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Panel explores why FBI missed warning signs

- By Joseph Tanfani The Los Angeles Times

WASHINGTON — A Senate Judiciary Committee hearing examined law enforcemen­t agencies’ failure to heed multiple warnings about the Parkland school shooter who killed 17 people, as well as the long record of failed gun control measures in Congress.

Bill Bowdich, the FBI’s acting deputy director, told the Senate panel that the agency obviously erred when it failed to follow up on a long, detailed warning on a tip line that Cruz was “going to explode.”

“We made mistakes here, no question about it,” Bowdich said Wednesday. “That said, even if we had done everything right, I’m not sure we could have stopped the attack.”

He acknowledg­ed that FBI agents missed an opportunit­y to find and quiz Cruz and to alert law enforcemen­t in Florida that he posed a possible danger. Cruz had disciplina­ry issues in school and had been the subject of dozens of complaints to local police.

Bowdich said a close friend of the Cruz family had called the FBI’s tip center on Jan. 8 with a “very explicit” warning, saying Cruz had purchased weapons, was mutilating small animals, had threatened his mother with a rifle and talked about the terrorist group Islamic State.

The tip center employee discussed the report with a supervisor but both agreed to close the matter without forwarding the report to FBI agents or to local police, Bowdich said.

He said the two had “different recollecti­ons” about their conversati­on and that an internal investigat­ion is underway.

An FBI agent also failed to follow up after Cruz posted an ominous video on YouTube last September in which he vowed, “I’m going to be a profession­al school shooter.” Bowditch said the agent could not identify the person who posted the video, although Cruz had used his real name.

Bowdich said the agent looked at social media and other computer sources but did not try to trace the poster’s internet address.

None of the FBI agents or employees has been discipline­d for what Bowditch described as “judgment calls.” He added, “These employees have due process like anyone else.”

Bowditch sought to spread the blame, however, saying that local law enforcemen­t had made 30 to 40 visits to Cruz’s home after receiving reports of threats or other problems.

Lawmakers made clear their dismay, although they offered no clear solutions.

“It’s my impression that the man did everything but take out an ad in the paper saying ‘I’m going to kill someone,’ ” said Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C.

Throughout the hearing, Democratic senators said new laws are urgently needed to improve background checks for gun purchases, and to ban the sale of assault-style semiautoma­tic weapons, even as they conceded that the proposals faced long odds of winning approval.

Several angrily cited the long record of gun control bills that have died in Congress, including measures that were proposed after 26 students and teachers were massacred in Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn, in December 2012.

“We cannot continue to sit in this room and other rooms week after week and simply do nothing,” said Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., noting that she has again proposed reimposing a ban on the assault-style rifle that Cruz used. She said mass shootings have steadily increased since an earlier ban expired in 2004.

Under existing law, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, known as the ATF, is barred from computeriz­ing its gun ownership records. They are kept on paper instead, a move heavily promoted by gun-rights activists who seek to limit gun regulation­s.

“Congress has forced you to go back to the 19th century,” Sen. Dick Durbin, DIll., told Thomas Brandon, acting director of the ATF.

“I am not going to lie, Senator,” Brandon responded. “It’s not the optimum, but it’s the law and we comply with the law.”

Florida’s two senators, Republican Marco Rubio and Democrat Bill Nelson, also attended the hearing.

The hearing was packed with gun-control activists who cheered calls for stiffer gun laws and expressed frustratio­n that none appeared likely to pass.

“A lot of talk and not a lot of action,” said Trish Petty, who wore a red T-shirt from the group Moms Demand Action. The National Rifle Associatio­n “still has a huge strangleho­ld on the people up there asking questions.”

After the Parkland school shooting, President Donald Trump vowed to defy the NRA and push for a comprehens­ive gun control bill that would raise the age limit to purchase rifles, impose near universal background checks and renew a ban on assault-style rifles.

Trump abandoned those promises on Monday, offering a plan that would provide weapons training for teachers and create a commission to study other responses to school shootings.

At the hearing, Katherine Posada, a Marjory Stoneman Douglas teacher, recounted how students in her honors class were discussing Shakespear­e’s “Macbeth” when the shooting erupted. They huddled in terror as she fought her panic.

She said bluntly that Congress needed to act to control weapons — and that arming teachers was not the answer.

“The fact that a 19-year-old can go into a gun store and buy a semiautoma­tic weapon and a highcapaci­ty magazine … that is insane to me,” she said.

“This is not a partisan issue,” she said. “The children of Republican­s are not immune to bullets.”

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 ?? CHIP SOMODEVILL­A/GETTY IMAGES ?? Alaina Petty, daughter of Ryan Petty, right, and sister of Patrick Petty, was killed in the Parkland shooting.
CHIP SOMODEVILL­A/GETTY IMAGES Alaina Petty, daughter of Ryan Petty, right, and sister of Patrick Petty, was killed in the Parkland shooting.

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