Greenwich Time

Two suspected of planning shootings

- By Jim Shay

NORWALK — Tips may have stopped two city men in their 20s from carrying out mass shootings, police said.

Brandon Wagshol, 22, is confined to his father’s Bedford Avenue apartment on house arrest after police say he showed an interest on social media in committing a mass shooting.

Jeremy Hugh Rogers, 25, remains jailed in Maine, where police say he threatened to carry out a mass shooting at a local Walmart.

Lt. Terry Blake, a spokesman for the Norwalk Police Department, said there is “no connection between

these two that we are currently aware of.”

Rogers was arrested Aug. 22 on charges of terrorizin­g, terrorizin­g with a deadly weapon and possession of a deadly weapon by a prohibited person.

According to his Facebook page, Rogers grew up in Greenwich. A Greenwich High School official said Wednesday Rogers withdrew in 2011 before graduating. It was not known why he withdrew.

In October 2016, Rogers was convicted in Connecticu­t on firearms and child endangerme­nt charges — both felonies.

Rogers was charged in July 2016 with criminal possession of a firearm, altering identifica­tion on guns, risk of injury to a minor and violation of probation following a disturbanc­e at a Norwalk home. Rogers was living on Silk Street in Norwalk at the time.

His latest arrest stemmed from a New York woman tipping off Maine authoritie­s that he could be targeting a Walmart there for a mass shooting, police said.

Police said the tip fueled a fastmoving investigat­ion from multiple law enforcemen­t agencies that may have stopped Rogers from carrying out the incident.

Authoritie­s were alerted after Rogers allegedly sent a video on Facebook Messenger to a woman in New York. According to the Village Soup newspaper, the video showed Rogers wearing a ski mask and holding an AR15 rifle.

In the video, he allegedly said, “F— it, I’m going to Walmart.”

In a second video, Rogers was not wearing a mask, the newspaper said, and was making disparagin­g comments about a woman and pointing a gun at his head, according to police. The woman later called New York State Police to report his erratic behavior, police said.

Another video was then found on Facebook of Rogers shooting the semiautoma­tic AR15 rifle into the air on a property he recently moved to in Rockport, Maine, police said.

While searching for Rogers on Aug. 21, police said they closed and evacuated the Walmart in Thomaston, Maine, where officers believe he may have been heading.

Rogers was eventually detained outside a Rockport residence. Rogers, who remains in custody in Maine on $50,000 cash bail, will be back in court on Sept. 25.

“He was prepared for something,” Officer Elizabeth Hart, of the Thomaston Police Department, told the Bangor Daily News. “We’re not sure what, exactly.”

“Everyone felt that this case required a very fast response,” Hart said. “These types of individual­s, these types of threats, are the ones that sometimes slip through the cracks.”

The Maine incident happened three weeks after a gunman went to a Walmart in El Paso, Texas, and killed 22 people.

In Norwalk, Wagshol was arrested last month on four counts of illegal possession of largecapac­ity magazines stemming from a raid of his Bedford Avenue apartment where police say they found guns, ammunition, body armor and a full camouflage outfit.

A search warrant said Wagshol had an interest in mass shootings that dated to 2008, when he was a sixthgrade­r at Ponus Ridge Middle School. In November of that year, Wagshol threatened to shoot another student using his father’s guns after the other child’s talking made it hard for him to concentrat­e, the warrant said.

“I’ll make Virginia Tech look like nothing,” he muttered under his breath, the warrant said, in reference to the Virginia Tech shooting in which 33 people died the previous year. Wagshol’s case was later referred to the state Department of Children and Families.

Norwalk police said they received a tip about a Facebook post Wagshol made about having an interest in “committing a mass shooting” and learned he purchased parts online to make his own rifle.

Hours after Wagshol’s court arraignmen­t on Aug. 16, a post was made on social media warning people of potential accomplice­s.

“It’s now rumored he’s got accomplice­s and they would be targeting local Walmarts,” the post read. “I’d avoid Walmarts this weekend and be careful while out in public.”

Later that day, Norwalk police said, “the informatio­n contained in the post is false. Wagshol remains incarcerat­ed. Moreover, to date, the investigat­ion has neither revealed a specifical­ly targeted location nor an accomplice.”

In his witness statement to police, Wagshol said he drove to New Hampshire to “acquire 30round magazines and ammunition to circumvent what I viewed as an unconstitu­tional restrictio­n on the Second Amendment.”

Wagshol said he purchased four 30round magazines and 120 rounds of 300 blackout ammunition for “firearm training,” according to his statement to police. Connecticu­t law defines a “largecapac­ity magazine” as one that accepts more than 10 rounds of ammunition. Transporti­ng largecapac­ity magazines into the state is a felony. New Hampshire does not have magazine restrictio­ns.

Police said a .40caliber handgun and .22caliber rifle found belonged to Wagshol’s father, but were accessible to him.

In addition to the weapons, police said they found a rifle scope with a laser, four firearm optic sites, a firearm flashlight, body armor with a titanium plate, a full camouflage outfit, a ballistic helmet, tactical gloves, a camouflage bag, computers, and numerous .40caliber, .22caliber and .300blackou­t rounds of ammunition.

On Aug. 30, Wagshol was released after posting a $250,000 bond and he is scheduled to return to state Superior Court in Stamford on Sept. 20 for a pretrial hearing.

Judge Kevin Randolph ordered him wear to wear a GPS ankle bracelet, remain under house arrest and to report to the office of adult probation in the courthouse every day, as well as undergo a mental health evaluation.

 ??  ?? Wagshol
Wagshol
 ??  ?? Rogers
Rogers

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