New Straits Times

Couple: No idea we had a monster under our roof

-

PARKLAND: The couple who took in Florida school shooter Nikolas Cruz after his mother’s death have described him as quirky but pleasant and seemingly on the right track, saying they had no idea they had a “monster living under our roof ”.

Cruz, 19, moved in with James and Kimberly Snead here in late November after his adoptive mother died that month from complicati­ons of pneumonia, they told the South Florida Sun Sentinel in an interview published on Sunday.

He was a friend of their son. Prone to odd eating and sleeping habits and unused to any form of housework, he was neverthele­ss making progress in dealing with his grief and kept himself busy with adult education classes along with his job at a discount store, the couple said.

“I told him there’d be rules and he followed every rule to the T,” James Snead, 48, an army veteran and military intelligen­ce analyst, told the paper.

“We had this monster living under our roof and we didn’t know,” said Kimberly Snead, 49, a neonatal nurse. “We didn’t see this side of him.”

Cruz killed 17 people at his former high school last Wednesday using an AR-15 rifle that he had legally purchased. It was the country’s worst school massacre since the horror at Sandy Hook six years ago that left 26 dead.

He owned other guns, including two other assault rifles, as well as knives, according to the Sneads, who own firearms themselves and did not find this unusual.

His ultimate aim was to join the army and become an infantryma­n, something he had become excited about after a recent meeting with a military recruiter.

A profile has emerged of a troubled young man who was expelled from school last year for “disciplina­ry reasons”.

The FBI admitted receiving a detailed warning last month about Cruz’s gun ownership, erratic behaviour and disturbing social media posts, as well as the potential for him carrying out a school shooting. The agency took no action, despite the tip-off.

Cruz was known to police after his mother repeatedly reported him for violent outbursts, while records obtained by the newspaper showed authoritie­s investigat­ed Cruz in 2016 after he cut his arms on messaging app Snapchat and threatened to buy a gun.

But he was eventually deemed a low risk and later passed a background check, allowing him in February last year to buy the AR15 rifle used in the massacre.

The Sneads said it appeared he grew up without ever having to do common chores. He couldn’t cook, do laundry, pick up after himself or even use a microwave.

He seemed lonely and badly wanted a girlfriend, and was also depressed about the death of his mother, the couple said.

Kimberly Snead had taken Cruz to the office of a therapist just five days before the shooting, and he had said he was open to therapy if his medical insurance would cover it.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia