USA TODAY US Edition

Secret Service: Signs were there before attacks

Authoritie­s found that 64% of mass-attack suspects had symptoms of mental illness.

- Kevin Johnson

WASHINGTON – Many suspects linked to violent attacks in schools and other public places last year were stalked by symptoms of mental illness, and nearly half were motivated by real or perceived personal grievances, a Secret Service report found.

An examinatio­n of 28 attacks, which claimed nearly 150 lives and wounded hundreds from Orlando to Las Vegas, found that more than three-quarters of the assailants engaged in suspicious communicat­ion or conduct that raised concerns from others before the assaults, according to the report released Thursday.

The analysis, prepared by the Secret Service’s National Threat Assessment Center, had been in the works months before the massacre Feb. 14 at a high school in Parkland, Fla., but its findings are likely to further fuel concerns about the untreated mentally ill and their access to high-powered firearms.

In the Parkland case, which has reinvigora­ted a national debate on gun safety, social workers, mental health counselors, school administra­tors and law enforcemen­t authoritie­s were all warned about Nikolas Cruz’s deteriorat­ing mental state and risk of violence before he was accused of the attack that killed 17.

The Secret Service review builds on a lengthy examinatio­n released by the agency in 2015, which found that more than half of suspects involved in 43 attacks targeting government facilities or federal officials from 2001 to 2013 suffered symptoms of mental illness, including paranoia, delusions and suicidal thoughts.

In the new report, authoritie­s found that 64% of suspects showed symptoms of mental illness.

In 25% of the cases, attackers had been “hospitaliz­ed or prescribed psychiatri­c medication­s” before the assaults.

One of the most glaring cases involved Devin Kelley, whose attack on a Texas church in November left 26 dead and 20 wounded.

In the years leading up to the assault, Kelley battered his young stepson, menaced his former wife, was accused of sexual assault, had a history of stalking former girlfriend­s and escaped from a mental health facility in 2012.

According to a police report related to the escape in 2012, Kelley — then a member of the U.S. Air Force — was hospitaliz­ed after he was charged by military authoritie­s with fracturing the skull of his 1-year-old stepson.

The Air Force has acknowledg­ed it failed to flag Kelley, who should have been banned from buying the weapons he used in the attack on the church because of his record of domestic violence.

Using the same weapons, Kelley killed himself after the church shooting.

The Sutherland Springs First Baptist Church massacre was one of two church shootings examined in the Secret Service report. Among some of the other incidents analyzed were four school attacks and 13 assaults involving places of business.

“These acts violated the safety of the places where we work, learn, shop, relax and otherwise conduct our day-today lives,” the report said. “The resulting loss of 147 lives and injury to nearly 700 others had a devastatin­g impact on our nation as a whole.”

One of the incidents sent a shiver through the nation’s capital last June when an Illinois man fired on Republican lawmakers with a modified assault rifle and handgun at a baseball field in Northern Virginia.

Shortly after the attack, which left House Majority Whip Steve Scalise, R-La., and four others wounded, the FBI described gunman James Hodgkinson as adrift and struggling to cope with an array of personal problems.

Plagued by financial difficulti­es, the 66-year-old, who died in a shootout with police, had anger management problems and left a strained marriage in Belleville, Ill., more than a month before the shooting to take up residence in a van on the outskirts of the nation’s capital — along with his weapons.

Hodgkinson was prone to rage against the politics of President Trump and carried the names of six lawmakers in his pocket.

“He was struggling in all kinds of different ways,” FBI Assistant Director Tim Slater said a week after the attack.

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Devin Kelley

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