Warning signs in Florida school shooting have officials taking a hard look at procedures

As investigators dig into Florida school shooting suspect Nikolas Cruz’s background, more and more instances have emerged in which state and federal officials apparently missed opportunities to stop his runaway obsession to, as the alleged killer purportedly stated in a 6-month-old comment on a YouTube video, “be a professional school shooter.”

“This kid, in his own way, was screaming out in every way the mind knows how to scream out. He did everything, including saying, ‘I want to go and shoot people in school,'” Cruz’s attorney Howard Finkelstein told ABC News. “I don’t know what you can do more than that to get somebody’s attention.”

MIKE STOCKER/POOL/EPA-EFE/REX/Sh
Nikolas Cruz appears in court for a status hearing before Broward Circuit Judge Elizabeth Scherer in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, Feb. 19, 2018.

Among the growing list of warning signs either detailed by public statements from officials or public records are:

— An admission by the FBI that it was given two tips on Cruz’s potential for violence, including the September comment on the YouTube video, which the FBI said it investigated but could not verify who posted it. The bureau also said on Friday that a Jan. 5 tip that came across its Public Access Line, warning that Cruz might be planning a “school shooting” and detailing his guns, was not passed on to its Miami field office and was never investigated.

— A report in August 2016 by the Florida Department of Children and Family that shows the agency investigated a Snapchat post showing Cruz cutting his arms and was told by Cruz that he “plans to go out and buy a gun.” The agency determined Cruz “to be stable enough not to be hospitalized,” according to the DCF report obtained by The Associated Press.

Joe Raedle/Getty Images
People look on at the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, Feb. 18, 2018, in Parkland, Florida.

— Investigators dissecting Cruz’s social media accounts since the mass shooting have found posts that Broward County Sheriff Scott Israel described to ABC News as “very, very disturbing.”

— Broward County School District officials saying Cruz was reprimanded regularly while a student at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School and eventually expelled. Jim Gard, a math teacher at the school, told ABC News he believes Cruz had been banned from bringing a backpack to school when he was a student there.

— At least 20 calls for service in the last few years regarding Cruz for a variety of disturbance complaints, including fighting with his mother, who died in November after contracting pneumonia, authorities said. In a police report from Sept. 28, 2016, a therapist who went on one of the calls cleared Cruz, concluding he was “no threat to anyone or himself.”

— One of Cruz’s classmates told ABC News that about a year ago, Cruz told him, “I swear to God I’ll shoot up this school.” But the student did not report the threat to school officials after Cruz apologized for making it, the student said.

Rhona Wise/AFP/Getty Images
Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School student Emma Gonzalez speaks at a rally for gun control at the Broward County Federal Courthouse in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, Feb. 17, 2018.

During a gun control rally in Fort Lauderdale on Saturday, Emma Gonzalez, a student at Stoneman Douglas, told a crowd that students had reported Cruz numerous times for his behavior.

“We did, time and time again since he was in middle school,” Emma said. “It was no surprise to anyone who knew him to hear he was the shooter.”

Robert Runcie, the Broward County School District superintendent, declined to comment on Cruz specifically, but told ABC News in an interview on Sunday, that the district follows up on all complaints about students.

“They are disciplined, they are reviewed,” Runcie said. “In schools, we provide counseling and support to the greatest extent possible.

“But there are limitations for what we can do at a legal standpoint right now,” Runcie said. “If a student has serious issues, we collaborate when appropriate with law enforcement agencies on when to take action. But the big challenge, I believe, is that we have various agencies, including the school system, that are working really hard but in silos.”

Runcie said there isn’t a system available in which the schools, law enforcement, social service agencies and mental health agencies share information that could possibly connect the dots about a particular student.

“We’re gonna certainly review this and all of us in our respective areas are gonna figure out how we can improve on what we are doing,” Runcie said. “But at the end of the day, there’s got to be legislation, there has to be some type of infrastructure built so that we’re all working smarter instead of just harder in our own silos, if you will.”

Israel told ABC News that he’s ordered an investigation into all 20 calls regarding Cruz to “look at what our deputies did, and if our deputies acted inappropriately, or missed and didn’t do what our leaders think they should’ve done.”

But Israel said his deputies often find their “hands are tied” by laws. He said the state’s Baker Act — which gives law enforcement the ability to involuntarily take someone suffering from mental illness to a facility to be examined if they are an immediate threat to themselves or others — needs to be expanded.

“We have to be able to when we read disturbing texts, when somebody says ‘I want to be a school killer’… we need the ability to involuntarily Baker Act someone for what we think they might do,” Israel said. “That has to be done in this day and age.”

But Israel said nothing will change unless Congress acts to strengthen gun laws to keep weapons out of the hands of people with a history of mental illness.

“They deserve and we deserve to have them confined, and when they’re examined and somebody says they’re ready to be released, they should be released and they shouldn’t be able to come over with an order and have us give them their handguns,” Israel said.

“They’re not better three or seven days later,” he said. “They’re not better, they’re not healed. We don’t know what’s gonna happen. We need to keep their guns.”

Buffalo gores camper on Southern California island

AVALON, Calif. — Authorities say a buffalo has gored a man camping on Southern California’s Catalina Island.

Los Angeles County sheriff’s officials say the man was sitting on a log Saturday evening and the buffalo was grazing nearby.

Sgt. Ray Ward says that when the buffalo came closer, the man tried to move away and that’s when the animal charged.

Ward says the buffalo gored the man’s left arm. He didn’t know the extent of the injuries.

The Orange County Register reports that the man was treated at the scene and then airlifted to a hospital on the mainland.

Buffalo are common and roam freely on the back side of Catalina Island, where there are campgrounds. Ward says it’s very rare for them to attack humans.

Russia’s shadowy world of military contractors: independent mercenaries, or working for the Kremlin?

“I’d like everyone to know about my husband,” she said in an interview with Znak, a Russian news site. “And not only about my husband, but about all the boys who died there so stupidly. Where were they sent to, and why? They didn’t even have protection, they were like pigs sent to slaughter!”

66 Feared Dead After Iran Plane Crashes Into Mountain

Photo
Distraught relatives of passengers of the crashed Aseman Airline flight gathered at the Mehr-Abad Airport in Tehran, Iran, on Sunday.

Credit
Abedin Taherkenareh/European Pressphoto Agency

TEHRAN, Iran — A commercial plane crashed on Sunday in a foggy, mountainous region of Iran, most likely killing all 66 people on board, the state news media reported.

The Iran Aseman Airlines plane went down near its destination, the city of Yasuj, about 485 miles south of the capital, Tehran.

Mohammad Taghi Tabatabai, a spokesman for Aseman Airlines, initially told state television that everyone aboard the ATR-72, a twin-engine turboprop used for short-distance regional flights, had been killed.

The airline later issued a statement saying it could not reach the crash site and could not “accurately and definitely confirm” everyone had died.

The plane was carrying 60 passengers, including one child, and six crew members, according to The Associated Press. The cause of the crash was not immediately clear.

The Iranian Red Crescent said it had sent people to the area, and the authorities said they would be investigating.

But fog prevented rescue helicopters from reaching the site in the Zagros Mountains, state TV reported. Mr. Tabatabai said the plane had crashed into Mount Dena, which has an elevation of about 14,500 feet.

News reports said the plane disappeared from radar screens 50 minutes after taking off from Mehrabad International Airport, in western Tehran, which mainly serves domestic flights but has some international routes.




TURKMENISTAN

Caspian

Sea

AFGHAN.

Tehran

Tabas

IRAN

MT. DENA

IRAQ

Yasuj

KUWAIT

Persian Gulf

SAUDI ARABIA

400 miles


By The New York Times

Under decades of international sanctions, Iran’s commercial passenger aircraft fleet has aged, with accidents occurring regularly in recent years.

The sanctions have prevented the oil-rich country from updating its fleet, forcing it to use substandard Russian planes and to patch up older jets far past their normal years of service, drawing on spare parts bought on the black market.

In 2014, a locally built Iranian passenger plane crashed shortly after takeoff from Mehrabad Airport, killing 39 people and reviving questions about the safety of an aviation sector hobbled by sanctions.

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That plane was based on a relatively obscure Ukrainian design that had been involved in previous Iranian air disasters. The Sepahan Air regional airliner, bound for Tabas in eastern Iran, went down in a residential area shortly after takeoff at 9:20 a.m.

In November 2006, an Iranian military plane crashed at Mehrabad Airport, killing all 38 people on board, including 35 members of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps, state television reported.

The Antonov 74 aircraft, headed to Shiraz in the south of Iran, crashed shortly after takeoff, the airport’s director said.

Earlier that year, a plane carrying 147 passengers caught fire while landing in northeastern Iran, killing 29 people and injuring 47.

The plane, a Russian-made Tupolev-154, apparently blew a tire while landing in Mashhad, slipped off the runway and burst into flames, the governor of Khorasan Province said.

After the landmark nuclear deal with world powers in 2015, Iran signed deals with Airbus and Boeing to buy scores of passenger planes.

The ATR 72 involved in the crash on Sunday, a French-Italian short-haul aircraft, was introduced in the late 1980s. The fleet of Aseman Airlines was delivered from 1993 to 2009.


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Adam Rippon changes his mind and won’t accept NBC job

Well, at least NBC will still be able to interview Adam Rippon, right? In a reversal of news she had broken earlier on Sunday, USA Today’s Christine Brennan reported that the figure skater will not, after all, take a job with the network as a correspondent for the rest of the Winter Olympics.

Rippon “decided overnight that he would rather remain as an Olympian,” Brennan reported, citing a source “who would not speak publicly because of the sensitivity of the matter.” She said he did not “want to relinquish his official Olympic standing, give up credential, move out of Team USA housing and miss [the] closing ceremony.”

“I am so flattered that NBC wanted me to work as a correspondent, but if I took this opportunity, I would have to leave the Olympic team and I would have to leave the [Olympic] Village,” Rippon said Sunday on NBCSN (via USA Today). “It’s so important to me, you know, I worked so hard to be on this Olympic team, and my teammates and my friends were there for me during my events, and that meant so much to me, that I really feel like I need to be there for them during their events.”

An openly gay skater who helped the United States win a bronze medal in team competition, Rippon became one of the biggest breakout stars at Pyeongchang not just for his athletic exploits but for saying things that have been at turns smart, creative and refreshing for viewers. NBC had confirmed the news of its hiring of the 28-year-old Pennsylvania native, but he apparently had a change of heart.

John Kelly, Chinese officials caused commotion over nuclear football in Beijing, report says

President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump arriving for a state dinner last November with China’s President Xi Jinping and China’s first lady Peng Liyuan in Beijing.

 (REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst, File)

President Donald Trump has boasted repeatedly about his big and powerful “nuclear button” — but according to a new report, it almost got away from him last year in China.

According to Axios, five sources said that on Nov. 9, during Trump’s visit to Beijing’s Great Hall of the People, Chief of Staff John Kelly and a U.S. Secret Service agent had a “skirmish” with Chinese security officials over the so-called nuclear “football,” which helps set a nuclear strike order in motion.

When the U.S. military aide carrying the football entered the Great Hall, Axios reported, Chinese security officials blocked his entry.

Kelly, in the adjoining room, was told, and the former United States Marine Corps general rushed over and told U.S. officials to keep walking, according to Axios.

“We’re moving in,” Kelly said — and his team all started moving.

A Chinese security official then grabbed Kelly, and Kelly shoved the man’s hand off of his body, according to Axios. Then a U.S. Secret Service agent grabbed that Chinese security official, and tackled him to the ground.



Axios reported that at no point did the Chinese have the nuclear football in their possession or even touch the briefcase.

The process for launching a nuclear strike is secret and complex. The nuclear football is carried by a rotating group of military officers everywhere the president goes and is equipped with communication tools and a book with prepared war plans.

If the president were to order a strike, he would identify himself to military officials at the Pentagon with codes unique to him. Those codes are recorded on a card known as the “biscuit” that is carried by the president at all times. He then would transmit the launch order to the Pentagon and Strategic Command.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Chilean sexual abuse victim testifies before Vatican investigator

NEW YORK (Reuters) – The key witness in the case of a Chilean bishop accused of covering sexual abuse said on Saturday he gave “eye opening” testimony to a papally mandated investigator and hoped it would lead to the truth.

Juan Carlos Cruz met in a church on Manhattan’s Upper West Side for about four hours with Archbishop Charles Scicluna, one of the most experienced and respected Vatican investigators of clergy sexual abuse.

“It’s been a good experience and I leave here very hopeful today,” he told reporters afterwards. “I feel that I was heard … it was very intense and very detailed and very, sometimes, eye-opening for them.”

“Hopefully it will lead to good things,” he said.

The Vatican announced on Jan. 30 that Pope Francis had appointed Scicluna to look into accusations that Bishop Juan Barros of the diocese of Osorno in Chile had covered up crimes against minors.

It was a dramatic U-turn for the pope, who eight days earlier told reporters aboard his plane returning from Latin America he was sure Barros was innocent and that the Vatican had received no concrete evidence against him.

“For the first time I feel that someone is listening,” said Cruz, who now lives in Philadelphia and works for a large-multinational company in nearby Delaware.

“We’ll see what the outcome is of all this, but I feel that Monsignor Scicluna is a very good man, and I think he was sincerely moved by what I was saying. He cried,” Cruz said.

“He was hearing my testimony, and I was telling him about the abuse, about the cover up [and] the way survivors, not just me, are treated … the personal toll it takes on someone. He was crying … it wasn’t an act … I felt that he was concerned and that he was listening,” Cruz said.

Scicluna declined to comment on the details of the testimony.

EMOTIONALLY DRAINED

As a teenager, Cruz was sexually abused by the Rev. Fernando Karadima, who was found guilty in a Vatican investigation in 2011 of abusing him and other teenage boys over many years. Karadima always denied the allegations.

The Vatican ordered him to follow a life of prayer and penitence and banned him from public ministry, but he avoided criminal prosecution because under Chilean law too much time had elapsed since the offences. The 87-year-old still lives in Chile.

Cruz says Barros witnessed the abuse by Karadima, who was Barros’ mentor years ago in a Santiago parish. Barros has always denied this and said he was unaware of any wrongdoing by Karadima, who had trained him to become a priest.

The Karadima case has gripped Chile for years and many Chileans protested the pope’s decision to make Barros a bishop in 2015. It cast a long shadow over the pope’s trip to Chile last month.

Scicluna will travel to Chile on Tuesday to continue his investigation of Barros there.

Cruz said he was “emotionally drained” but felt empathy from Scicluna and another priest from the Vatican’s doctrinal office in Rome who also took part in the meeting.

During his visit to Chile last month, the pope testily told a Chilean reporter: “The day I see proof against Bishop Barros, then I will talk. There is not a single piece of evidence against him. It is all slander. Is that clear?”

He later apologized to victims, acknowledging that his choice of words and tone of voice had “wounded many.”

Cruz said all victims deserved to be heard with the same respect and treatment he received from Scicluna.

“The pope needs to understand that is what survivors need. Cases don’t have to come to the media for them to pay attention,” he said.

Writing by Philip Pullella

Military helicopter crashes in Mexico, killing 13 quake survivors on the ground

While some homes and businesses near the quake’s epicenter were damaged, there were no reports of deaths, officials said. About 200 miles away in Mexico City, where an earthquake early warning system sent hundreds of thousands of people fleeing into the streets for safety Friday, only minor damage was reported.

Slain police commander laid to rest with stories of selflessness, harsh words for suspect

With Bridgeport draped in blue Saturday to honor slain Chicago police Cmdr. Paul Bauer, the city laid the fallen officer to rest with stories of his selflessness and harsh words for the man charged with his murder.

Thousands attended the funeral at Nativity of Our Lord Catholic Church, where the two-hour service and subsequent procession combined for one of most impressive — and stately — civic farewells in recent memory. Elected officials, department brass and rank-and-file officers from across North America filled the cavernous sanctuary on the South Side, while the Dan Ryan Expressway was closed so hundreds of police vehicles could lead the hearse carrying Bauer’s flag-draped casket to a suburban cemetery.

The mourners were comforted throughout the day by the Bridgeport community, which tied blue ribbons around trees and hung the commander’s photo in storefront windows. Some residents brought doughnuts and coffee to officers standing outside the church in frigid temperatures, while others opened their homes for them to warm up or use the bathroom.

Bridgeport residents Erica and Gerardo Avitia brought their two daughters, 3 and 2, to watch the funeral procession. Holding signs with Bauer’s picture on them, the couple said they wanted to show their support for the city and its grief-stricken Police Department.