Edmonton Journal

MOTHER OF EL PASO GUNMAN EXPRESSED CONCERN ABOUT RIFLE.

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The Dallas-area mother of the young man arrested in the mass shooting that killed 22 people in El Paso, Texas, had called police weeks earlier expressing concern about his fitness to own an assault-style rifle, CNN said on Wednesday.

The mother contacted the Allen Police Department because she worried whether her 21-year-old son, Patrick Crusius, was mature or experience­d enough in handling such a weapon to have purchased an “Ak”-type firearm, CNN said, citing lawyers for the suspect’s family.

CNN quoted the lawyers, Chris Ayres and R. Jack Ayres, as saying the mother’s call was “informatio­nal” in nature rather than motivated by concern that her son posed a threat to anyone.

“This was not a volatile, explosive, erratic-behaving kid,” Chris Ayres told the network. “It’s not like alarm bells were going off.”

CNN said it was not known whether the gun that the mother inquired about was the same weapon police said was used in Saturday’s attack.

Authoritie­s have said they are investigat­ing the attack as a hate crime and an act of domestic terrorism.

Police say Crusius, a white male from the Dallas suburb of Allen, drove 1,046 kilometres to the west Texas border city of El Paso before opening fire at a Walmart store there.

Most of the 22 people killed were Hispanic, including eight Mexican citizens. At least two dozen people were injured. The suspect, who surrendere­d to police, has been charged with capital murder.

A racist, anti-immigrant manifesto believed by authoritie­s to have been written by the suspect was posted online shortly before the attack, which the author called a “response to the Hispanic invasion of Texas.”

During his mother’s query to Allen police weeks earlier, according to her attorneys, she was transferre­d to a public safety officer who told her that based on her descriptio­n of her son, he was legally allowed to buy the weapon in question, CNN said.

The mother, the lawyers told the network, did not give police her son’s name, and police did not seek any additional informatio­n from her before the call ended.

A statement posted by Allen police on Twitter this week, in response to media inquiries about the suspect’s prior encounters with law enforcemen­t, listed just three relatively minor contacts in department records.

The most recent, in March, was a false burglar alarm reported by the suspect at his grandparen­ts’ home, a call police said “was cleared without incident according to protocol.”

In 2014, the suspect was reported as a juvenile runaway, but returned home without incident about 30 minutes later, police said.

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