Dayton Daily News

Causes of mass shootings complex

Research says shooters are male, feel victimized and have mental distress.

- By Katie Wedell and Kaitlin Schroeder Staff Writers

When a mass shooting occurs it is common for communitie­s to look to mental illness as the cause.

But most wide-scale studies of mass shooters — including one released just last week — repeatedly show that mental illnesses are not the main cause of such tragedies.

Ohio Governor Mike DeWine focused on mental illnesses last week in his response to the Oregon District shooting. Among other proposals, he called for increased access to inpatient psychiatri­c care, “wrap-around services,” early interventi­on training, online mental health services for students, training on risk factors, and red- flag legislatio­n to keep guns out of the hands of the mentally ill.

Dayton-area health officials applaud these measures and any steps that will help improve the community’s mental health.

But research has shown the behavioral factors that lead some to commit heinous acts ofmass violence are more nuanced and complex than a label of mental illness.

Dr. Victoria Kelly, president of Ohio Psychiatri­c Physicians Associatio­n, said that mass shootings can seem so unbelievab­le, people might blame mental illness because it’s hard to picture what else could

be the cause.

“I think that’s just the wrong path to go because we run the risk ofmaking everything amental disorder, which shouldn’t be the case either,” she said. Kelly said it is frustratin­g when

mental health profession­als have to continuous­ly fifififigh­t stigma after a mass shooting.

“I think the other big thing is that in mental health, we care a lot about gun policy. And it’s frustratin­g to have to continue to have the same discussion that we needmore research into this public health crisis. That’s just not happening,” Kelly said.

Studies of mass-shooters in the U.S. have found that about 25% have a diagnosed mental illness, which is a slightly higher rate than the percentage of people in the general population — 18%.

TheNationa­lCouncil forBehavio­ral Health released a 96-page study last week titled, “Mass Violence inAmerica: Causes, Impacts and Solutions,” which summarized research fifindings intomass shooters.

According to the report, the most common characteri­stics that mass shooters share are: ■ They are male;

■ They feel hopeless and harbor grievances related to work, school, fifinances or relationsh­ips

■ They feeling victimized and sympathize­with otherswho they perceive to be similarly mistreated;

■ They have an indiffffff­fffffferen­ce to life.

By the standards of mental healthprof­essionals, these attackers are in mental distress, which is diffffffff­fffferent from having a mental illness.

“Perpetrato­rs ofmass violence may bemotivate­d bymental distress fromlife events and circumstan­ces or by the symptoms of mental illness. These are not the same and thus require diffffffff­fffferent

modes of detection and prevention,” theNationa­l Council report says. “At present, our current health care delivery systemis not designed to address the causes or detect and provide interventi­ons for people at risk for mass violence behavior.”

Others studiesnot­ethatanoth­er common trait: many have a history of domestic violence.

“It’s a pattern experts have noticed,” said SarahWolf-Knight, grants and advocacy manager at YWCA Dayton. “Not just domestic violence among these mass shooters, but also just this pattern of toxic masculinit­y.”

In Dayton, it’s still unknown publicly if the shooter was ever diagnosed with a mental health disorder or illness, although a woman who said she recently dated himsaid he told her he had bipolar and obsessive compulsive disorders. Neither his family nor investigat­ors have confifirme­d that diagnosis.

He did have a history of threatenin­g women who he felt had wronged him. Multiple witnesses

said he was discipline­d in high school for creating a “hit list” of girls he wanted to rape and kill. His band performed a genre of music that focuses on violent imagery including raping and

killing women. “In more than a third of the public attacks over the past eight years we’ve been able to directly identifyth­eperpetrat­orshadcomm­itted some form of violence against women,” Wolf- Knight said. Talking about or actually

brutalizin­g woman is the common denominato­r that appears long before the mass killing in dozens of these cases, she said.

And while the Southern Poverty LawCenter has labeledmal­e supremacy a hate ideology, it’s not a mental illness diagnosis.

Perpetuati­ng stigma

The rush to label mass shootings as acts of “mentally ill monsters,” as President Donald Trump said last week, is often too broad, experts said.

“Since it is diffifficu­lt to imagine that a mentally healthy person would deliberate­ly kill multiple strangers, it is commonly assumed that all perpetrato­rs of mass violence must be mentally ill,” the National Council report says.

Whenmental illness becomes the accepted reason for mass

violence, it follows that restrictin­g the liberty of people with mental illnesses and preventing them from owning guns are the solutions.

“This simplistic conclusion

ignores the facts that mass violence is caused by several diffffffff­fffferent social and psychologi­cal factors that interactwi­th each other in complex ways, that many if not most perpetrato­rs do not have a diagnosabl­e mental illness and that the large majority of people with diagnosabl­e mental illnesses are not violent toward others. Following the Dayton shooting,

the American Psychiatri­c Associatio­n said people with mental illness are far more likely to be victims of violent crime than perpetrato­rs of violence.

“Rhetoric that argues otherwise will further stigmatize and interfere with people accessing needed treatment. Individual­s can also be emboldened to act violently by the public discourse and divisive rhetoric,” the associatio­n said.

The termmental health casts a wide net that encompasse­s a range of behaviors and diagnoses. Similarly, the National Council notes that mental illness, “is a highly elastic clinical termthat can mean many things but is often used without definition in the mass violence narrative.”

National Alliance on Mental Illness, one of the leading mental health advocacy groups, advocates for peoplewith personalit­y disorders as part of the mental health community. The organizati­on also distinguis­hes between personalit­y disorders and other diagnoses such as schizophre­nia. Personalit­y disorders, such as antisocial personalit­y disorder (colloquial­ly called sociopathy), are not curable but are treatable.

Kelly said personalit­y disorders are an entirely diffffffff­fffferent category than illnesses like bipolar disorder, schizophre­nia, depression, or even PTSD.

“Personalit­y disorders are a pervasive pattern of experienci­ng life and it affects the way that you think about things. It afffffffff­fffects your ability to regulate yourmood, impulse control and function in interperso­nal ways,” she said. “So that is different

than bipolar disorder or schizophre­nia, depression, where you might have isolated episodes.”

Terry Russell, executive director for NAMI Ohio, which is the state- level chapter, said blamingmen­tal health problems can stigmatize everyone. He emphasized that treated mental illness and untreated mental illness are diffffffff­fffferent situations and said untreated mental illness can sometimes play a role in violent crimes, though overall people with mental health issues are no more likely to commit violent crimes than others.

“We believe that those committing these senseless acts that have an untreatedm­ental illness may have exhibited symptoms prior to their crimes. We must educate everyone in society to recognize these symptoms but more importantl­y be capable of referring to immediate treatment,” Russell said.

Characteri­stics of a mass shooter

Mass shootings are incredibly rare, accounting for two-tenths of one percent of all homicides. Couple that with the fact that many of perpetrato­rs end up dead, and it’s a very difficult phenomenon to study scientific­ally, experts told the Dayton Daily News.

“Even though it’s rare, it does seemto be accelerati­ng,” said Dr. Randon Welton, associate professor of psychiatry and director of residency training at the Wright State University Boonshoft School of Medicine. From 2011 to 2014 there was onemass shooting every 64 days, up from one every 200 days from 1982 to 2011.

“It would be tough to explain that accelerati­on by mental illness, becausemen­tal illnesshas­n’t tripled since 2011,” Welton said.

The Secret Service compiled informatio­n on 28 mass attacks in public spaces during 2017.

The only things 100% of the attackers had in common was that they were all male and they

all had experience­d acute stress in the past fifive years due to life events including but not limited to a job loss, the end of a marriage or a family health crisis.

The next most common factor was aggressive­ly narcissist­ic behavior, which was seen in the histories of 82% of attackers.

“Some inappropri­ately asserted control over others, as observed by their histories of domestic violence, sexual assault, harassment, or harming animals. Others had a history of violent or angry outbursts following interperso­nal conflflict­swith co-workers, neighbors, or family members,” the report says. “Some attackers displayed an inflflated sense of self or entitlemen­t, unrealisti­cally believing that they were deserving of certain relationsh­ips, successes, or benefits, with some reacting angrily when they did not obtain what they believed they deserved.”

Nearly 80% of the attackers studied that year had a history of concerning or threatenin­g communicat­ion. About half had a history of substance abuse, 32% had priordomes­tic violence incidents, and a quarter followed an ideol

ogy that played into their crime such as being a white suprema

cist or conspiracy theorist. Welton said none of these factors on their own predicts amass shooting, but in combinatio­nthey elevate the risk.

What can be done?

In the wake of themass shooting and the resurfaced conversati­on onmental health, Ohio MedicaidDi­rector Maureen Corcoran highlighte­d mental health investment­s already in the works by the DeWine administra­tion.

De Wine recently signed an executive order that took changes that were coming for behavioral health services and made those change se ff ff ff ff ff f fe ct ive Aug .1.

This includes higher reimbursem­ent rates for crisis services, which can include crisis providers that ride along with police, crisis providers that admit people whomight otherwise be brought by police to a jail, and agencies that evaluate people at hospital emergency rooms to see if they need to be admitted to a psych hospital.

“Wewanted tomake some targeted investment­s that would help stabilize services andmake sure that we didn’t lose access to services that exist,” Corcoran said.

The DeWine administra­tion is also working on increasing supports forhelping children be emotionall­y and behavioral­ly healthy froman early age, such as a pilot telehealth program that will let schools remotely connect childrenwi­th a behavioral provider.

These are all needed improvemen­ts, experts said, andwill certainly help prevent deaths, especially from suicide. But alone they will likely not stop future mass shooting incidents.

Red flflag or extreme risk protection laws, for example, are a solution being put forward that would allow families and law enforcemen­t to petition a judge to temporaril­y remove fifirearms from individual­s at imminent risk for using themto harm themselves or others. Andwhile the data shows that many mass shooters do exhibit concerning behavior ahead of their crime, a much smaller percentage make direct threats about their target. It makes it diffifficu­lt to prove an “imminent” risk, Welton said.

“We can predict people who are at a higher ( risk), but predicting when they’re going to be violent we’re really bad at,” he said. “In hindsight you can build a case for mental illness or mental distress, but the key is could youhave done that before hand?”

Personalit­y traits like narcissism, victimhood and toxic masculinit­y can be worked on with therapy, but it’s a long process, Welton said.

“Disgruntle­ment, there’s no pill for that,” he said. “A 72-hour psychiatri­c hold is not the answer for these individual­s. Theywould have to consent to many days, weeks and years of therapy to learn where their warped view of reality stems from, and how to better cope with stress and disappoint­ment.”

TheYWCA inNashvill­e isworking to combat toxicmascu­linity froman early age through a programcal­led, “Amend Together.” The Dayton YWCA is hoping to get a grant to bring the program here.

The idea is to dismantle harmful stereotype­s in boys so they don’t grow up to be domestic abusers.

“It’s really this narrow and repressive definition of what we in society have been telling people what it means to be man ,” Wolf-Knight said .“Designatin­g man hood to bede fifi ned by things like violence, sex, status, aggression, so that’s what a lot of men are raised thinking that that’s what they need to be or demonstrat­e in order to be considered a man.

Health offifficia­ls hope investment in early interventi­ons with kidswill preventmas­s shootings down the road by producing adults who have empathy, can cope with stress and failure in healthy ways and don’t turn to violence as a solution.

“If you take those individual­s who are already pre-determined to commit things like domestic violence because of the way they were conditione­d culturally and societally, ( combine that with) access to weapons, and even knowledge of some of these other mass shootings that they are inflfluenc­ed by and are able to look at these things on the internet,” Wolf-Knight said.

“I think it all probably comes together to increase that prevalence.”

 ?? JIMOTTE / STAFF ?? OhioGov. Mike DeWine announcing gun safety proposals Tuesday with Lt. Gov. Jon Husted and fifirst lady Fran DeWine.
JIMOTTE / STAFF OhioGov. Mike DeWine announcing gun safety proposals Tuesday with Lt. Gov. Jon Husted and fifirst lady Fran DeWine.

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