Nelson Mail

Gunman planned attacks for a year

- GERMANY Reuters

The 18-year-old German-Iranian gunman who killed nine people in Munich on Friday began planning the attack a year ago after visiting the German city of Winnenden where another teenager killed 15 people in 2009, Bavarian officials said on Sunday.

Materials found at the gunman’s home also showed he had been hospitalis­ed for psychiatri­c care for three months around the same time, and was an avid player of violent video games, the officials told a news conference.

One of the games was Counter Strike: Source, Robert Heimberger, president of the state crime office, said. He said it was ‘‘a game played by nearly every known rampage killer’’.

The gunman — identified by sources as David Sonboly — called himself ‘‘Ali’’ and once described the 17-year-old killer in the 2009 attack as a good person, according to a 16-year-old youth with whom he played video games in an online club, the German magazine Spiegel reported.

He frequently used online video handles such as ‘‘Hate’’ and ‘‘Rampage Killer’’, expressed nationalis­tic views, and was eventually excluded from the club because the other members were afraid of him, the magazine cited the other youth as saying.

‘‘We always expected something like what happened, but we never thought he could get a gun and then use it,’’ he said.

The gunman was also evidently inspired by Norwegian mass killer Anders Breivik, and likely deliberate­ly staged the shooting on the fifth anniversar­y of Breivik’s massacre of 77 people, Heimberger said.

Later on Sunday, German police arrested a 16-year-old Afghan youth on suspicion of a connection to the mass killing.

The youth was under investigat­ion for possibly having failed to report the plans of the gunman, who later shot himself, and may have played a role in a Facebook posting that invited people to the scene of the shooting, a police statement said.

‘‘There is a suspicion that the 16-year-old is a possible tacit accomplice to [Friday’s] attack,’’ it said.

Bavaria’s chief prosecutor Thomas Steinhaus-Koch said the gunman was treated for anxiety and been hospitalis­ed for psychiatri­c treatment from July to September 2015, followed by out-patient treatment as recently as last month.

Investigat­ors also found prescripti­on medicines at his home, where he lived with his parents and younger brother.

He had made reference to his hospitalis­ation in a heated exchange that was videotaped immediatel­y after the shooting.

‘‘I am German,’’ he yelled at a bystander in a nearby apartment house after he yelled a racial slur and threw a beer bottle. ‘‘Because of you I was bullied for seven years.’’

Officials said authoritie­s had investigat­ed allegation­s in 2012 that the gunman was bullied by three other children, but none of those individual­s — or any other classmates of the gunman — were among the shooting victims.

Nor did the victims include anyone who commented on a fake Facebook page created by the gunman in May, using photograph­s and the name of a young Turkish woman, the officials said. He had invited people to free food at the McDonald’s restaurant at 4pm local time, shortly before the shooting began.

Heimberger said the gunman likely purchased his weapon — a reactivate­d Glock 17 pistol — on the shadowy dark net area of the internet.

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