Bangkok Post

Warnings ‘may have been missed’

-

PARKLAND: Months before authoritie­s say Nikolas Cruz walked into his former high school and slaughtere­d 17 people, the troubled teen began showing what may have been warning signs he was bent on violence.

“Im going to be a profession­al school shooter,” a YouTube user with the screen name “Nikolas Cruz” posted in September.

The 19-year-old got expelled last year from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School for undisclose­d disciplina­ry reasons. And less than a year ago, the former Junior ROTC cadet bought a military-style AR-15 rifle.

As investigat­ors tried to establish the motive for Wednesday’s rampage, students and neighbours portrayed Cruz as an often strange and hostile figure who threatened others, talked about killing animals, and posed with guns in disturbing photos on social media.

“I think everyone had in their minds if anybody was going to do it, it was going to be him,” 17-year-old Dakota Mutchler said after Mr Cruz was identified as the gunman in the nation’s deadliest school shooting in more than five years.

Benjamin Bennight, a Mississipp­i bail bondsman, was concerned enough after seeing the “profession­al school shooter” comment on his Youtube channel that he took a screenshot of it on his phone and called the FBI. Two FBI agents visited Mr Bennight the next day.

But the FBI said it never spoke to the Florida teen. “No other informatio­n was included in the comment which would indicate a particular time, location or the true identity of the person who posted the comment,” said Brett Carr, a spokesman for the FBI office in Jackson, Mississipp­i.

“The FBI conducted database reviews and other checks but was unable to further identify the person who posted the comment.”

Maths teacher Jim Gard told The Miami Herald that Mr Cruz may have been seen as a potential threat well before the rampage. Mr Gard said he believes the school had sent out an email warning teachers that Mr Cruz shouldn’t be allowed on campus with a backpack.

“There were problems with him last year threatenin­g students, and I guess he was asked to leave campus,” Mr Gard told the newspaper.

Student Victoria Olvera, 17, said Mr Cruz had been abusive to his ex-girlfriend and that his expulsion was over a fight with her new boyfriend. Mr Cruz had been attending another school in Broward County since the expulsion, school officials said.

Mr Cruz’s mother, Lynda Cruz, died of pneumonia on Nov 1, and her husband died of a heart attack years ago, neighbours, friends and family members told the Sun Sentinel.

According to lawyer Jim Lewis, who represents but did not identify the family, they knew that Mr Cruz owned the AR-15 but made him keep it locked up in a cabinet and never saw him go to a shooting range with it. He did have the key, however.

Mr Cruz passed a background check and legally purchased the semi-automatic rifle from a dealer in Florida in February 2017, authoritie­s said.

The family is devastated and shocked, Mr Lewis said. “No indication that anything severe like this was wrong,” he said. “Just a mildly troubled kid who’d lost his mom. ... He totally kept this from everybody.”

Mr Cruz’s attorney, Melisa McNeill, said after a court hearing on Thursday on the murder charges against the young man that Cruz was sad and remorseful and “just a broken human being”.

“When you don’t have the support system, that affects who you are, and that affects the people around you,” Mr McNeill said. “And when your brain is not fully developed you don’t know how to deal with these things.”

 ?? AFP ?? People grieve on Thursday after placing flowers on a memorial for the victims of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting in Parkland, Florida.
AFP People grieve on Thursday after placing flowers on a memorial for the victims of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting in Parkland, Florida.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand