The Denver Post

Shooter. He was on Junior ROTC marksmansh­ip team.

- By Michael Biesecker and Collin Binkley

The troubled teen authoritie­s say killed 17 people at a Florida high school excelled in an air-rifle marksmansh­ip program supported by a grant from the National Rifle Associatio­n Foundation, part of a multimilli­on-dollar effort by the gun group to support youth shooting clubs and other programs.

Nikolas Cruz, 19, was wearing a maroon shirt with the logo from the Army Junior Reserve Officer Training Corps program at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School when he was arrested Wednesday shortly after the shooting. Former JROTC cadets told The Associated Press that Cruz was a member of the small varsity marksmansh­ip team that trained together after class and traveled to other area schools to compete.

It was a close-knit group. One of the other cadets started calling Cruz “Wolf,” and the nickname stuck.

“He was a very good shot,” said Aaron Diener, 20, who gave Cruz a ride to shooting competitio­ns when they were part of the same four-member team in 2016. “He had an AR-15 he talked about, and pistols he had shot . ... He would tell us, ‘Oh, it was so fun to shoot this rifle’ or ‘It was so fun to shoot that.’ It seemed almost therapeuti­c to him, the way he spoke about it.”

The JROTC marksmansh­ip program used air rifles special-made for target shooting, typically on indoor ranges at targets the size of a coin.

Records show that the Stoneman Douglas JROTC program received $10,827 in non-cash assistance from the NRA’s fundraisin­g and charitable arm in 2016, when Cruz was on the squad. The school’s program publicly thanked the NRA Foundation on its Twitter feed .

A spokeswoma­n for the NRA declined to comment on Friday. The top officers of the foundation are all current or former executives of the NRA.

The more than 1,700 high school JROTC programs nationally also receive financial support from the U.S. military and are typically supervised by retired officers from the Army, Navy, Air Force and Marines. The military collaborat­es with school systems on the training curriculum, which includes marching drills, athletic competitio­ns and shooting teams.

Cadets wear military uniforms with ranks and insignia’s similar to those of the military branch with which they are affiliated.

Peter Mahmood, the retired Army major who supervises the JROTC program at Stoneman Douglas, did not respond to messages left by phone and at his home.

Authoritie­s say Cruz, who was expelled last year for disciplina­ry reasons, walked into his former school with an AR-15 and opened fire. He is charged with 17 counts of murder.

The shooting team’s equipment came in handy for some students during the chaos of the rampage. Student Colton Haab told CNN that he led more than 60 students into a JROTC room on campus and barricaded them behind Kevlar sheets used by the rifle program in the event the shooter came after them. In the end, they were not targeted.

Former cadets say they were surprised the awkward teen they remember from a couple years ago now stands accused of slaughteri­ng students and staff. But, in retrospect, there were signs of trouble.

Kyle Ramos, who was the executive officer of the JROTC battalion, said Cruz spoke about guns and knives incessantl­y and liked to wear military-style clothing to school. He also bragged about shooting animals for fun.

“He told me he would attack little animals with pellet guns and stuff, and I was a little weirded out by that,” said Ramos, now 20. “Like squirrels and lizards and stuff.”

Diener said Cruz sometimes missed target practice because he had detention. There was another time he remembers that Aaron Feis, a member of the school’s security staff, came to get Cruz out of JROTC class because he was in some sort of trouble.

Feis, who was also an assistant football coach at the school, is among those Cruz is charged with killing.

The NRA Foundation gave nearly $2.2 million to schools across 30 states in 2016, the most recent year for which its federal tax filings are publicly available. Of that amount, more than $400,000 was in cash grants, while nearly $1.8 million came as in-kind donations ranging from equipment for high school air rifle teams to gun safety programs for younger children.

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