Lodi News-Sentinel

Dayton shooter obsessed with killing, former classmates say

- By Will Garbe, Jeremy P. Kelley and Jennifer Brett

DAYTON, Ohio — The man who killed nine people Sunday morning in Dayton’s Oregon District was once kicked out of his high school for making a list of girls he wanted to kill, the Dayton Daily News learned in interviews with former classmates and school administra­tors.

Connor Betts, 24, of Bellbrook was shot and killed by Dayton police, ending a brief yet deadly rampage in which he killed his sister, eight others and injured 27.

Police said they haven’t yet establishe­d a motive for Sunday’s massacre. But acquaintan­ces tell the Dayton Daily News the warning signs — signs of the shooter’s unusual obsession with killing and death — cropped up long ago.

“This isn’t a mystery to me,” said one middle school classmate. “I’m furious.”

The classmate, who spoke to the newspaper on condition of anonymity, said Betts once said he fantasized about tying her up and slitting her throat. The fetish was so macabre that even the shooter admitted he was scared of his thoughts, the woman recalled him saying.

“He knew it wasn’t normal,” the woman said about the decade-old conversati­on. “He and I talked at length about him getting help.”

The woman said she and her parents told Bellbrook police about the bizarre admission, but the woman said she felt she wasn’t taken seriously, despite the wouldbe shooter including her on a hit list.

Bellbrook police haven’t released informatio­n about any involvemen­t they might have had with him.

Chris Baker, the former Bellbrook High School principal who resigned this summer, confirmed to the Dayton Daily News that Betts was suspended for causing a lockdown by writing a hit list on a bathroom wall.

“I would not dispute that informatio­n, but I don’t want to get involved any more than just making that comment,” Baker said.

Sinclair Community College officials said Betts enrolled there in 2017 and studied psychology, but he wasn’t taking classes this summer.

“We are actively working with law enforcemen­t to provide any and all informatio­n we may have to assist them in the response to this horrific act,” said Steve Johnson, the college president.

Law enforcemen­t executed a search warrant Sunday morning at a home in Bellbrook. A background check purchased by the Dayton Daily News listed the home as Betts’ place of residence. Dayton police said Betts’ adult criminal history was limited to traffic violations, such as speeding, failure to control his vehicle and failure to yield.

The newspaper also purchased a background check of Betts’ social media history. Among the details that surfaced in the search were MySpace photograph­s of notebook sketches showing odd phrases handwritte­n in screamo music-style font. The posts appear to be about a decade old.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States