While no specific reason has been given as to what spurred him to
fatally shoot 12 people at Washington's Navy Yard, Aaron Alexis' overall
mindset came into sharper focus Tuesday -- including a history of trouble in
the Navy and psychological issues.
That past includes a Newport, Rhode Island, incident on August 7,
more than five weeks before Alexis was gunned down after single-handedly
pulling off America's latest mass shooting.
Describing himself as a Navy contractor, Alexis told police he
believed an individual he'd gotten into a verbal spat with had sent three
"people to follow him and keep him awake by talking to him and sending
vibrations into his body," according to a police report. Alexis said he
hadn't seen any of these people, but insisted they'd followed him between three
hotels in the area -- the last being a Marriott, where police investigating a
harassment complaint encountered him.
There, Alexis told authorities the unseen individuals continued
speaking to him through walls and the floor, and that they used "some sort
of microwave machine" to send vibrations into his body to keep him awake.
He added, according to the police report, that "he does not have a history of mental illness in his family and that he never had any sort of mental episode." Nonetheless, a police sergeant alerted authorities at Naval Station Newport to Alexis "hearing voices." Reached Tuesday, officials at the base referred CNN to the FBI, which declined to comment.
It's not known if this incident was in any way related to Monday's
shooting spree. Still, it and other details offer insights into the shooter and
raised questions about whether he could have been stopped.
The Navy moved to discharge Alexis in 2010 due to what two Navy
officials described as a "pattern of misconduct," though he ended up
leaving the next year on a "general discharge" but maintained his
security clearance.
There were also run-ins with police, beyond the Newport incident.
In Seattle, for instance, Alexis was arrested in 2004 for shooting out the
tires of another man's vehicle in what he later told detectives was an
anger-fueled "blackout."
DeKalb County, Georgia, authorities said Tuesday they arrested
Alexis in 2008 on a disorderly conduct charge.
And recently, Alexis contacted two Veterans Affairs hospitals
around the capital, law enforcement sources told CNN. Two indicated he sought
help for sleep-related issues, with another source saying Alexis was
"having problems sleeping" and "hearing voices."
Whatever his past, Alexis was a military contractor and was in the
Navy's Ready Reserve -- a designation for former military members who don't
actively serve in a Reserve unit but who can be called up if the military needs
them.
Moreover, he had legitimate credentials to enter the base, Valerie
Parlave, assistant director in charge of the FBI's Washington field office,
said Tuesday. He also had a secret security clearance valid through 2017, even
after leaving the service full-time in 2011, Navy spokesman John Kirby told
CNN.
Should he have? Did the military miss opportunities to prevent
Alexis from attacking? And how was he able to get a shotgun onto the naval
base?
Those are good question, yet none has a definitive answer.
Investigators scour crime scene, hotel and
beyond
The historic Navy Yard will remain closed to all but
"essential" Navy employees Wednesday, as it was Tuesday. Even then,
it's likely to remain abuzz with investigators methodically modeling bullet
trajectories and mapping the scene, according to Parlave.
Federal law enforcement sources say authorities recovered three
guns from the scene: a shotgun and two handguns.
Two days before the shooting, Alexis spent "a couple
hours" shooting at Sharpshooters Small Arms Range in northern Virginia
before paying $419 for a Remington 870 shotgun -- after being approved by the
federal background check -- and a small amount of ammunition, the store's
attorney, J. Michael Slocum, said.
The two handguns, sources say, may have been taken from guards at
the naval base. But how Alexis brought the shotgun in, though, remains an open
question, with Washington Mayor Vincent Gray speculating he may have concealed
it.
Surveillance video shows Alexis walking into the facility,
bringing a bag into a bathroom in Building 197 and coming out with the shotgun,
a federal law enforcement official said. It's believed Alexis had the
disassembled gun inside the bag.
From there, he headed to a perch overlooking the building's atrium
and began firing on those below using 00 buckshot shells, each packed with
about a dozen pellets capable of causing tremendous damage, according to the
same official.
Parlave said Alexis is believed to be solely responsible for
Monday's bloodshed that, in addition to those killed, left eight wounded. Three of them suffered
gunshot wounds, one of whom was released Tuesday. Another is Washington police
Officer Scott Williams credited with killing Alexis. Still, that doesn't mean authorities aren't
looking into others who might have helped Alexis, wittingly or unwittingly, or
known something about the plot.
Alexis? Yard
Federal investigators on Tuesday collected Alexis' computer and
possessions from the hotel where he spent the last few days of his life, in
addition to reviewing surveillance and other tools to see whom he interacted
with in three weeks around Washington.
Co-workers have portrayed Alexis of having lived the mundane work
life of a well-paid tech contractor given daily per diems that allowed a
comfortable stay in an expensive city, a senior law enforcement official said.
Authorities are also appealing for the public's help in a probe
U.S. Attorney Ronald Machen estimates could take "weeks and months."
"No piece of information is too small," Parlave said.
'Who was this guy?'
A New York City native -- where both his parents, now divorced,
still live -- Alexis worked between 2001 and 2003 at the Borough of Manhattan
Community College. His supervisor there, Barry Williams, told CNN he never
would have expected such a violent outburst, though Alexis would get easily
frustrated over minor things and hold grudges.
Years later, Alexis joined the Navy -- which admitted him knowing of his 2004 arrest,
having been apparently "satisfied that it did not preclude granting
(secret security) clearance," a senior Navy officer said -- as a petty officer working on electrical systems.
But his four years in service weren't all smooth. He was written
up for eight instances of misconduct on duty, a U.S. defense official told CNN,
including cases of insubordination, disorderly conduct, unauthorized absences
and at least one instance of intoxication.
"He wasn't a stellar sailor, we know that," said Rear
Adm. Kirby, adding that the misconduct cases were all "relatively
minor." "... None of those (offenses) give you an indication he was
capable of this sort of brutal, vicious violence."
Rep. Michael McCaul, chairman of the House Homeland Security
Committee, said he feels the infractions "were kind of swept under the
rug."
"It is real easy to just pass the buck along to another
military base or in this instance, a defense contractor," the Texas
Republican said Tuesday. "...There are so many red flags that popped up in
this case."
Without a civilian conviction, the offenses weren't enough to
produce a general discharge; Alexis was granted an honorable discharge in
January 2011 instead. In fact, he remained part of the Navy's Ready Reserve up
to his death, Navy Secretary Ray Mabus told CNN.
The Experts -- the contracting firm for which Alexis worked for
about six months over the past year -- said the last of two background checks
it conducted in June on Alexis "revealed no issues other than one minor
traffic violation."
Still, did something change more recently? There was the August
incident in Rhode Island. And a friend and former housemate, Kristi
Suthamtewakul, told CNN's "New Day" she noticed personality changes
in Alexis over the last few months, but nothing indicating the potential for
such violence.
"Aaron was a very polite, very friendly man," she said.
Among other problems, he had been frustrated about pay and
benefits issues after a one-month contracting stint in Japan last year,
Suthamtewakul said.
"He got back and he felt very slighted about his benefits at
the time," she said. "Financial issues. He wasn't getting paid on
time, he wasn't getting paid what he was supposed to be getting paid."
"That's when I first started hearing statements about how he
wanted to move out of America," Suthamtewakul said. "He was very
frustrated with the government and how, as a veteran, he didn't feel like he
was getting treated right or fairly."
Another friend, Texas resident Michael Ritrovato, also said Alexis
recently had been frustrated with his employer over pay.
But Ritrovato said his friend never showed signs of aggressiveness
or violence, though he played a lot of shooting video games online.
"It's incredible that this is all happening, because he was a
very good-natured guy," Ritrovato said. "It seemed like he wanted to
get more out of life."
Melinda Downs described Alexis as "very intellectual"
and of "sound" mind -- saying if he did hear voices, "he hid it
very well." The two spoke as recently as a week ago, at which time Downs
said she had no hints of what was to come.
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