Los Angeles Times

In manifesto, clues to shooting rampage

Newly released document shows the thoughts of killer in an Oregon college attack.

- By Rick Anderson Anderson is a special correspond­ent.

SEATTLE — Laurel Harper remembered her 26year-old son as perpetuall­y mad at the world.

“I mean, he was born angry, pretty much,” said the mother. “I mean, even the doctor said this is one angry baby.”

At age 5, he tried to jump out of her moving car, she said. In his later years, he was diagnosed with Asperger’s syndrome, which can limit social developmen­t and lead to behavioral meltdowns. He took medication­s but by age 18 gave them up because of side effects.

He continued to rage. “I would just try to, try to, like, defuse,” she said. “And there was one time when he pointed a shotgun at me.”

She calmly talked him down. She never called the police then or other times because she didn’t want him to go to jail.

“I was just too weak or something. I just couldn’t do it.”

When he was small and acting angrily, she would put him in a bear hug until he gave up, she recalled. Now, she felt, she had no solutions.

He owned nine guns, including an assault-style rif le, said Harper, a part-time night nurse at the county jail. She eventually joined him at the shooting range with her own AR-15, thinking it could be a healthy motherson activity.

No, she told the two Oregon State Police detectives sitting in her living room and interviewi­ng her that morning of Oct. 1, 2015, she didn’t know why Christophe­r Sean Harper-Mercer, in hornrimmed glasses and shaved head brandishin­g several of six guns he brought along, killed all those people two hours earlier.

Most of the nine bodies were found in one classroom at Umpqua Community College in Roseburg, which he attended, and where he had herded frightened students for questionin­g. He asked some of them if they believed in God, then killed them one by one before shooting himself, according to newly released police records and interview transcript­s.

Witnesses said HarperMerc­er told one student who said he was Catholic, “Thank you for standing for your beliefs,” then shot him. He told some of his victims that death wouldn’t hurt, and laughed as one died. He killed 10 people that day — himself included — and wounded seven.

Why? the detectives asked. What made him snap?

“There’s nothing I could look back at and say, ‘Oh, yeah, this, there’s an arrow pointing the way’” to the Umpqua massacre, his mother told the detectives. “Nothing.”

But, in the wake of this month’s school shootings near Spokane, Wash., and other recent school-related shooting incidents across the U.S., some insights and similariti­es have emerged from a comparison of some of the cases. They reveal missed warning signs, shooters imitating and idolizing other shooters, and suggest that access to weapons was no problem for shooters, many who used their parents’ guns.

It is a pattern reflected in many of the 239 U.S. school shootings that have occurred since 2013, according to everytownr­esearch.org. Among the site’s findings from shootings perpetrate­d by minors at primary and secondary schools and for which the source of the firearm was known, more than half of the shooters obtained their weapons at home, probably because an adult did not store them locked and unloaded.

The release of the Umpqua shooting files, a week before the Spokane shooting, came almost two years after the Oregon incident, delayed in part because the FBI was investigat­ing the mother for possible charges. None were filed, and officials declared that Harper-Mercer “acted alone.”

Most revealing in the files, however, was a copy of the shooter’s manifesto. In it, Harper-Mercer seemed to have drawn up a script of his life to convince the public that the killings were the result of his mistreatme­nt by others, and that he was merely seeking revenge. The journal also has the overly dramatic tone of someone seeking to be noticed.

“I have always been the most hated person in the world,” Harper-Mercer wrote. “Ever since I arrived in this world, I have been under siege from it. Under attack from morons and idiots.… My whole life has been one lonely enterprise. One loss after another. And here I am, 26, with no friends, no job, no girlfriend, a virgin. I long ago realized that society likes to deny people like me these things. People who are elite, people who stand with the gods.”

The people like him — the ones who stand with the gods — he said, were “Elliot Rodger, Vester Flanagan, the Columbine kids, Adam Lanza and Seung Cho.”

All are shooters that Harper-Mercer may have emulated.

In 2014, Rodger killed six people and injured 14 others near the campus of UC Santa Barbara, then shot himself. He had earlier uploaded a YouTube video that claimed he sought to punish women for rejecting him and said he was jealous of sexually active men. He also wrote a manuscript posted on the Internet that was referred to as his manifesto.

Flanagan boldly killed two Virginia journalist­s on live television in 2015, then killed himself. Flanagan, who is black, claimed in a suicide note that the recent massacre of nine black worshipers at a South Carolina church by a white supremacis­t Dylann Roof was “the tipping point.… I’ve been a human powder keg for a while … just waiting to go BOOM !!!! ”

The “Columbine kids” were Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold, who killed 13 people and wounded 24 others in 1999 at Columbine High School in Colorado, then killed themselves. They used illegally acquired and altered semiautoma­tic weapons. A journal, or manifesto, found in Harris’ bedroom detailed their massacre plans, in which they hoped to “outdo” the violence of the Oklahoma City bombing and the Waco siege.

In 2012, Adam Lanza shot his mother at home, killed 20 first-graders and six adults at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., then shot himself – 28 deaths in one day. Lanza, who had developmen­tal and mental health concerns, posted writings and audio clips on a masskiller website that was mostly devoted to the Columbine shooters.

Seung-Hui Cho killed 32 people and wounded 17 others while armed with two semiautoma­tic pistols in 2007 at Virginia Tech University in Blacksburg, Va. Cho, who suffered from depression, had briefly been confined to a mental health facility but was nonetheles­s able to buy the two pistols from legit dealers, in violation of the law. In a postmortem report, educators and mental health profession­als were criticized for failing to notice his deteriorat­ing condition and help him.

Though unmentione­d in Harper-Mercer manifesto, other recent cases show more similariti­es. Arcan Cetin, 20, who killed five people at a Burlington, Wash., mall last year, then later hanged himself in jail, obtained his weapons from the bedroom of his parents, whom he was visiting for dinner. Also, he apparently planned a larger massacre, having propped open a door to a nearby movie theater — but after finding it closed, took his rifle to a woman’s store in the mall instead. Investigat­ors said Cetin’s theater plan was probably inspired by James E. Holmes’ Aurora, Colo., theater massacre in 2012 that left 12 dead and 70 wounded.

And 15-year-old freshman Jaylen Fryberg, who in 2014 shot five students, four fatally, at Marysville Pilchuck High north of Seattle before taking his own life, obtained his firearm from his father’s collection. Raymond Fryberg was later found guilty of owning nine firearms he legally could not possess and received a twoyear prison sentence.

The Sept. 13 shooting at Freeman High School in Rockport, near Spokane, was allegedly the work of 15year-old sophomore Caleb Sharpe, who, like Umpqua shooter Harper-Mercer, sports a shaved head and horn-rimmed glasses and has a deep dislike for other students. He told police he wanted to “teach everyone a lesson about what happens when you bully others,” according to probable-cause papers filed in court.

Using weapons — an assault-style semiautoma­tic rifle, which jammed, and a handgun that later jammed, both of which he took from his father’s gun safe — he allegedly killed a student who tried to stop him and then shot three others. When the handgun jammed, he raised his hands and surrendere­d to a school custodian, then was held for police.

 ?? Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times ?? PEOPLE pray after the 2015 shootings at Umpqua college in Roseburg, Ore.
Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times PEOPLE pray after the 2015 shootings at Umpqua college in Roseburg, Ore.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States