The Borneo Post

Police were warned of shooter grudge against YouTube

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SAN FRANCISCO: Police said Wednesday they had been alerted that the Iran- born animal rights activist who shot three people before killing herself at YouTube’s California headquarte­rs, was believed to have a vendetta against the online giant.

The father of Nasim Najafi Aghdam informed police in the Silicon Valley hub of Mountain View that she had gone missing from her San Diego home, and may have travelled to the area because she was furious at YouTube’s alleged censorship of her video channels.

But officers in Mountain View – who found her sleeping in her car early Tuesday – said they saw no reason to detain her.

Hours later Aghdam, 39, burst into the courtyard of the YouTube headquarte­rs in nearby San Bruno during lunchtime, opening fire with a 9mm handgun.

She wounded two women and one man before turning the gun on herself as police surrounded the campus of the world’s leading video- sharing platform.

Aghdam, who also went by the name Nasime Sabz, was an activist who posted videos on her YouTube channels supporting animal rights and vegan causes, in English, Turkish and Farsi – as well as bizarre dance and workout clips performed in outlandish costumes.

San Bruno police said her motive appeared to be anger over YouTube’s policies.

“At this point in the investigat­ion, it is believed that the suspect was upset with policies and practices of YouTube. This appears to be the motive for this incident,” police chief Ed Barberini said Wednesday.

Barberini said they had recovered a handgun registered to Aghdam, and that she had gone to a local gun range on Tuesday before entering YouTube offices via the parking garage.

Of the three wounded, the man remains in serious condition at Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital, a spokesman said. The two women wounded were released Wednesday.

Aghdam was one of a number of people in the animal rights community who complained that Google- owned YouTube had placed restrictio­ns on their postings, ostensibly because their videos were viewed as too gory for the general public.

She and others also complained about YouTube’s small revenuesha­ring payments for advertisin­g that runs on their channels.

“Growing on YouTube is not in your hands,” Aghdam complained in one video.

“It all depends on who is controllin­g your channel.”

In addition to restrictin­g her postings on animal mistreatme­nt, she said, YouTube had blocked others.

“They age- restricted my ab workout video, a video that has nothing bad in it, nothing sensual,” she complained.

There were no immediate reports of her having been a known threat or having a police record.

Police in Mountain View, where YouTube parent Google is located, confirmed that they found her sleeping in her car just after midnight Tuesday morning.

But they said she showed no sign of being a threat or in trouble, and they had no cause to detain her. — AFP

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