were killed and at the home he shared with his mother, who was also murdered:

At the school:

1 Bushmaster .223 caliber model XM15 rifle with a 30-round magazine

1 Glock 10mm handgun

1 9mm Sig Sauer P226 handgun

1 Saiga 12 shotgun with two magazines containing 70 rounds

6 30-round magazines, three of them emptied

At the home:

Guns:

1 Enfield bolt-action .323 rifle

1 Savage Mark II .22 caliber rifle with magazine, 3 live rounds, 1 spent cartridge

1 black marksman BB gun

Ammunition:

5 Winchester 12-gauge shotgun shells cut open, with buckshot

1 white plastic bag with 30 Winchester 12-gauge shotgun shells

1 can with .22 caliber and .45 caliber bullets

8 boxes of Winchester Windcat .22 caliber bullets, 50 rounds per box

20 "Estate" 12-gauge shotgun shells

4 boxes of SB buckshot 12-gauge, 10 round per box

1 box of Lightfield 12-gauge slugs

1 box of 20 Prvi Partizan 303 British rifle cartridges

1 box of 20 Federal 303 British rifle cartridges

2 boxes of .22 long rifle Blazer rounds, 50 each box

1 box with numerous rounds of Winchester .45 caliber bullets

2 boxes of 50 rounds of PPU .45 caliber automatic

1 box of 20 rounds for Remington .223 caliber

3 boxes of Blazer 40 S&W, 50 rounds each

2 boxes of Winchester 5.56 mm, 20 rounds each

1 box of Magtech 45ACP with 30 rounds

1 empty Box of SSA 5.56 mm

1 box of Fiocchi .45 auto with 48 rounds

80 rounds of CCI .22 long rifle

6 boxes of PMC .223 rem, 20 rounds each

6 Winchester 9 pellet buckshot shells, 12-gauge

2 Remington 12-gauge slugs

3 Winchester .223 rifle rounds

31 .22 caliber rounds

2 boxes of Underwood 10 mm auto, each with 50 rounds

130 rounds of Lawman 9mm Luger

2 spent shell casings for Glock 10mm

1 empty box of Gold Dot 9mm Luger

2 empty boxes of Winchester 9mm Luger

1 box of Underwood 10mm auto with 34 rounds

1 box of 29 miscellaneous 9mm rounds

1 spent .22 shell casing

1 small plastic bag containing numerous .22 caliber bullets

1 tan bag with numerous Blazer .45 caliber bullets

1 box of Blazer .22 long rifle with 50 rounds

1 box PPU 303 British cartridges with 9 rounds

2 Winchester 9mm rounds

2 brass-colored shell casings

1 small caliber bullet (live round) labeled C

Magazines:

1 Promag 20-round 12-gauge drum magazine

1 MD Arms 20-round 12 gauge drum magazine

3 AGP Arms 12-gauge shotgun magazines

1 Surefire GunMag magazine with 8 rounds of Winchester 12-gauge, 9-pellet buckshot

2 AGP Arms 12-gauge shotgun magazines, taped together, each with 10 rounds of Winchester 9-pellet buckshot

2 empty Ram Line magazines for Ruger 10-22

1 AGP Arms Gen 2 12-gauge shotgun magazine with 10 rounds of Winchester 12-gauge, 9-pellet buckshot

1 clear plastic Ramline magazine for an AR 15

1 magazine with 10 rounds of .223 bullets

Knives:

Metal bayonet

1 6-foot-10-inch wood-handled two-sided pole with a blade on one side and a spear on the other

1 Samurai sword with a 28-inch blade and sheath

1 Samurai sword with a 21-inch blade and a sheath

1 Samurai sword with a 13-inch blade and sheath

1 knife with a 12-inch blade and sheath

1 wooden-handle knife with a 7.5-inch blade and sheath

1 wooden-handle knife with a 10-inch blade

1 knife with a 5.5-inch blade and sheath

1 black-handled knife with a 7-inch blade and sheath

1 black rubber-handled knife with 9.5-inch blade and sheath

1 white and brown-handled knife with 5-inch blade and sheath

1 brown wood-handled knife with a 10.25-inch blade

1 Panther brown-handled folding knife with a 3.75 inch blade

1 small blue folding knife

Gear:

1 Volcanic .22 starter pistol wth 5 live rounds and 1 expended round

Leightning L3 ear protection

Peltor ear plugs

Simmons binoculars

Uncle Mike's Sidekick nylon holster

Box for vest accessories

Leather dual magazine holder

Black leather handgun holster

High Sierra fanny pack

Numerous paper targets

1 cardboard targets

1 Bushnell sport view rifle scope

Plastic bag of miscellaneous parts

Safariland holster paperwork

Glock handgun manual

MD-20 20-round shotgun magazine manual

MD Arms V-Plug guide

Bushmaster XM15 and C15 instruction manual

Savage Arms bolt-action rifle manual

Glock paperwork

Miscellaneous:

Adam Lanza's National Rifle Association certificate

Nancy Lanza's NRA certificate

Three photographs with images of what appears to be a deceased human covered with plastic and what appears to be blood

Holiday card with a check from Nancy Lanza to Adam Lanza for purchase of C183 firearm

1 digital print of a child and various firearms

1 military-style uniform

Handwritten notes with addresses of local gun shops

Receipts and emails documenting firearm and ammunition supplies

Blue folder labeled “guns” with receipts and paperwork

Paperwork titled "Connecticut Gun Exchange Glock 20SF 10mm" dated 12-21-11

Sandy Hook report card for Adam Lanza

New York Times article on a 2008 shooting at Northern Illinois Unversity

Books: “Look me in the Eye: My Life with Asperger’s;” “Born on a Blue Day: Inside the Mind of an Autistic Savant;” “NRA Guide to Basics of Pistol Shooting;” “Train Your Brain to Get Happy”

1 Seagate Barracuda 500gb hard drive, damaged

1 custom-built desktop computer, no hard drive


1 Microsoft Xbox with partially obliterated serial number

One cotton swab of blood-like substance

1 tan sheet with blood-like substance

1 tan fitted sheet with blood-like substance

1 striped towel with blood-like substance

http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/201...nd-gear-adam-lanzas-arsenal-item-by-item?lite

OK, so he accidentally shot his HD, couldn't play call of Duty any more so decided to play it for real - mystery solved!

-t
 
Why is the fact that a shooter had Aspergers bolded? I hope the intent wasn't to demonize folks who live with it.

There's absolutely no statistical correlation between Aspergers and violence, and I believe some studies have actually shown the inverse to be true.
 
Why is the fact that a shooter had Aspergers bolded? I hope the intent wasn't to demonize folks who live with it.

There's absolutely no statistical correlation between Aspergers and violence, and I believe some studies have actually shown the inverse to be true.

for the same reason that "people with Aspergers are often bullied" and that he went to the school he shot up was bolded. It points to a motive.

-t
 
Sandy Hook Families Urge Gun Control In Mayors Against Illegal Guns Ad
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/28/sandy-hook-families-ad_n_2970551.html

Mayors Against Illegal Guns, a group led by New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, released a television ad on Thursday featuring family members of four victims of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting last December.

The ad features the families of two first-graders and two teachers killed at Sandy Hook, out of the total 20 children and six adult staffers killed that day. The family members in the ad are Neil Heslin, father of first-grader Jesse Lewis; Chris and Lynn McDonnell, parents of first-grader Grace McDonnell; Jillian Soto, sister of teacher Vicky Soto; and Terri and Gilles Rousseau, parents of teacher Lauren Rousseau.

Translation: the families of 18 children killed at Sandy Hook are not in favor of Gun Control and refuse to have their children's deaths used as a political tool.

-t
 
There's some math problems arising since the latest report says 154 casings found yet only 3 empty 30 round mags and 1 half empty 30 round mag were found. One single 10mm casing was found as the suicide round. There's a gap of where 50 casings came from. Report also says total time from entry into the school to suicide was under 5 minutes. That means he averaged one shot every 2 seconds (at most, if given full 300 seconds). No time for reloading mags in there, particularly not 50 more rounds. Wouldnt make sense to reload empty AR mags anyway since he had the Glock and the Sig fully loaded, yet unused.

This thing just stinks more every day.
 
There's some math problems arising since the latest report says 154 casings found yet only 3 empty 30 round mags and 1 half empty 30 round mag were found. One single 10mm casing was found as the suicide round. There's a gap of where 50 casings came from. Report also says total time from entry into the school to suicide was under 5 minutes. That means he averaged one shot every 2 seconds (at most, if given full 300 seconds). No time for reloading mags in there, particularly not 50 more rounds. Wouldnt make sense to reload empty AR mags anyway since he had the Glock and the Sig fully loaded, yet unused.

This thing just stinks more every day.

The search warrants, and reports of what the police found in their searches, were initially sealed for two weeks after the shootings, but the Danbury state’s attorney, Stephen Sedensky III, received a 90-day extension, which expired on Wednesday. Mr. Sedensky wrote in his court motion that the search warrant affidavits contained information that “is not known to the general public and any potential suspect(s), the disclosure of which would jeopardize the investigation and chances of successfully solving any crime(s) involved.”

The documents released include inventories from searches of the Lanzas’ home at 36 Yogananda Street in Newtown and of the 2010 black Honda Civic Mr. Lanza drove to the school. Prosecutors redacted the names of witnesses cooperating with the police, emphasizing in particular one “citizen witness.” Identifying the witness, Mr. Sedensky wrote in his motion to redact, “could jeopardize” the person’s safety.

^^SECOND SHOOTER!

-t
 
The documents released include inventories from searches of the Lanzas’ home at 36 Yogananda Street in Newtown and of the 2010 black Honda Civic Mr. Lanza drove to the school. Prosecutors redacted the names of witnesses cooperating with the police, emphasizing in particular one “citizen witness.” Identifying the witness, Mr. Sedensky wrote in his motion to redact, “could jeopardize” the person’s safety.

^^SECOND SHOOTER!

-t

Still never heard any reasonable explanation of why the black Civic was recorded on police scanners as being registered to Christopher Rodia, not anyone named Lanza.
 
Why is the fact that a shooter had Aspergers bolded? I hope the intent wasn't to demonize folks who live with it.

There's absolutely no statistical correlation between Aspergers and violence, and I believe some studies have actually shown the inverse to be true.

True. But that provides Big Pharma with cover. You'll note that the article does not mention that Lanza was on antidepressants, even though those do have a statistical link with violence.

You'll also note that this...

Loughner's guilty plea enabled him to avoid the death penalty. He is serving his sentence at a federal prison medical facility in Springfield, Mo., where he was diagnosed with schizophrenia and forcibly given psychotropic drug treatments to make him fit for trial.

...comes well down the page from the section that puts considerably greater emphasis on some of his acquaintenances' statements that they thought his mistrust of government irrational, and receives no more weight that his mother's unconfirmed fears that he might have been on meth.
 
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