Greenwich Time

911 transcript­s reveal chaotic scene in Maine shooting

- By Patrick Whittle and David Sharp

PORTLAND, Maine — Emergency calls pouring into dispatch centers as a gunman opened fire with an assault rifle reflected the chaos of the unfolding situation as shots rang out first at a bowling alley, then minutes later at a bar.

The 911 transcript­s of the Oct. 25 shooting, the deadliest in Maine history, were released on Monday. They showed that people began identifyin­g the shooter soon after the photo was released to the public. The transcript­s captured tense moments including dispatcher­s staying on the phone with callers, providing encouragem­ent and telling them to wait for police to announce their arrival.

“Just keep those around you as quiet as possible. If you hear the police announce themselves, make yourselves known, but otherwise I want you to stay down and stay quiet, okay?” one dispatcher­s said in the transcript­s, released in response to a Freedom of Access Act request by The Associated Press and other news organizati­ons.

About two hours after the bowling alley shooting, one caller said they saw a picture of the suspect online and correctly identified him as Robert Card of Bowdoin. The caller described Card's deteriorat­ing mental health state as known to the community, saying he had recently kicked his family out of his house and “they're basically estranged and he's just not been well.”

The caller's name is redacted, but their statements support previously released police and military statements about Card's mental health state and potential danger to the community. The caller goes on to state that Card was known to have firearms in his house, and that the sheriff 's department had previously been contacted about his behavior and mental health.

“We've just been really concerned about his mental health lately,” the person said.

In another call, the 911 operator became frustrated at one point over not being able to transfer a call with a person who said they are in the back field behind the bar.

“Let me get you over to the call center, OK?” the 911 operator says. Soon after, the operator says “Why won't it let me transfer it? It won't let me transfer it at all. Jesus Christ.”

All told, 18 people were killed and 13 wounded when an Army reservist opened fire on Oct. 25, leaving behind carnage and prompting a lockdown for tens of thousands of residents during the biggest manhunt in state history. It ended with the discovery of the body of gunman Robert Card II two days later in nearby Lisbon. An autopsy concluded he died by suicide.

An independen­t commission appointed by Gov. Janet Mills is investigat­ing all aspects of the shootings, which sparked consternat­ion over why warning signs about Card's deteriorat­ing mental health were ignored.

Concern about Card's behavior accelerate­d when he was hospitaliz­ed for two weeks while with his Army Reserve unit for training at West Point, New York. After his release, his access to military weapons was restricted, and he was no longer allowed to be deployed with his unit.

His fellow reservists remained worried about him upon his return to Maine. One of them wrote to a superior in September in a text: “I believe he's going to snap and do a mass shooting.”

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