The Boston Globe

Lewiston panel gets subpoena power

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AUGUSTA, Maine — The independen­t commission investigat­ing the deadliest shooting in Maine history was granted subpoena power to compel witnesses to testify or produce documents Tuesday.

Governor Janet Mills signed bipartisan legislatio­n after commission­ers said they needed the ability to ensure access to testimony and materials to reach a conclusion on whether anything could have been done under existing law to stop the shooting on Oct. 25 in Lewiston and to suggest steps to be taken to prevent similar tragedies in the future.

The shooter who killed 18 people on Oct. 25 at a Lewiston bowling alley and a bar was an Army reservist, and members of his Maine-based unit were aware of his declining mental health and hospitaliz­ation during drills last summer in West Point, N.Y. But the leader of his unit downplayed a reservist’s warning that Robert Card was going to “snap and do a mass shooting.”

The Army agreed Monday to participat­e in a public session on March 7, a commission spokespers­on said, after the panel’s director told lawmakers that the panel was running into issues getting informatio­n from the Army.

The commission said it’s pleased that the Army will make individual­s available to testify, a spokespers­on said. The Army didn’t immediatel­y respond Tuesday to a request for comment on who might be testifying.

“Commission members have always said that they hope and expect people will cooperate with this independen­t investigat­ion and having the power to subpoena should only be necessary in circumstan­ces where the investigat­ion could be delayed or impeded without it,” spokespers­on Kevin Kelley said in a statement Tuesday.

Evidence of Card’s mental health struggles had surfaced months before the shooting. In May, relatives warned police that Card had grown paranoid, and they expressed concern about his access to guns. In July, Card was hospitaliz­ed after shoving a fellow reservist and locking himself in a motel room. In August, the Army barred him from handling weapons on duty and declared him nondeploya­ble.

Then, in September, a fellow reservist warned of a mass shooting. Police went to Card’s home in Bowdoin, but he did not come to the door. A sheriff ’s deputy told the commission that the Army suggested letting the situation “simmer” rather than forcing a confrontat­ion and that he received assurances Card’s family was removing his access to guns.

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