Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Shooter’s writings ordered released to the public

- By Dave Collins Associated Press

HARTFORD, CONN. >> Some of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooter’s personal belongings, including personal journals containing stories about hurting children and a spreadshee­t ranking mass murders, must be released to the public because they are not exempt from open record laws, the Connecticu­t Supreme Court ruled Tuesday.

Thousands of documents already have been released from the investigat­ion that ended without determinin­g a motive for the massacre of 20 first-graders and six educators at Sandy Hook Elementary School on Dec. 14, 2012, but the writings could provide insights into the thinking of the shooter, Adam Lanza.

The Hartford Courant and other media organizati­ons requested to view Lanza’s belongings, which were seized by authoritie­s during a search of Lanza’s home and described in a state police report released about a year after the shooting. State police rejected the requests, citing privacy rights in the state’s search and seizure law.

The Courant appealed to the state Freedom of Informatio­n Commission, which in 2015 ordered state police to release the documents. But Superior Court Judge Carl Schuman overruled the commission in 2016 — a decision overturned Tuesday in the 5-0 Supreme Court ruling.

“We feel these documents are necessary to tell a complete story in our reporting,” said Andrew Julien, publisher and editor-inchief of the Courant. “Understand­ing what a mass killer was thinking not only paints a clearer picture of the individual, it helps us identify and understand red flags that could be part of a prevention formula for future mass shootings.”

It’s not immediatel­y clear when the 35 requested items will be released. The state attorney general’s office, which represents state police and declined to comment Tuesday, could ask the Supreme Court to reconsider its ruling or possibly appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court. State police officials did not return messages seeking comment.

Among the disputed documents are a spreadshee­t ranking mass murders by name and number killed and a notebook titled “The Big Book of Granny.” The notebook contains a story that Lanza wrote in the fifth grade about a woman who uses her “rifle cane” to kill people.

Police also so far have not released an eight-page document titled simply, “me,” which was described in a police inventory as “detailing relationsh­ips, ideal companion, culture, voting, personal beliefs, describes doctors touching children as rape.” Another, named “tomorrow,” apparently contains details about the author’s “desires, list of the benefits of being thin and negative connotatio­ns associated with being overweight, list of goals ...”.

Some of the other requested items include a folder containing handdrawn, comic-style pictures and stories about Pokemontyp­e characters; a packet of educationa­l materials from the Sandy Hook school to Lanza’s mother including report cards and an educationa­l plan addressing his mental health issues; a list of problems and requests from Lanza to his mother; and a story about a relationsh­ip between a 10-year-old boy and a 20-year-old man.

A report by the Connecticu­t child advocate said Lanza’s severe and deteriorat­ing mental health problems, his preoccupat­ion with violence and access to his mother’s weapons “proved a recipe for mass murder.”

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Adam Lanza

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