Bangkok Post

YouTube shooter’s bizarre videos key to suspected motive

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MENIFEE: The woman whom police say shot three people at YouTube’s headquarte­rs was prolific at producing videos and posting them online, many of them bizarre such as a clip in which she removes a revealing purple dress to expose fake breasts with the message, “Don’t Trust Your Eyes”.

In others, Nasim Aghdam exercises, promotes animal rights and explains the vegan diet, often in elaborate costumes or carrying a rabbit.

The videos have become central to the motive authoritie­s have settled on for the shooting: Aghdam’s anger with the policies of YouTube, the world’s biggest online video website.

Nasim Aghdam, who was in her late 30s, posted the videos under the online name Nasime Sabz, and a website in that name decried YouTube’s policies, saying the company was trying to “suppress” content creators.

“Youtube filtered my channels to keep them from getting views!” one of the messages said. “There is no equal growth opportunit­y on YOUTUBE or any other video sharing site, your channel will grow if they want to!!!!!”

People who post on YouTube can receive money from advertisem­ents that accompany their videos, but the company “demonetise­s” some channels for reasons including inappropri­ate material or having fewer than 1,000 subscriber­s.

YouTube had no comment about any actions related to Aghdam’s videos.

She also ran a Farsi-language public channel on the messaging app Telegram, which had 6,000 followers. Telegram reportedly has some 40 million users in Iran. In one post she says “internet crackdown and filtering is increasing in the West”.

Police who found Aghdam sleeping in her car early on Tuesday in the city of Mountain View about 40km from YouTube headquarte­rs said she was calm and said nothing about being angry with YouTube or having any plans to harm others or herself.

“It was a very normal conversati­on. There was nothing in her behaviour that suggested anything unusual,” said Mountain View Police Chief Max Bosel.

Later that day, Aghdam went to a gun range before walking through a parking garage into a courtyard at YouTube’s campus south of San Francisco, where she opened fire with a handgun and wounded three people, police said. She then killed herself.

Two women wounded in the shooting were released on Wednesday from a San Francisco hospital. The third victim, a 36-year-old man, was upgraded from critical to serious condition.

The suspect’s father, Ismail Aghdam, told the Bay Area News Group he warned police the day before the attack that his daughter was upset with how YouTube handled her videos and might be planning to go to its offices.

Police in Mountain View said they spoke to Ismail Aghdam twice after contacting the family to report finding his daughter and that he never told them she could become violent or pose a threat to YouTube employees. During her 20-minute interview with officers, Nasim Aghdam said she was having family problems and had left her home, police said.

Agents with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives on Wednesday searched two homes where Nasim Aghdam had lived — one in Menifee, which is southeast of Los Angeles, and another in 4S Ranch, north of San Diego.

Nasim Aghdam referenced a since-deactivate­d website, PeaceThund­er, in a 2014 interview promoting veganism. The state attorney general’s website shows a charity group named PeaceThund­er affiliated with Nasim Aghdan was dissolved at her request in 2011. She gave no reason.

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