Times of Suriname

Texas church gunman escaped mental health facility in 2012

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US - The man who killed more than 20 people at a small Texas church escaped from a mental health facility five years ago after sneaking guns onto an Air Force base and making threats against commanders, according to a police report.

Devin Patrick Kelley’s June 2012 escape from Peak Behavioral Health Systems in New Mexico occurred months after he was accused of abusing his ex-wife and her child, according to an El Paso Police Department report obtained by CNN affiliate KVIA. Kelley was picked up after the Santa Teresa, New Mexico, facility listed him as missing. The documents said officers had been warned that Kelley was a danger to himself and others and that he had sneaked firearms onto Holloman Air Force Base, where he had reportedly threatened his commanders.

Kelley had been placed into pretrial confinemen­t at a civilian facility days before his escape, according to two Air Force officials. As investigat­ors try to piece together a picture of Kelley, more clues have emerged in the deadliest shooting in modern Texas history. Authoritie­s placed the death toll at 26, including an unborn child. The dead parishione­rs from the First Baptist Church in Sutherland Springs ranged in age from 17 months to 77 years old.

Kelly had previously attended the Texas church but he was not welcomed there, Wilson County Sheriff Joe Tackitt told CNN.

Pastor Frank Pomeroy of First Baptist Church knew Kelley from his attendance at church events, according to Tackitt. The pastor wanted him out. There were no threats but Pomeroy told authoritie­s Kelley “was not a good person to be around.”

“He did not think that he was a good person and did not want him around his church,” Tackitt said of the pastor. “But he said: “How do I run him away from my church?”` On Sunday, Kelley reappeared at the church. This time, he was armed with an assault rifle, 15 loaded magazines and an obsession with a family dispute.

Kelley, who had a record of violence, was consumed by a dispute with his mother-inlaw and spent time posting anti-God and pro-gun statements on Facebook in the months before the shooting, according to officials, as well as acquaintan­ces and former classmates.

He sent threatenin­g text messages to his mother-in-law and texted her as recently as Sunday morning -- not long before he sprayed bullets at the people in the church with an assault rifle, authoritie­s said. He may have thought she was at church on Sunday. “There are many ways that he could have taken care of the mother-in-law without coming with 15 loaded magazines and an assault rifle to a church,” said Freeman Martin of the Texas Department of Public Safety.

(CNN.COM)

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