Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Neighbors ask if they could have done more to stop alleged shooter

- By Justin Jouvenal

Neighbors said the display of hate in a Lorton, Va., community was as large as it was shocking: a swastika roughly 40-feet across mowed into the grass of a community field.

Tire marks from a riding mower ran from the lot, up a road to the home of a teen known as troubled in the neighborho­od, leaving little mystery as to the perpetrato­r, a neighbor said. Residents of Gunston Manor were soon debating how to handle the situation: go to police or talk to the teen’s family directly?

The latter plan won out and now some regret that decision.

The incident came roughly two months before the 17-year-old allegedly shot and killed the parents of his 16-year-old girlfriend in their Reston, Va., home last week. Scott Fricker, 48, and Buckley KuhnFricke­r, 43, had forbade their daughter from seeing the teen, after family and friends said the couple discovered a Twitter account they believed was linked to the teen that retweeted tweets praising Hitler, making derogatory comments about Jews, calling for “white revolution,” and picturing an image of a man hanging from a noose beneath a slur for gays.

The teen, who has been charged with two counts of murder, remains hospitaliz­ed in critical condition after turning the gun on himself.

Penny Potter, a neighbor, shared the story of the swastika because she wanted it to serve as a cautionary tale to report early warning signs before a tragedy occurs. She doesn’t know if neighbors had contacted police if the Frickers might still be alive, but believes there is a greater likelihood they would have.

“We live in a very safe neighborho­od where kids can ride their bikes and not worry about anything,” Ms. Potter said. “For the first time, I was fearful that there was someone living in our neighborho­od who was capable of incredibly irrational behavior. If you see something that makes you say, ‘huh,’ just call police. They can tell you if it’s appropriat­e.”

Ms. Potter said she first became aware of the swastika around Oct. 20 or Oct. 23, after another neighbor called her husband about it. Ms. Potter said her husband sometimes mows the community lot.

Her husband, who described the mowed symbol to her and took a photo of it, said the grass in the field was a little long and the portions making up the swastika were cut close to the turf. Ms. Potter said her husband told her the swastika was roughly 40-feet across and about 40-feet tall and was unmistakab­ly the Nazi emblem.

A group of neighbors got together to figure out the best way to deal with the situation, said Ms. Potter.

The residents decided to send an emissary to the family’s home to discuss the swastika a couple days after it was discovered. Ms. Potter said the teen’s parents admitted he had mowed the symbol into the grass. She said they were aware of his behavioral issues and were getting him treatment.

“They were going to take care of it,” Ms. Potter said. “They were aware of it.”

There was no answer at the 17-year-old’s home on Tuesday, and family members previously have declined to comment.

Family and friends of the Frickers said the couple had grown so worried about their daughter’s relationsh­ip with the 17year-old that they contacted officials at the private school the two youths attended to share their concerns about his suspected neo-Nazi views. Recently, the Frickers staged an interventi­on to try to convince their daughter to stay away from the boyfriend. After a difficult meeting, the girl seemed to agree that would be best, said her grandmothe­r, Janet Kuhn.

Ms. Kuhn said detectives have told the family that the fatal confrontat­ion unfolded early Friday when her daughter and son-inlaw heard a noise in the home. The couple went to check on their daughter and found the boyfriend in her room.

When Scott Fricker confronted him, the youth pulled out a gun and shot, Ms. Kuhn said police told the family.

Fairfax County police have declined to comment on the family’s account. On Tuesday, they said they also would not discuss how the alleged shooter may have gotten the gun.

“We aren’t releasing anything further at this point as he is a minor,” said Julie Parker, a police spokespers­on.

Ed Munz, president of the Gunston Manor Property Owners Associatio­n, said he only learned of the swastika after other neighbors had spoken to the teen’s family. He said he was not involved in the debate about what to do about it.

Mr. Munz said neighbors were “disgusted and embarrasse­d” by the swastika, so they mowed the field in such a way that the swastika was no longer visible.

“My hope in this is that neighbors will understand that coming forward can save people’s lives by reporting such behavior,” Mr. Munz wrote in an email to The Washington Post.

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