Cape Argus

Demand for gun control measures

FBI takes the heat as protests grow over school shooting

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ATEENAGER accused of fatally shooting 17 people at a Florida high school was investigat­ed by police and state officials as far back as 2016 after slashing his arm in a social media video, and saying he wanted to buy a gun, but authoritie­s determined he was receiving sufficient support, newspapers said on Saturday.

Nikolas Cruz, 19, is charged with committing multiple murders on Wednesday at the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, last week. More than a dozen people also were wounded in the deadliest shooting at a US high school.

The charges can bring the death penalty, but prosecutor­s have not yet said if they will seek capital punishment. Days after the killings, a sombre series of vigils and funerals were being held in and around Parkland, a Fort Lauderdale suburb of about 32 000 people.

The South Florida Sun Sentinel first reported that a video of Cruz cutting his arm was posted om the social media network Snapchat in September 2016 raised concerns among law enforcemen­t and at the Florida Department of Children and Families.

“Mr Cruz stated he plans to go out and buy a gun. It is unknown what he is buying the gun for,” said a report written by department officials after investigat­ors interviewe­d the teenager, the Sun Sentinel said.

The newspaper reported investigat­ors ultimately decided that Cruz, then 18, was receiving enough support from mental health profession­als and from his school and any risk in his case was low.

The Department of Children and Families (DCF) has asked a court to release the records for transparen­cy, adding it has reviewed the circumstan­ces surroundin­g the 2016 case.

“Mental health services and supports were in place when this investigat­ion closed,” DCF secretary Mike Carroll said in a statement.

The long-simmering US debate about gun rights played out on Saturday at events in the area.

Hundreds of people attended a rally in Fort Lauderdale where students from the school demanded new gun control measures to tighten what they saw as easy access to firearms. They also accused some politician­s of being more concerned about protecting the firearms lobby than children.

“Because of these gun laws, people that I know, people that I love, have died,” Delaney Tarr, a senior at the school, told the rally.

At a nearby gun show, attendees said new laws would not have prevented the massacre, adding gun rights are protected by the US constituti­on’s second amendment.

In a tweet on Saturday night President Donald Trump criticised the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion (FBI) for its handling of the case.

“Very sad that the FBI missed all of the many signals sent out by the Florida school shooter. This is not acceptable,” Trump wrote on Twitter.

He accused the FBI of “spending too much time trying to prove Russian collusion with the (2016) Trump campaign”.

The FBI admitted on Friday that it had failed to investigat­e a warning that Cruz possessed a gun and the desire to kill. A person described as close to Cruz called an FBI tip line on January 5 to report concerns about Cruz, according to the FBI. That informatio­n was not forwarded to the FBI’s Miami office, in what agency officials called a breakdown in protocol.

The disclosure spread angry disbelief among Parkland residents and prompted Florida’s Republican Governor Rick Scott to call for FBI Director Christophe­r Wray to resign.

US Attorney General Jeff Sessions has ordered a review of FBI procedures following the shooting, in which 14 students and three school staff members died.

Trump called local politician­s and the school’s principal from his Mar-a-Lago, Florida, resort to express condolence­s, offer support and receive updates, a White House spokeswoma­n said. On Friday, he visited shooting survivors and first responders.

He and some other Republican political leaders have said mental illness prompted the massacre. Cruz had been expelled from the high school for undisclose­d disciplina­ry reasons and former classmates described him as an outcast and troublemak­er with a fascinatio­n for weapons.

As more details emerged on the suspect, CNN reported that Cruz posted disparagin­g comments about Jews, African Americans and gays in a private chat group on the social media network Instagram.

“I think I am going to kill people,” Cruz wrote in the group, according to CNN, which also quoted an unnamed law enforcemen­t source as saying the suspect bought at least five guns in the past year.

Cruz’s attorneys at the Broward County Public Defender’s Office did not return requests for comment on that or the 2016 report by Florida’s Department of Children and Families.

“This kid exhibited every single known red flag, from killing animals to having a cache of weapons, to disruptive behaviour, to saying he wanted to be a school shooter,” the county’s public defender, Howard Finkelstei­n, told the New York Times.

Speaking at an event in Dallas, Texas, on Saturday, Vice-President Mike Pence said Trump was making the safety of the nation’s schools a top priority.

“We will get to the bottom of what happened,” Pence said, adding the administra­tion would take “a renewed look at giving law enforcemen­t and local authoritie­s the tools they need to deal with individual­s struggling with dangerous mental illness.” – Reuters

 ?? PICTURE: REUTERS ?? Participan­ts at the March for Action on Gun Violence protest in Broward County at the US courthouse in Fort Lauderdale, Florida at the weekend.
PICTURE: REUTERS Participan­ts at the March for Action on Gun Violence protest in Broward County at the US courthouse in Fort Lauderdale, Florida at the weekend.

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