Dayton Daily News

Munich teen gunman ‘obsessed with attack’

Authoritie­s say he appeared to have started planning rampage a year ago.

- Melissa Eddy

The teenage gunman who killed nine MUNICH — people in a shooting rampage in Munich had been treated for depression and paranoia and appeared to have begun planning the attack about a year ago, German authoritie­s said Sunday.

The gunman, Ali Sonboly, who was the 18-yearold son of Iranian immigrant parents and held both German and Iranian citizenshi­p, had sought refuge in the internet, where he immersed himself in a violent video game and the so-called darknet of encrypted networks, through which authoritie­s suspect that he acquired the pistol used to carry out the attack.

Sonboly appeared to have begun planning the attack after visiting the site of a 2009 school shooting in Winnenden, Germany, in which 15 people were killed, initial evidence gleaned from his computer showed.

“We found a manifesto of his, in which he considers such attacks,” said Robert Heimberger, chief of the Bavarian State Criminal Police. “From photos we found on a digital camera, we know that he visited the site and took pictures there.”

Sonboly was “obsessed with that attack,” Heimberger said.

Later Sunday, Munich police said they had arrested a 16-year-old Afghan on suspicion of knowing about the planned attack, but failing to inform authoritie­s.

The Afghan teenager, who was not further identified, was a friend of Sonboly and went to police on Friday night and was questioned. But after searching the teenager’s home, police found conflictin­g informatio­n, leading them to detain the young man.

Although most of the victims in Friday’s shooting at the Olympic mall in a neighborho­od to the west of downtown Munich were also teenagers from the Munich area, police and prosecutor­s said they had found no links between them and the gunman. The victims included three 14-year-olds, two 15-year-olds, and individual­s ages 17, 19, 20 and 45.

The count of those injured had risen to 35, including several who were injured elsewhere in the city in the panic that followed the shootings at the mall, officials said.

Emergency calls to police had led them to believe there could be as many as three gunmen. With the rampage coming on the heels of the attacks by a Tunisian immigrant that killed 84 people in Nice, France, and by a young Afghan refugee wielding an ax and a knife who wounded five people on a train in Germany, fear spread quickly.

But Thomas Steinkraus-Koch, spokesman for the Munich prosecutor­s’ office, said initial evidence had not indicated any kind of political motivation for Sonboly’s attack.

Instead, it appeared that Sonboly used a Facebook account opened in May under a false name, or the name of a real girl who was not involved in the shooting, to invite people to the McDonald’s across from the mall, promising free food. Five of the nine victims were found inside the fast food restaurant, two others on the sidewalk in front, one in front of an electronic­s market and one inside the shopping mall. None of the victims were schoolmate­s of the gunman or appeared to have responded to the invitation over social media.

“None of those named in the commentary under the posting were among the victims,” Heimberger said.

Some reports have identified the gunman as David Ali Sonboly, but neighbors who lived in his apartment building said he was known to everyone as Ali. His parents remained too distraught to question, Heimberger said.

Heimberger stressed that officials had only begun their investigat­ion, but that evidence collected so far painted a picture of a mentally disturbed teenager obsessed with mass shootings and first-personshoo­ter video games, including “Counter-Strike: Source.”

Medical records showed that the gunman had received inpatient psychiatri­c treatment for two months in 2015 and continued to be seen on an outpatient basis, said Steinkraus-Koch. Prescripti­on medication for treatment of depression was found in Sonboly’s home, Steinkraus-Koch said, but it was not clear if he was regularly taking the medication.

After a brief altercatio­n with police, the gunman turned his refurbishe­d Glock 17 pistol on himself, firing a bullet into his head, Steinkraus-Koch said. The pistol was a former theater weapon that had been restored to be capable of shooting live rounds.

Pressed for further details about the weapon and the gunman’s activities in the dark internet, Heimberger said he knew little about the murky world of the darknet, which is accessible only by certain software and is used by criminals and terrorists to communicat­e without being detected.

 ?? JOHANNES SIMON / GETTY IMAGES ?? People mourn the slayings of nine people at a shopping center in Munich. Details about the gunman emerged Sunday.
JOHANNES SIMON / GETTY IMAGES People mourn the slayings of nine people at a shopping center in Munich. Details about the gunman emerged Sunday.
 ?? AP ?? People mourn Sunday beside the Olympia shopping center, where a shooting took place leaving nine people dead Friday in Munich. The victims included three 14-year-olds, two 15-year-olds, and individual­s ages 17, 19, 20 and 45.
AP People mourn Sunday beside the Olympia shopping center, where a shooting took place leaving nine people dead Friday in Munich. The victims included three 14-year-olds, two 15-year-olds, and individual­s ages 17, 19, 20 and 45.

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