The Oklahoman

Police: Shooter was calm when found sleeping in car

- BY MICHAEL BALSAMO AND RYAN NAKASHIMA

SAN BRUNO, CALIF. — Just hours before she shot and wounded three people at YouTube headquarte­rs, Nasim Aghdam calmly told police who found her sleeping in her car that she was having family problems and had left her home.

During the 20-minute interview with officers early Tuesday, she did not mention being angry with YouTube or having accused the company of suppressin­g her video posts. She gave no indication she was a threat to herself or others.

Later that day, she went to a gun range before walking through a parking garage into a courtyard at YouTube’s campus south of San Francisco, where she fired several rounds with a handgun and wounded three people. She then killed herself.

The sequence of Aghdam’s activities emerged Wednesday as police continued gathering informatio­n about the attacker and her motives.

Agents with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives searched two Southern California homes where Aghdam had lived. Spokeswoma­n Ginger Colbrun would not confirm the locations but reporters saw agents entering homes in the communitie­s of Menifee, southeast of Los Angeles, and 4S Ranch, north of San Diego.

Police, meanwhile, visited a gun range not far from the YouTube headquarte­rs. Investigat­ors do not believe Aghdam, who was in her late 30s, targeted anyone in particular, and there is no reason to believe she illegally obtained the semi-automatic 9mm pistol used in the shooting, San Bruno Police Chief Ed Barberini said.

Authoritie­s are still trying to determine whether she got past security measures to enter YouTube headquarte­rs, he said.

Two women wounded in the shooting were released Wednesday from a San Francisco hospital. The third victim, a 36-year-old man, was upgraded from critical to serious condition.

The day before the attack, the shooter’s father, Ismail Aghdam, said he warned police that his daughter was upset with how YouTube handled her videos and might be planning to go to its offices.

Aghdam “hated” YouTube and was angry that the company stopped paying her for videos she posted, Ismail Aghdam told the Bay Area News Group. Her video posts included segments about veganism, animal cruelty and exercise, along with glamor shots of herself.

Police in Mountain View said they spoke to Ismail Aghdam twice after contacting the family to report finding his daughter and that he never told them she could become violent or pose a threat to YouTube employees.

When officers found Nasim Aghdam, she was in her car near a strip mall in Mountain View, about 25 miles from YouTube and home to the company’s owner, Silicon Valley giant Google. She told Mountain View police who spoke to her around 2 a.m. Tuesday that she had come to the area to stay with relatives and was looking for a job, police said.

They let her go, saying there was no indication she needed to be detained.

Nasim Aghdam used the name “Nasime Sabz” online, a law enforcemen­t official with knowledge of the investigat­ion told The Associated Press. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the official was not authorized to discuss the case.

 ?? [JEFF CHIU/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? A YouTube sign is shown across the street from the company’s offices Tuesday in San Bruno, Calif. A woman opened fire at YouTube headquarte­rs Tuesday, setting off a panic among employees and wounding several people before fatally shooting herself,...
[JEFF CHIU/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] A YouTube sign is shown across the street from the company’s offices Tuesday in San Bruno, Calif. A woman opened fire at YouTube headquarte­rs Tuesday, setting off a panic among employees and wounding several people before fatally shooting herself,...

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