Florida school shooting suspect ordered a drink at Subway after deadly assault
February 16, 2018 by admin
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Florida school shooting suspect Nikolas Cruz was brought to the Broward County jail and charged with 17 counts of premeditated murder Thursday morning. (Feb. 15)
AP
The teenager accused of killing 17 at a Florida high school dropped his AR-15 rifle and left the scene with terrified students, blending in to make his escape before casually walking into a nearby Wal-Mart to get a drink.
Nikolas Cruz, 19, used the cover of fleeing students to make his way to the Wal-Mart, where he bought a drink at a Subway restaurant in the store, Broward County Sheriff Scott Israel said at a news conference Thursday. Then Cruz walked to a McDonald’s, Israel said.
Israel says Cruz was confronted by a police officer and taken into custody about 40 minutes after leaving the McDonald’s. Cruz then told detectives that “he was the gunman who entered the school campus . . . and began shooting students he saw in the hallways,” according to court papers filed Thursday afternoon.
“Cruz stated that he brought additional loaded magazines to the school campus and kept them hidden in a backpack until he got on campus to begin his assault,” according to an arrest affidavit.
The moments leading up to Cruz’ arrest were detailed shortly after the subdued, handcuffed suspect made his first court appearance on charges of premeditated murder in the killing of 17 students and faculty at the school.
Wearing an orange jail jumpsuit and with his head slightly lowered, Cruz said only, “yes, ma’am,” when addressed on closed-circuit television by Judge Kim Theresa Mollica.
Mollica ordered the suspect held without bond on 17 counts of murder. His attorney, public defender Melissa McNeill, stood with her arm around Cruz during the brief court appearance as they stood before a podium looking at the camera, did not contest the order.
Before the hearing, Chief Assistant Public Defender Gordon Weekes, whose office is defending Cruz, described the suspect as a “deeply troubled child who has endured a lot of emotional trauma in a short period of time.” He said Cruz began spiraling downward following the death of his mother in November.
McNeill described Cruz, who was on suicide watch in jail, as a “broken child” who suffered brain developmental problems and depression. She said he was “sad, mournful and remorseful” over the killings. ”He is fully aware of what is going on.”
The brief hearing amounted to a formal presentation of charges in the massacre Wednesday at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla.
After his expulsion last year for fighting, Cruz returned to the high school with a vengeance, outfitted with a gas mask, smoke grenades and multiple magazines of ammunition and a semiautomatic weapon. He arrived at the school via the Uber transportation service, which he arranged through his smart phone, police said in charging papers.
Authorities say he triggered a fire alarm in a building that normally serves freshmen students, then roamed the schools’ corridors — from the first floor to the third — opening fire on students pouring into hallways.
It was the nation’s deadliest school shooting since a gunman attacked an elementary school in Newtown, Conn., more than five years ago.
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Max Charles, second from right, 14, a student at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., speaks to members of the media after being picked up by family members at a nearby hotel, in Coral Springs, Fla. A former student opened fire at the Florida high school Wednesday, killing more than a dozen people and sending scores of students fleeing into the streets in the nation’s deadliest school shooting since a gunman attacked an elementary school in Newtown, Conn.
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listed at 5-foot-7 and 131 pounds, was arrested a short distance from the high school near a home. He is being held without bond.
More: Why the AR-15 keeps appearing at America’s deadliest mass shootings
More: Florida shooting: What we know about attack at Parkland high school
More: Suspect in fatal Florida school attack is former student with ‘anger’ issues
More: Florida high school football coach ‘died a hero’ while shielding students
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A former student went on a shooting rampage at a Florida high school, leaving 17 dead while panicked students barricaded themselves inside classrooms and frantic parents raced to the scene.
USA TODAY
The 17 dead include students and adults, Broward County Sheriff Scott Israel said. At least 15 were injured and taken to local hospitals.
A sheriff said the bodies of 12 of the dead, including a beloved coach and security guard, Aaron Feis, who stepped in front of one spray of bullets to protect his students, were found inside the building.
Counselors were made available Thursday morning off-campus for the more than 3,000 students, teachers and staff at the school, which will remain closed as an investigation continues.
A glimpse into suspect’s past
Israel said Cruz had been expelled from the school for “disciplinary reasons.”
Victoria Olvera, 17, a junior, said the suspect was kicked out last school year after a fight with his ex-girlfriend’s new boyfriend. She said Cruz had been abusive to his girlfriend.
School officials said Cruz attended another school in Broward County after his expulsion.
A law enforcement official told the Associated Press that Cruz legally purchased his AR-15 rifle about a year ago. The official is familiar with the investigation into the shooting but not authorized to discuss it publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.
Cruz’s mother Lynda Cruz died of pneumonia Nov. 1, neighbors, friends and family members said, according to the Sun Sentinel. Cruz and her husband, who died of a heart attack several years ago, adopted Nikolas and his biological brother, Zachary, after the couple moved from Long Island in New York to Broward County.
The boys were left in the care of a family friend after their mother died, family member Barbara Kumbatovich, of Long Island said.
Unhappy there, Nikolas Cruz asked to move in with a friend’s family in northwest Broward. The family agreed and Cruz moved in around Thanksgiving. According to Jim Lewis, the family’s lawyer, who did not identify them, they knew Cruz owned the AR-15 but made him keep it locked up in a cabinet. He did have the key, however.
“This family did what they thought was right, which was to bring in a troubled kid and try to help him out,” he told CNN.
Broward County Mayor Beam Furr said during an interview with CNN that the shooter was getting treatment at a mental health clinic for a while, but that he hadn’t been back to the clinic for more than a year.
“It wasn’t like there wasn’t concern for him,” Furr said.
Warning signs
Math teacher Jim Gard told The Miami Herald that Cruz may have been identified as a potential threat to other students. Gard said he believes the school sent out an email warning teachers that Cruz, who had been in his class last year, shouldn’t be allowed on campus with a backpack.
“There were problems with him last year threatening students, and I guess he was asked to leave campus,” Gard said.
However, Broward County School District Superintendent Robert Runcie said Thursday he did not know of any threats posed by Cruz to the school.
“Typically you see in these situations that there potentially could have been signs out there,” Runcie said. “I would be speculating at this point if there were, but we didn’t have any warnings. There weren’t any phone calls or threats that we know of that were made.”
Cruz’s former classmates say the former participant in the ninth grade JROTC group, had a hot temper and a history of making dark, gun-related jokes.
Jillian Davis, 19, recalls him as withdrawn and having “a lot of anger management issues.”
“Finding out it was him makes a lot of sense now,” Davis said.
Dakota Mutchler, 17, a junior, said he used to be close friends with Cruz, who “started progressively getting a little more weird.”
Mutchler recalled Cruz posting on Instagram about killing animals and said he talked about doing target practice in his backyard with a pellet gun.
A Mississippi bail bondsman and frequent YouTube blogger received an eerie comment last year that took on new meaning Wednesday. ”Im going to be a professional school shooter,” the post read. The poster’s name: “Nikolas Cruz.”
Ben Bennight said he took a screenshot and reported the post to the FBI. “I wish I could have given them more information but it was just a comment on my channel,” he said.
FBI special agent Rob Lasky told reporters they pursued the report but they were unable to determine the location or true identity of the person making the comment.
‘This is tragic’
The massacre in Florida left a close-knit community reeling. As the ordeal unfolded, parents rushed to the school, lining a nearby roadway to await word on their loved ones. Others simply grieved.
In a TV address Thursday, President Trump said he would visit Parkland, Fla., to meet with family members and local officials. He called for unity and for tackling the difficult issue of mental illness.
“It is not enough to simply take action that makes us feel like we are making a difference, we must actually make that difference,” he said.
Officials said a #GoFundMe site, Stoneman Douglas Victims Fund, had been set up on behalf of victims and their families.
In Parkland, Gov. Rick Scott met with families of the victims Wednesday night and said his heart goes out to them.
“I don’t know what to say to everybody other than the fact that we live in a state that people love each other and care about each other,” he said. “This is tragic. It makes you mad.”
He told reporters that he would meet with lawmakers in Tallahassee to find ways to keep people with mental illness from obtaining weapons. “If someone is mentally ill, they should not have access to a gun,” he said.
Runcie said students at the stricken high school approached him to call on lawmakers to take action.
“(They) are saying that now is the time for this country to have a real conversation on sensible gun control laws.” he said.
Contributing: Alexi Cardona, Naples Daily News, Emily Bohatch, The (Stuart, Fla.) News; The Associated Press.
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Trump Threatens to Veto Immigration Bills that Don’t Meet His Demands
February 15, 2018 by admin
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The president’s decision to weigh in forcefully is likely to undermine the efforts of several bipartisan groups in the Senate and the House by calling into question whether any legislation they come up with might be dead-on-arrival once they make it to the president’s desk.
Instead, Mr. Trump said in the statement that lawmakers should support Mr. Grassley’s immigration legislation to codify his own plan. The bill would provide a path to citizenship for 1.8 million young immigrants, end the visa lottery program, build a border wall and end what he calls “chain migration,” which is family-based immigration.
“The overwhelming majority of American voters support a plan that fulfills the Framework’s four pillars, which move us towards the safe, modern, and lawful immigration system our people deserve,” Mr. Trump said.
He added that he would oppose a smaller, “Band-aid” approach to immigration that some lawmakers have been discussing, which would protect Dreamers for a few years in exchange for a small increase in border security spending — essentially kicking the issue down the road.
Senator Chuck Schumer of New York, the Democratic leader, responded harshly to the president’s entreaty, noting with dismay that Mr. Trump last September ended the Obama-era program known as DACA, or Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, which protected the Dreamers from deportation and provided them work permits.
“The American people know what’s going on,” Mr. Schumer said on the Senate floor. “They know this president not only created the problem, but seems to be against every solution that might pass because it isn’t 100 percent of what he wants. If, at the end of the week, we are unable to find a bill that can pass — and I sincerely hope that’s not the case due to the good efforts of so many people on both sides of the aisle — the responsibility will fall entirely on the president’s shoulders and those in this body who went along with him.”
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Republicans searching for a compromise on immigration were similarly perplexed.
“The president’s going to have a vote on his concept. I don’t think it will get 60 votes,” Senator Lindsey Graham, Republican of South Carolina said, adding, “The bottom line then is: What do you do next? You can do what we’ve done for the last 35 years — blame each other. Or you can actually start fixing the broken immigration system. If you came out of this with strong border security — the president getting his wall and the Dream Act population being taken care of, most Americans would applaud.”
Mr. Trump’s statement was a victory for conservatives in his administration, including Stephen Miller, his top domestic policy adviser, who have been pushing the president to demand an overhaul of the nation’s immigration rules in exchange for his support of a permanent solution for the Dreamers.
Several senior White House advisers told reporters on Wednesday that Mr. Trump will not relent in his support for his hard-line immigration principles and said Dreamers should blame Democrats if legislation does not pass.
One senior adviser, who requested anonymity to discuss legislative strategy, said the president had made “dramatic concessions” by agreeing to a path to citizenship for 1.8 million young immigrants. Another made it clear that Mr. Trump will not compromise any further.
That position was underscored on Wednesday by a Department of Homeland Security statement that slammed a competing immigration measure being offered by Senator John McCain, Republican of Arizona, and Chris Coons, Democrat of Delaware.
That bipartisan bill would call for more border security, but would not directly finance construction of a border wall that Mr. Trump has promised. The bill would offer a way for Dreamers to become legal; the D.H.S. statement described it as a “mass legalization” measure.
“The McCain-Coons proposal would increase illegal immigration, surge chain migration, continue catch-and-release and give a pathway to citizenship to convicted alien felons,” the statement from the department said.
The top Republicans in both the House and Senate praised the statements from the administration on Wednesday, describing them as a boost for the approach that many of their more conservative members support.
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“The president has made clear what principles must be addressed if we are going to make a law instead of merely making political points,” Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Republican leader, said Wednesday morning.
Speaker Paul D. Ryan of Wisconsin echoed that sentiment, saying that “the president did a very good job of putting a very sincere offer on the table. And that sincere offer that he put on the table should be the framework through which we come together to find a solution.”
While the president’s support of the Iowa Republican’s bill is not surprising, his vague promise not to support other bills is notable, as Mr. Trump told lawmakers last month that he would sign any immigration bill that Congress sends him. Republican leaders have said Congress should only pass legislation that Mr. Trump would sign, but how flexible the president would be was a key question for lawmakers.
The president’s answer to that question came as one of the bipartisan coalitions in the Senate closed in on a deal that the members believe would get 60 votes, setting up a clash between a large number of members from both parties and the Republican leadership, led by Mr. Trump.
Mr. Graham said there is “growing consensus” around a two-pronged approach, in which protections would be extended for roughly 1.8 million undocumented immigrants brought as children, in exchange for the full $25 billion for the president’s proposed border wall. He said addressing other proposals has become “politically toxic,” ever since a White House immigration meeting where Mr. Trump referred to African nations as “shithole countries.”
Asked about Mr. Trump’s veto threat, Mr. Graham said, “Well, then, we won’t go very far. Then you’ll have three presidents who failed. You’ll have Obama, Bush and Trump.”
The White House position was announced as the Senate began debate on immigration, which allows senators to build legislation from a blank slate on the Senate floor.
Other proposals with bipartisan support on Capitol Hill take a narrower approach than Mr. Grassley, extending protections for young immigrants brought to the country illegally as children and bolstering border security. But those bills do not include the tough changes to immigration law that Mr. Trump backs — and most Democrats strongly oppose.
The statement is likely to make deliberations on Capitol Hill far harder. The president ended an Obama-era program protecting young, undocumented immigrants, known as DACA, or Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, but gave Congress six months to find a legislative alternative. That deadline is now three weeks away.
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The Grassley bill includes several measures to increase border security, including increasing the use of radar and tower-based surveillance, sensors and drones mostly along the Southwest border and increasing the number of border patrol agents. The National Guard would also be used to help constructs border fencing and operate some of the surveillance equipment.
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