Los Angeles Times

Mass killer part of alt-right, report says

Elliot Rodger, who stabbed and shot six people in Isla Vista, had interest in Nazis.

- By Ben Poston

Elliot Rodger, the 22year-old who killed six students in the college town of Isla Vista in 2014, was the first “alt-right killer” to strike in recent years, according to a new report from the Southern Poverty Law Center.

The report counts Rodger among 13 alleged altright killers whose actions left 43 people dead and more than 60 injured since 2014.

The alleged perpetrato­rs were all men and most were under 30 years of age, the report says. The common thread: All participat­ed in the “far-right ecosystem that defines the alt-right.”

One of them made several references to Rodger before carrying out his attack last year, the report says.

William Edward Atchison used the pseudonym “Elliot Rodger” online and praised the “supreme gentleman,” a moniker Rodger gave himself that became an alt-right meme, according to the report. Atchison, 21, entered a New Mexico high school Dec. 7 and killed two students before taking his own life.

The list also includes Dylann Roof, the white supremacis­t convicted of fatally shooting nine black members of a Bible class in South Carolina in 2015.

Kelly Hoover, public informatio­n officer for the Santa Barbara County Sheriff ’s Office, said she had not read the Southern Poverty Law Center’s report but noted that investigat­ors had previously documented Rodger’s interest in Nazi figures.

“That’s something that did come out as part of the investigat­ion,” Hoover said.

A 2015 report by the sheriff ’s office revealed Rodger’s research of Nazis, including some of the architects of the Holocaust. The report does not mention the alt-right.

“Upon review of the suspect’s internet search history, investigat­ors have learned that the suspect was very interested in some of the practices and techniques of the Third Reich,” the sheriff’s report said. “The suspect’s in-depth research included informatio­n about Joseph Goebbels and

Heinrich Himmler, two infamous members of the Nazi hierarchy.”

The internet search history log shows Rodger had looked for terms such as “If you were Adolf Hitler” and “Nazi curbstomp.”

The sheriff’s report noted that Himmler’s date of death coincided with the date of Rodger’s attack: May 23. The report, however, says this appears to be purely coincident­al.

The Southern Poverty Law Center’s report says the “timeline for alt-right killers began on May 23, 2014.” On that day, Rodger killed six people before shooting himself.

The slayings started in an apartment he shared with Weihann “David” Wang, 20, and Cheng Yuan “James” Hong, 20. The two were ambushed separately as they entered the apartment and were stabbed to death. Rodger then killed their friend, George Chen, 19.

Deputies said Rodger left his laptop on and open on his bed; on the screen was the YouTube page where Rodger had just uploaded his video titled “Retributio­n.” He also posted a 137page autobiogra­phical essay that laid out his motives and his racist beliefs.

“How could an inferior, ugly black boy be able to get a white girl and not me? I am beautiful, and I am half white myself,” Rodger wrote. “I am descended from British aristocrac­y. He is descended from slaves.”

After he left the apartment, Rodger got into his BMW and sped across Isla Vista and fired more than 55 times. But he still had about 550 rounds of ammunition with him. He fatally shot three people and wounded 13 others before fatally shooting himself. He was wounded once when he exchanged fire with law enforcemen­t officials who were swarming the area. The shooting rampage lasted only eight minutes.

The shooting reignited the national debate on gun control because Rodger’s weapons were purchased legally despite his family expressing concerns for his mental health. It also launched a conversati­on about misogyny and entitlemen­t by men; in a series of sometimes disturbing, often rambling video messages posted to YouTube, Rodger complained that he was a virgin who couldn’t find a girlfriend despite his money and supposed attributes.

In his final video and essay posted online just minutes before he began the rampage, Rodger vowed to take revenge on the women of Isla Vista for these perceived slights.

After the shooting, California passed a law that allowed guns to be temporaril­y seized from people determined to be dangerous.

 ?? Lawrence K. Ho Los Angeles Times ?? ELLIOT RODGER left a 137-page manifesto that laid out his racist beliefs.
Lawrence K. Ho Los Angeles Times ELLIOT RODGER left a 137-page manifesto that laid out his racist beliefs.
 ?? Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ?? UC SANTA BARBARA students participat­e in a memorial for Rodger’s victims. The shooting reignited the national debate on gun control.
Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times UC SANTA BARBARA students participat­e in a memorial for Rodger’s victims. The shooting reignited the national debate on gun control.
 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? RESIDENTS of Isla Vista gather near where Elliot Rodger, 22, fatally shot himself after killing six people and wounding 13 others on May 23, 2014.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times RESIDENTS of Isla Vista gather near where Elliot Rodger, 22, fatally shot himself after killing six people and wounding 13 others on May 23, 2014.

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