Re-posted by Nicholas Stix
U.S. Navy was warned that Washington shooter “heard voices”
CAPTIONS
Kathy Gaarde, 62, of Woodbridge, Va.
When she was not commuting to Washington for her job as a financial analyst for Navy shipyards, Kathleen Gaarde, 63, could often be found repairing birdhouses and counting bluebirds in a Virginia wildlife refuge.
"This was something she really enjoyed doing," Amanda Daisey, the assistant manager for the Potomac River National Wildlife Refuge, said in a telephone interview. Gaarde was the person they called to prepare parts of the refuge for the yearly migration of bluebirds, she said.
"She was an important volunteer for us," Daisey said. At least once a week in the spring and summer months, Gaarde would lead a team of volunteers to check the bluebird nests and take an accurate count of the birds that biologists used to track the health of the population in the area.
"She loved her animals and was a bluebird counter for the local refuge," Gaarde's husband, Douglass, said in a statement left on the doorstep of his home at the end of a wooded cul-de-sac in Woodbridge, 30 miles south of the Navy Yard complex.
Kathleen, who was called Kathy by her friends and family, was born and raised in Chicago and graduated from Florida State University. She and Douglass were married for 38 years. She had cared for her mother until her mother died at 94 last year. She loved hockey, Douglass wrote in the statement, and was a Washington Capitals season ticket holder for 25 years.
"Kathy was a caring daughter, fantastic mother, wife [of 38 years] and best friend for 43 years," Douglass wrote.
Three women walked out of the two-story house on Tuesday afternoon.
"You will focus on the victims, right?" one woman said. She declined to give her name to a reporter.
-- Brian Bennett, Tribune Washington Bureau
(Family photo courtesy of Douglas Gaarde /December 25, 2006)
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Phil Stewart and Scott Malone Reuters
6:48 p.m. CDT, September 17, 2013
Chicago Tribune
WASHINGTON/BOSTON (Reuters) - Rhode Island police warned the U.S. Navy last month that Washington Navy Yard gunman Aaron Alexis had reported "hearing voices," raising further questions about how he gained security clearance at the complex where he went on a shooting rampage.
Officials say Alexis, a Navy contractor and former Navy reservist, opened fire at the Naval Sea Systems Command on Monday, killing 12 people before police shot him dead.
The shooting - a mile and a half from the U.S. Capitol and three miles from the White House - sent shockwaves through Washington.
The Pentagon said it would review security at military installations around the world and the White House promised to review standards for federal government contractors.
A Defense Department Inspector General's report published on Tuesday revealed security lapses that allowed 52 convicted felons to gain access to Navy facilities because budget cuts had undermined vetting.
Meanwhile, the U.S. capital paused to remember the victims, aged 46 to 73, who included retirees, parents and a bird lover.
Police in Newport, Rhode Island, were so concerned about Alexis' behavior on a business trip there in August that they alerted Navy police.
Alexis told police he believed people were following him and "sending vibrations into his body," according to a Newport police report.
He told police that he had twice moved hotels to avoid the noise he heard coming through the floor and the ceiling of his rooms, and that the people following him were using "some sort of microwave machine" to prevent him from sleeping.
"Based on the naval base implications and the claim that the involved subject, one (Aaron Alexis) was 'hearing voices,' I made contact with the on-duty Naval Station police," a Newport police officer wrote, adding that he faxed his report of the incident to Navy police.
The Newport police report said Navy police had promised to check if Alexis was in fact a naval base contractor.
Asked for comment, a spokesman said the Navy was looking into the matter, without confirming any details.
In addition, CNN reported that Alexis had contacted two Veterans Administration hospitals recently and was believed to be seeking psychological help.
"Initial reports indicate that this is an individual who may have had some mental health problems," U.S. President Barack Obama told Spanish-language network Telemundo.
"The fact that we do not have a firm enough background check system is something that makes us more vulnerable to these kinds of mass shootings." [ID:nL2N0HD27Y]
The Navy gave Alexis an honorable discharge despite a series of eight to 10 misconduct charges, ranging from traffic offenses to disorderly conduct.
SECURITY CLEARANCE
Using a valid pass as an information technology contractor with a private company, Alexis entered the Naval Sea Systems Command headquarters with a shotgun - bought legally in Virginia - and gained access to a handgun after he started firing, officials said.
He started picking off victims in a cafeteria from a fourth-floor atrium, witnesses said. Eight people were hurt, three with gunshot wounds, before Alexis was killed in a gun battle with police.
A U.S. defense official said a National Agency Check, a type of background check, was completed on Alexis in August 2007 and he was determined eligible to handle "secret" material in March 2008. Such clearances are valid for 10 years, meaning Alexis had no need to renew his.
Alexis' employer said it had enlisted a service to make what appeared to be two standard, employment background checks on him over the past year, finding only a traffic violation while twice confirming his "secret"-level security clearance with the U.S. Defense Department.
"The latest background check and security clearance confirmation were in late June of 2013 and revealed no issues other than one minor traffic violation," The Experts, an information technology company, said in a statement.
Alexis was arrested on September 4, 2010, in Fort Worth, Texas, on a misdemeanor charge of discharging a firearm. He was also arrested in Seattle in 2004 for shooting out a construction worker's car tires in an anger-fueled "blackout" triggered by perceived "disrespect," police said. In 2008, he was cited for disorderly conduct in DeKalb County, Georgia, when he was kicked out of a club for damaging furnishings and cursing.
In each case, the charges were dropped.
People who knew Alexis said they were shocked by the shooting, describing him as a lover of Thai culture who worshipped at a Buddhist temple in Texas, although one acquaintance told reporters he had an unnatural affection for violent video games.
The Navy Yard was closed to all but essential personnel on Tuesday. Military police were stationed at the four entrances, checking the identifications of the employees who were being allowed back in. Other personnel milled around outside, hoping to retrieve cars that remained locked inside the gates.
"I've never ever felt unsafe at this place," said David Berlin, a civilian who works at the Navy Yard as an assistant program manager building weapons systems. "If someone wants to skirt the rules, they can do that, but you trust your colleagues."
(Additional reporting by Mark Hosenball, Deborah Charles, Ian Simpson, and Alina Selyukh; Writing by Daniel Trotta; editing by Christopher Wilson)
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2 comments:
All of these crazy black homicidal maniacs may be crazy but they are very specific on their kills, Whites only. This navy base in the DC area has to be heavily populated with blacks, but somehow this crazy ass nigger was able to shoot only Whites.
On the Talking Head shows Tuesday night there was a lot of hand-wringing about "How did he get a security clearance?" An FBI type said he should never have gotten one.
The reason why is pretty obvious.
David In TN
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