It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
Leith, who will turn 59 in May, was a science teacher at Chelsea High School near Ann Arbor when he fatally shot Superintendent Joseph Piasecki and wounded Principal Ron Mead and teacher Phil Jones. He had been reprimanded for making inappropriate remarks about a female student, and responded by filing a grievance.
At a Dec. 16, 1993, meeting in Piasecki’s office to discuss the grievance, Leith became angry and stormed out, carrying a copy of his personnel file.
“My goal was to go home and cool off,” he says.
He did go home; he didn’t cool off.
At his home, a haven he had built on 10 acres near Chelsea, he kept firearms he had begun collecting in 1986. The more guns he amassed, the more he wanted. By the day of his grievance meeting, his collection had grown to four handguns and seven long guns, including an AK-47 assault rifle he had bought because “I figured at one time they would not be allowed to be sold, and I wanted one in my collection.”
In his kitchen, he glanced at his personnel file, and his anger grew.
“I went into this rage,” Leith says. “All I remember doing is just screaming at the top of my lungs.”
He grabbed his newest gun -- a 9-mm Browning, semi-automatic handgun he kept under his bed for protection -- and sped back to the school.
“It was like I was in a trance,” Leith says. He recalls repeating three phrases: “He has no right to do this to me. Gotta stop the pain. Gotta keep going.”
In his office, Piasecki was still meeting with Mead and Jones, a teacher and union officer there to represent Leith. As Leith opened the door, he faced Piasecki across a desk. Mead, on Leith’s right, and Jones, on his left, sat with their backs to him.
Leith pulled the gun from his pocket and fired several shots at Piasecki, and then, as Mead dove for cover, fired at him, striking him in the left leg, then at Jones, grazing his abdomen. Leith insists he did not knowingly shoot Mead or Jones – “my best friend” – but fired when he saw movement.
When he stopped firing, “it was like I was standing there looking at this mess,” he says. “I went into something like a convulsion. After I came out of the convulsion, I began to realize the enormity of what I’d done.”
That’s when his wife, Alice, an English teacher, appeared at the door. He pointed the gun at her. “Steve, give me the gun,” she said. He doesn’t recall if he did, or if he placed it on a secretary’s desk, as others recalled.
Minutes later, the police found him in his classroom grading papers. “I had to get them done for the next day,” he now explains.
Originally posted by Ghost375
Yeah let's listen to what the psychopath says about gun control... *rolls eyes*
What's next, you guys going to hire Charles Manson to be your spokesman?edit on 11-4-2013 by Ghost375 because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by Ghost375
Yeah let's listen to what the psychopath says about gun control... *rolls eyes*
What's next, you guys going to hire Charles Manson to be your spokesman?edit on 11-4-2013 by Ghost375 because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by usmc0311
Originally posted by Ghost375
Yeah let's listen to what the psychopath says about gun control... *rolls eyes*
What's next, you guys going to hire Charles Manson to be your spokesman?edit on 11-4-2013 by Ghost375 because: (no reason given)
With the gun debate flaring from all sides I believe it is important to look at every side and every viewpoint. The fact is he committed a heinous crime and now almost twenty years later he is willing to talk about it.
Originally posted by Infernalis
Originally posted by Ghost375
Yeah let's listen to what the psychopath says about gun control... *rolls eyes*
What's next, you guys going to hire Charles Manson to be your spokesman?edit on 11-4-2013 by Ghost375 because: (no reason given)
Very funny! I guess we should not try and understand why this type of thing happens at all. What's next, your going to just bury your head in the sand and pretend it's just the guns that do this. Oh wait you already do.
I think Casper is a good spokesman for you and your ilk, because we can see right through you!
Originally posted by usmc0311
reply to post by Ghost375
I get where you are coming from. I do think his viewpoint does hold some water though as it gives us a look into the mind of someone who has done such an evil thing and has had almost twenty years to think about it.
Leith accepts responsibility for killing Piasecki and wounding the other two. But he insists that, although he was carrying a gun, he didn’t intend to shoot them. He had been seeing a psychiatrist for depression and was taking an antidepressant, which he believes clouded his judgment and sent him into a dreamlike state.