Jump to content

WHITEWASH ATTEMPT: Chattanooga Shooting: FBI Recovers Gunman's Dis


Recommended Posts

GUYS,

   IS ANYONE ELSE GETTING THE FEELING THAT THE DICTATORSHIP IS DESPERATELY TRYING, THROUGH ITS MEDIA LACKEYS AND MOUTHPIECES, TO LAY THIS OFF ON DRUGS AND DEPRESSION, INSTEAD OF WHERE IT RIGHTLY BELONGS: RADICAL ISLAM!
 
   THEY'LL ALSO TRY TO USE THAT LYING CRAP TO DENY THE DEAD THE PURPLE HEART, YOU WATCH AND SEE.
 
   JUS' SAYIN'.............
 
  BTW, THE ARTICLE ALSO CONTAINED SEVERAL PICTURES OF THIS JIHADI SMILING, WELL-DRESSED, ONE OF HIM AS A SMILING CHILD, ETC., ETC.
 
  A FRANTIC ATTEMPT AT RE-HABBING THIS SWINE.
 
  THEY'LL BE CALLING HIM THE VICTIM NEXT.
 
  WERE THERE ANY SURVEILLANCE CAMERAS THAT CAUGHT FOOTAGE OF THE ATTACK??
 
  I'D LIKE TO SEE A SCREEN SHOT OF HIS "SMILING" FACE FROM THAT!
 
   JESS1344
 
 

  Chattanooga Shooting: FBI Recovers Gunman's Disturbing Diary

 
 
Jul 20, 2015, 6:58 AM ET
 
By  BRIAN ROSS, DOUG LANTZ and  JAMES GORDON MEEK
BRIAN ROSS More From Brian »
ABC News Chief Investigative Correspondent
 
 
 
JAMES GORDON MEEKMore From James »
Investigative Producer
 
 
 via  GOOD 
 
With more than 30  FBI agents due to arrive today in Chattanooga, a diary belonging to the gunman and FBI interviews with his parents paint a picture of a disturbed, suicidal young man using drugs, preparing for bankruptcy and facing an appearance in criminal court, according to a representative of the shooter’ s family.
Four days after the shooting, the FBI has not found any connection to overseas terrorist groups, but Mohammod Abdulazeez's diary says that as far back as 2013, he wrote about having suicidal thoughts and "becoming a martyr" after losing his job due to his drug use, both prescription and non-prescription drugs, the family representative said.
 
In a downward spiral, Abdulazeez would abuse sleeping pills, opioids, painkillers and marijuana, along with alcohol, the representative said.
 
 
 
 
Most recently, the 24-year-old was having problems dealing with a 12 hour overnight shift, and had to take sleeping pills, according to the representative. The young man was also thousands of dollars in debt and considering filing for bankruptcy.
 
Three months before the shooting, Abdulazeez was arrested on April 20 -- a day celebrated annually by marijuana users -- and charged with drunk driving. The arresting officer noted a smell of marijuana in the car.
 
The discovery of the diary comes as investigators also work to solve the mystery of Abdulazeez's actions in the days leading up to the deadly shooting. The family representative told ABC News Abdulazeez rented the silver Mustang Tuesday, showed up at the local mosque and took a friend on a “joy ride” until 3 a.m. He did not sleep at his parents’ home for the next two nights and the FBI is seeking to retrace his steps.
 
“He bragged about [the car], and was showing it off to friends about how fast it would go,” the family representative said Sunday.
 
On Wednesday, Abdulazeez  shot and killed four Marines and fatally wounded a Navy sailor after opening fire on two unguarded military facilities in Chattanooga.
 
The family representative said Sunday that the family told the FBI there were no outward signs of radicalization but added Abdulazeez “was susceptible to bad influences” and would be affected by watching news accounts of “children being killed in Syria.” For all his struggles with drugs, the representative said, Abdulazeez also struggled with being a devout Muslim.
 
The family representative said Abdulazeez had a number of guns in his house and often used them to go hunting or for target practice with friends at nearby firing ranges. FBI agents recently focused on the Walmart in Hixson, where officials tell ABC News
 
Abdulazeez bought ammunition for his guns on July 11. Two young men, seen with Abdulazeez in the store, are being sought for questioning although they are not believed to be accomplices.
 
The family representative said Abdulazeez's family sought, without success, to get him treatment for his mental illness, and to keep him away from a group of friends with whom he would drink and smoke marijuana.
 
A seven-month trip to  Jordan last year was an effort to “get him away from bad influences in the U.S.,” not part of a path to radicalization, the family told agents.
Abdulazeez's family released a statement Saturday saying that there are "no words to describe our shock, horror, and grief."
 
"The person who committed this horrible crime was not the son we knew and loved," the statement said. "For many years, our son suffered from depression. It grieves us beyond belief to know that his pain found its expression in this heinous act of violence."
 
Still, for the FBI, the psychological profile of the disturbed young man does not explain why he chose two U.S. military targets, seven miles apart, for his deadly mission.
 
ABC News' Barbara Schmitt, Brian Epstein, Alexander Hosenball, Rhonda Schwartz and Lee Ferran contributed to this report.
 

 

Link to post
Share on other sites

funny how you have a terrorist shoot up marines and no mention of the guns but they bring up psych meds from the past.

 

funny how you have people doped up on psych meds shoot up civilians and you hear all sorts of shit about the guns and nothing about the drugs.

Link to post
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
  • Chatbox

    Load More
    You don't have permission to chat.
×
×
  • Create New...