Police: Santa Monica gunman left farewell note
TAMI ABDOLLAH, AP
LOS
ANGELES (AP) — A farewell note left behind by the Santa Monica gunman
expressed remorse for the killing of his father and brother but provided
no explanation for the rampage that
left them and three others dead.
Police
Chief Jacqueline Seabrooks said that the three- to four-page
handwritten note was found on John Zawahri's body after he was shot and
killed June 7 by officers on the campus of
Santa Monica College.
The
23-year-old Zawahri also used the note to say goodbye to friends and
expressed hope that his mother would be taken care of and receive
recompense from his father's estate.
investigators believe mental illness played a role in the killings, Seabrooks said at a news conference Thursday.
"We
know his was a troubled life and that he experienced mental health
challenges," Seabrooks said. "We believe that his mental health
challenges likely played a role in his decisions
to shoot and kill both his father and his brother, to set fire to the
family home, and to go on a 13-minute shooting spree spanning roughly
1.5 miles and which left five innocent people dead and three people
injured."
Zawahri
apparently built his own .223-caliber assault rifle, using it to shoot
his father and brother before he set fire to their family home,
officials said earlier Thursday.
Zawahri's
mother was out of the country visiting family in Lebanon during
Friday's rampage but cut short her trip and returned home Sunday. She
has been interviewed by detectives.
Seabrooks
said the semi-automatic weapon appears to have been built with
component parts that are legal to obtain, but put together make the
rifle illegal in California.
She
said he also modified an antique black-powder .44 revolver so that it
could hold .45-caliber ammunition; it was loaded during the shooting and
he carried it with him in a duffel bag.
Zawahri's
rampage ended when police killed him in the Santa Monica College
library Friday. To get there, he had carjacked a woman, directing her to
the college and having her stop so
he could fire at vehicles and strangers. Police still did not know why
he chose to go to the college, why he targeted those killed or why he
chose that day.
Santa Monica police plan to work with the FBI to understand Zawahri's psychological makeup and motivation, Seabrooks said.
Officials
said Thursday that the fire at Zawahri's father's home, which erupted
soon after neighbors heard shots fired, was intentionally set.
An
official, who was not authorized to speak publicly and spoke on
condition of anonymity, said the fires were started in a front living
room and atop one of two twin beds in another
room. Several boxes of matches were also found in the bedroom.
Firefighters
found the bodies of the gunman's father and brother in a back bedroom
that was uninvolved in the blaze. The house was found unkempt with files
and papers scattered throughout,
providing ample kindling.
In
Zawahri's bedroom, investigations found illegal zip guns, Seabrooks
said. They also found ample evidence of his fascination with weapons,
including four replica airsoft pellet guns,
knives and gun magazines, said Sgt. Richard Lewis. Investigators also
found materials that indicate he likely assembled the weapon.
Police
said Zawahri bought a lower receiver that was only 80 percent complete.
Because it is not complete and not considered a full weapon, a person
isn't required to go through a background
check to get one, nor does the part need to have a serial number.
Though
Zawahri fired about 100 rounds during the rampage, police said he was
carrying 1,300 rounds of ammunition in magazines that were capable of
holding 30 rounds each. Such high-capacity
magazines are illegal to purchase, sell or transfer in California.
Possession is not illegal. He also had a spare upper receiver and the
antique revolver with him in a duffel bag.
Zawahri's
last reported contact with law enforcement was seven years ago, when
bomb-making materials were found at his house during a search prompted
by threats to students, teachers
and campus police officers at Olympic High, a school for students with
academic or disciplinary issues.
The
Santa Monica-Malibu school board was briefed at the time by school
administrators after police found Zawahri was learning to make
explosives by downloading instructions from YouTube,
school board member Oscar de la Torre said.
Retired
police officer Cristina Coria, who helped serve the search warrant,
said Zawahri was hospitalized for psychiatric evaluation at the time.
She didn't know the outcome of the evaluation.
Police
declined to provide further details, saying Zawahri was a minor at the
time. But once a person is held for such an exam, they cannot access or
possess firearms for five years.
In the case of Zawahri, that prohibition would have expired in 2011.
Police
said Thursday that in 2011, Zawahri tried to buy a weapon but was
denied by the California Department of Justice, likely because of that
2006 incident.
Despite
that denial, Seabrooks said, Zawahri was able to buy the component
parts to build his own weapon and obtain an array of magazines.
Santa Monica police said they will work with the ATF to understand how he came to possess these gun components, Seabrooks said.
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Tami Abdollah can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/latams
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