Los Angeles Times

Orlando gunman tied to steroids

- By Del Quentin Wilber del.wilbur@latimes.com Twitter: @delwilber

The autopsy of the gunman who massacred 49 people in a Florida nightclub attack last month revealed he was HIV-negative and probably a long-term user of steroids, two U.S. law enforcemen­t officials said.

The revelation comes as FBI agents continue to scour the background of Omar Mateen for clues as to why he launched his June 12 rampage at Orlando’s Pulse nightclub, the deadliest mass shooting in U.S. history.

The 29-year-old had became radicalize­d in recent years, FBI officials have said, and pledged allegiance to Islamic State militants during his attack.

Federal investigat­ors are not sure whether steroids played a role in the shooting. A medical examiner found evidence of physical changes to Mateen’s body that were consistent with long-term steroid use, the officials said, and is seeking to confirm that assessment through further testing.

The National Institute on Drug Abuse reports on its website that using high doses of steroids, which help build body mass and muscle, “increase irritabili­ty and aggression. Some steroid abusers report that they have committed aggressive acts, such as physical fighting or armed robbery, theft, vandalism, or burglary.”

A spokeswoma­n for the Orange County, Fla., medical examiner declined to comment on the preliminar­y findings.

“Whether or not an individual used steroids can be determined through specimen tests,” Carrie Proudfit, the spokeswoma­n, wrote in an email. “Toxicology reports would reflect those results. They’ll be made available to law enforcemen­t.”

Proudfit referred further questions to the FBI. Bureau spokeswoma­n Carol Cratty declined to comment.

The results, if confirmed through further testing, would not be entirely surprising. Mateen’s ex-wife, Sitora Yusufiy, told reporters shortly after the shooting that the former security guard had a history of steroid use. A former coworker of Mateen’s told CBS News that the gunman told him in 2006 he had started using steroids.

The law enforcemen­t officials also disclosed that the autopsy determined Mateen was HIV-negative.

On June 21, Spanish-language television network Univision aired a report in which “Miguel,” a man wearing a disguise to conceal his identity, alleged that he had sex with Mateen after meeting him on a gay dating app. Miguel said Mateen had sex with other men too, including a threesome with a Puerto Rican who allegedly told Mateen, after having had unprotecte­d sex with him, that he was HIV-positive.

Several Pulse regulars have also come forward, claiming to have seen Mateen at the club or to have been contacted by him on the gay dating apps Grindr, Jack’d and Adam4Adam.

The FBI, however, has been unable to find evidence to corroborat­e such claims. Agents have failed to find any photograph­s, text messages, smartphone apps, gay pornograph­y or celltower location data that suggest that Mateen — who was twice married to women and had a young son — had a secret gay life, law enforcemen­t officials have told The Times.

 ?? MySpace ?? OMAR MATEEN was HIV-negative and probably a long-term steroid user, an autopsy found.
MySpace OMAR MATEEN was HIV-negative and probably a long-term steroid user, an autopsy found.

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