Texarkana Gazette

Church gunman once escaped from mental health center

- By Nomaan Merchant, Jim Vertuno and Will Weissert

SUTHERLAND SPRINGS, Texas—The gunman who carried out the massacre of 26 people at a small-town Texas church briefly escaped from a mental health center in New Mexico in 2012 and got in trouble for bringing guns onto a military base and threatenin­g his superiors there, police reports indicate.

Devin Patrick Kelley was also named as a suspect in a 2013 sexual assault in his hometown of New Braunfels, about 35 miles from the scene of the church attack.

The records that emerged Tuesday add up to at least three missed opportunit­ies that might have offered law enforcemen­t a way to stop Kelley from having access to guns long before he slaughtere­d much of the congregati­on in the middle of a Sunday service. Kelley died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound after he was chased by bystanders and crashed his car.

The Air Force confirmed Tuesday that Kelley had been treated in the facility after he was placed under pretrial confinemen­t stemming from a court-martial on charges that he assaulted his spouse and hit her child hard enough to fracture the boy’s skull.

Involuntar­y commitment to a mental institutio­n would have been grounds to deny him a weapon provided that records of his confinemen­t were submitted to the federal database used to conduct background checks on people who try to purchase guns.

Kelley was also caught trying to bring guns onto Holloman Air Force Base in New Mexico when he was stationed there, according to an El Paso, Texas, police report released Tuesday.

While in the military, Kelley, who was 21 at the time, had made death threats against superior officers, according to the June 2012 report, which also mentioned the military charges. He was eventually sentenced to 12 months of confinemen­t for the assault.

The Air Force acknowledg­ed Monday that it did not enter Kelley’s criminal history into the federal database, as required by military rules.

Had Kelley been convicted of sexual assault, he would likely have been prevented from purchasing a gun because federal guidelines prohibit sales to anyone convicted of a felony punishable by more than one year

in prison. The Comal County sheriff said he was reviewing whether his department mishandled the sexual assault investigat­ion.

Officers recovered a Ruger AR-556 rifle at the church and two additional handguns from the shooter’s vehicle, said Fred Milanowski, the agent in charge of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms

and Explosives in Houston. All three weapons were purchased by Kelley, Milanowski said.

The sporting goods chain Academy Sports & Outdoors confirmed Monday that it sold Kelley two guns.

The El Paso report notes that Kelley was committed to a mental health facility in Santa Teresa, New Mexico, but at some point escaped and was

later found by police at a bus station in downtown El Paso in June 2012.

In New Braunfels, Comal County Sheriff Mark Reynolds said that it appeared sheriff’s deputies investigat­ed the rape case for three months after being called to Kelley’s home in June 2013, but stopped investigat­ing after they believed Kelley had left Texas and moved to Colorado. Reynolds said the case was then listed as inactive.

Reynolds said he was trying to find out how deputies came to believe Kelley had moved and why they did not continue to pursue the case, either in Colorado or after Kelley returned to the area later. Deputies were called to the same house in February 2014 to investigat­e a domestic violence report involving Kelley and Danielle Shields, his girlfriend at the time, whom he married two months later.

“The last informatio­n that we have is the suspect moved to Colorado and then the investigat­ion seems to have tapered off,” Reynolds said Tuesday. “That’s what we’re looking into.”

The district attorney for Comal County said in an interview that she became aware of the sexual assault case Monday before the records were released to The Associated Press and other media.

“That case was never presented to our office,” Jennifer Tharp said.

Meanwhile at the First Baptist Church in tiny Sutherland Springs, investigat­ors continued analyzing a gruesome crime scene and tried to gain access to the shooter’s cellphone, a longstandi­ng challenge for the FBI in thousands of other cases.

Authoritie­s aimed to conclude the crime-scene investigat­ion at the church by Wednesday evening. Investigat­ors have no reason to believe anyone conspired with Kelley, who acted alone, said Texas Department of Public Safety Regional Director Freeman Martin.

Martin repeated earlier statements that the shooting appeared to stem from a domestic dispute involving Kelley and his mother-in-law, who sometimes attended services at the church but was not present on Sunday.

“We don’t know what he was thinking or what was in his mind,” Martin said. “There was conflict. He was upset with the mother in law.”

Also Tuesday, authoritie­s explained that the death toll of 26 included the unborn baby of one of women killed.

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