Los Angeles Times

Ideology and mass shooting

Did political views play a role in the attacks in El Paso or Dayton?

- By Jenny Jarvie

ATLANTA — In their political views, the gunmen who brought carnage to two American cities last weekend could not have been more different.

One posted a lengthy screed railing against the “Hispanic invasion of Texas” and supported President Trump.

The other apparently identified as a leftist, posting on Twitter to support Democratic presidenti­al candidate Elizabeth Warren and proclaim, “Kill every fascist.”

As the nation struggles to understand the motives behind the attacks, political ideology has become a focus.

Prominent Democrats have accused Trump of emboldenin­g white nationalis­ts with his divisive rhetoric on race, noting that his trope of an immigrant “invasion” was echoed in the manifesto apparently written by 21-year-old Patrick Crusius before police say he opened fire in an El Paso Walmart, killing 22 people.

“We have a president right now who traffics in this hatred, who incites this violence, who calls Mexican immigrants rapists and criminals, calls asylum seekers animals and an infestatio­n,” Beto O’Rourke, the Democratic presidenti­al candidate who represente­d El Paso in Congress, said Sunday at a vigil.

Trump countered that his critics were purposely ignoring the left-wing views of Connor Betts, the 24year-old who killed nine people outside a crowded bar in Dayton, Ohio.

“In Dayton, it just came out ... he was a fan of Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren — nothing to do with Trump, but nobody ever mentions that,” he said Wednesday at the White House before spending the day visiting both cities. “I don’t blame Elizabeth Warren, I don’t blame Bernie Sanders, in the case of Ohio — I don’t blame anybody. These are sick people. These are really people who are mentally ill — who are disturbed.”

That position has been a talking point for the president’s defenders.

“When the media found out that the Dayton, Ohio, shooter was a Bernie Sanders socialist supporter they were absolutely silent,” Hunter Pollack, brother of Parkland, Fla., shooting victim Meadow Pollack, said Tuesday on Fox News. “The hypocrisy they show is absolutely vile.”

Experts who study mass shootings say many factors must be considered when trying to determine a motive. Though political views generally play less of a role than personal problems and dysfunctio­n, the publicly available evidence suggests that political ideology played a role in El Paso but not in Dayton.

One important question is whether the choice of target lines up with the perpetrato­r’s stated ideology, said Adam Lankford, a professor of criminolog­y at the University of Alabama.

“That seems to hold true a little bit more with the El Paso shooter at first view than it does with the Dayton shooter,” he said.

Crusius drove more than 600 miles to carry out his attack in a predominan­tly Latino community, police say — a central reason that law enforcemen­t officials believe he was motivated by the political views in the 2,300-word manifesto posted on the website 8chan.

“I am simply defending my country from cultural and ethnic replacemen­t brought on by an invasion,” it said.

In contrast, officials have not determined the motive of the Ohio killer or whether his political views played a role. The bar had a racially diverse clientele, and the dead included his sister and apparently random bystanders.

Ernesto Verdeja, an assistant professor of political science and peace studies at the University of Notre Dame, said the shooting in El Paso was a “political terror attack” but the Dayton shooting was not. He said attempts to cast both as equally motivated by politics were disingenuo­us.

“There’s a kind of a false equivalenc­e — that one killer is on the right, another killer is on the left, and that the problem is really hateful, divisive discourse from across the political spectrum,” Verdeja said.

“But we’re not seeing the same kind of discourse on the two political sides right now,” he added. “With President Trump, there is a consistent use of dismissive, hateful, racist language that creates conditions that encourage or at least sanction the use of violence. Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders simply don’t do that.”

At the same time, massshooti­ng experts say the attention on political ideology this week has obscured the fact that family conflicts, mental health problems, suicidal feelings or failure at work or school tend to be more important than political views in motivating killers.

“Personal struggles are far more significan­t as the driving force than political ones for these individual­s,” Lankford said.

“Often, mass shooters perceive themselves to be victims or to have been hurt in some way,” he said. “They need to create a narrative that leverages their feeling of pain and then justifies violence as self-defense. Rather than having to create their own story, they can just latch on to the ideology.”

For that reason, Lankford was wary of drawing a direct link between Trump and the El Paso gunman.

“Can we say definitive­ly that this mass shooting would not have happened under a different president?” he said. “I’m not comfortabl­e saying that, because it’s possible the perpetrato­r would have found a different justificat­ion for his shooting.”

Crusius would not be the first mass shooter to invoke Trump’s rhetoric.

Those who have said they were inspired by the president’s words include James Fields, a white nationalis­t who killed a protester with his car in Charlottes­ville, Va., and Cesar Sayoc, who was sentenced to 20 years in prison this week for mailing pipe bombs to Trump critics and media.

Prosecutor­s in El Paso have charged Crusius with capital murder. Federal authoritie­s say they are separately pursuing a domestic terrorism case and considerin­g hate-crime charges.

The Dayton shooter did not leave a manifesto, but a Twitter bio believed to be associated with him, @iamthespoo­kster, reads: “he/him / anime fan / metalhead / leftist / I’m going to hell and I’m not coming back.”

 ?? John Minchillo Associated Press ?? A MEMORIAL in Dayton, Ohio, where nine people were killed a day after 22 people were slain in an El Paso Walmart. The gunmen apparently had opposing political views, but experts caution against drawing parallels.
John Minchillo Associated Press A MEMORIAL in Dayton, Ohio, where nine people were killed a day after 22 people were slain in an El Paso Walmart. The gunmen apparently had opposing political views, but experts caution against drawing parallels.

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