Chicago Sun-Times

GUNMAN WENT ON TRUMP TIRADE BEFORE ATTACK

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ALEXANDRIA, Va. — For three months, James T. Hodgkinson lived out of a white cargo van in a gentrified neighborho­od just miles from where U. S. laws are made. Fellow YMCA patrons saw him there most mornings working on his laptop. One bartender said he spent many evenings quietly sipping cans of Budweiser by himself.

The Bernie Sanders supporter told his wife he had an interest in tax policy, and he sold his Harley motorcycle and home inspection business before making the trip in March. By Tuesday, he seemed ready to come home, asking a mechanic to make sure his tires would survive the trip back to Illinois.

That was a day before he sprayed rifle fire at Republican members of Congress as they practiced for a charity baseball game, wounding House Majority Whip Steve Scalise and four others before he was mortally wounded by police. And it was at that auto shop that his anger flared during small talk with the mechanic.

“This man was just so passionate and hateful toward ( President Donald) Trump,” said Crist Dauberman, recounting Hodgkinson’s profanity- laden tirade. Among other things, Hodgkinson said Trump had screwed up the nation “more than anyone in the history of this country.” The Del Ray Service Center is known as a “neutral zone” of sorts when it comes to politics; lawmakers of both parties take their cars there.

“It was more than the average person who had maybe voted for Hillary. This was different. It was deeply rooted to where his whole tone and composure changed. His voice got loud and deep. There was so much anger in it.”

At the YMCA, Hodgkinson was nondescrip­t: he always wore black pants and golf shirts, sometimes beige, sometimes gray, sometimes black. Even his email address was basic: hodg@ att. net. He worked on his laptop and sipped coffee, rarely joining in the political discussion­s often set off by the TV.

“He would say ‘ yeah I agree’ or something like that,” said former Alexandria Mayor Bill Euille, who got to know Hodgkinson over the course of about six to eight weeks. “But he never really implied one way or the other that he was pro- Democrat, anti- GOP Republican or anything like that.”

Stephen Brennwald, an attorney and YMCA regular, said he thought it was odd that Hodgkinson never exercised or wore workout clothes. He thought about asking a staffer about him but never did.

“Looking back with 20/ 20 hindsight, I can see how the guy was troubled, but at the time I thought he was working,” Brennwald said.

In the evenings, Hodgkinson became a bit of a regular at the Pork Barrel BBQ restaurant just a few blocks from the ballfield where he opened fire. He always drank alone, and always drank cans of Budweiser — sometimes just one, sometimes as many as six, said Kristina Scrimshaw, a bartender at the restaurant. He rarely spoke. “He would just sit and stare at the Golf Channel,” she said.

On Tuesday, Hodgkinson broke his apparent silence at the garage.

“I wish I had some kind of clue that his hate was going to turn into a shooting,” said Dauberman, the mechanic. “But you just never know. People say weird things all the time.”

 ??  ?? James Hodgkinson protests in downtown Belleville, Illinois, in 2012.
| BELLEVILLE NEWS - DEMOCRAT VIA AP
James Hodgkinson protests in downtown Belleville, Illinois, in 2012. | BELLEVILLE NEWS - DEMOCRAT VIA AP

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