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Taggart
Inside the home, said Connecticut State Police Lt. J. Paul Vance, police also found “some good evidence in the house as to why [the shooting] occurred.”
Asktheanimals
reply to post by starviego
From the same article was this:
Inside the home, said Connecticut State Police Lt. J. Paul Vance, police also found “some good evidence in the house as to why [the shooting] occurred.”
www.thedailybeast.com...
Why would Lt. Vance say that but when the final summary is released they have no idea why he did it?
Could it be related to "taking samples" from Nancy Lanza's body in addition to fingerprints? There is a part redacted where it says "she was shot in the head and sustained _________________________.(Blacked out around 27 characters)
There was also mention of a red "blood-like substance" that struck me as odd as well.
You'll notice this article also carried the bit about Lanza wearing a bulletproof vest which was later not true.
Strange stuff.
JBA2848
reply to post by Asktheanimals
Sunday- May 27th,. 2012
Starting-7:37pm Yogananda (Newtown)
Ending - 7:56 pm Wooster Mt. State Park (Danbury)
Starting- 8:05 pm Wooster Mt. State Park (Danbury)
Ending-8:30pm Yi)gananda (Newtown)
Can't find a MT state park?
Wooster st ends in front of the juvenile court house though?
goo.gl...
"I wish I would've killed him then," he says. "Or he should have killed himself a long time ago. He would've saved us all the trouble. ... He should've run in front of a bus, or some other type of terrible death he should've done to himself.
He's not in school. I'm homeschooling.
Lanza would not say a word. Every now and then, he'd mumble something. His mother was the boss. She'd pipe up when the barber asked Adam if he liked his haircut.
I don't like it, Mom would say. Cut it shorter, trim his sideburns.
When the haircut was done, the barber would tell Lanza it was time to get up. But he'd just sit there, like he was still getting clipped.
His mom would grab him by the arm and yank him up.
It's time to go, Adam. Your haircut is done.
The boy would listen to his mother. Always, always, always. Never would he disobey her.
CTCHIP is a comprehensive child identification program designed to give families a measure of protection against the ever increasing problem of missing children. The Connecticut Freemasons Foundation are bringing this fine program to communities throughout Connecticut and are looking for other agencies/businesses to partner with in an effort to expand CTCHIP as part of their ongoing commitment to children and families. Their goal is to conduct CTCHIP Events state-wide so that any parent wishing to participate in this "FREE" comprehensive service will find it regularly offered in their area.
How does it work?
The Masons plan events that assemble the equipment and volunteers necessary to generate completed ID packages "PURPLE PACKS" that consists of the following major components:
a brief recorded interview
a digital still photograph
fingerprinting of both hands
dental bite impression
cheek swap DNA/Scent Sample
The recorded interview and still photo burned by the camera directly onto a mini-DVD-ram disc, can not be viewed on your home DVD player or home computer, but can be viewed by Connecticut law enforcement if and when the parent turns it over to them to search for their missing child. The recorded interview disc is a recovery tool that provides far more individual characteristics, a voice sound-bite and mannerisms, in addition to the standard digital still photographs. Fingerprinting is a tried and true method of individual identification. The dental bite impression provides an 3-D image of the biting surface of teeth which, like fingerprints, are unique to each individual. The dental impression and cheek swab also collects enough saliva/cheek cells to provide DNA and a source for scent track for canine recovery. Together, these identifying items provide a most powerful identification and recovery tool.
Yet, perhaps predictably, the owner of the local rifle range was defiant.
Richard Dravis, who gives shooting training at Wooster Mountain rifle range, 15 miles away from the school, said: "We don't train crazy people. I think that if we would address the mental health issue here we could possibly do something in the future. But we can't count the number of rounds in the magazine of a nut head."
www.businessinsider.com...
Mr. Dravis has taught hundreds of locals how to shoot safely, but can’t remember ever seeing the shooter, Adam Lanza, or his gun-enthusiast mother at any of the local ranges. She owned at least five guns, including the military-grade Bushmaster AR-15 that Mr. Lanza used to kill his victims.
Mr. Dravis’s resistance to firearm restrictions reflects a local enthusiasm for weaponry that has caused repeated problems in the past.
The aunt of Connecticut shooter Adam Lanza said the shooter's mother pulled him out of Newtown's public school system because she was unhappy with the school district's plans for her son.
Marsha, who lives in the Chicago suburb of Crystal Lake, said that Nancy had home-schooled Adam after pulling him out of the Newtown public school system. "She mentioned she wound up home-schooling him because she battled with the school district," said Marsha.
School administrators placed Richard Novia on administrative leave immediately following a March 11 altercation involving him and a 17-year-old junior at the high school.
According to police, during disciplinary action for an unrelated incident, Novia pushed the student while in his office with police School Resource Officer Domenic Costello.
The student told Novia, "You can't put your (expletive) hands on me," to which Novia responded, "One day you are going to get your (expletive) kicked," according to police.
The student's family did not file a complaint against Novia after meeting with police, but district administrators put Novia on paid administrative leave.
Attorney Vincent Sabatini, representing Novia, a 15-year employee of the school system, told the board at its meeting Tuesday that because the Board of Education, not school administrators, signed Novia's contract, he deserves the right to have the board address the issue.
"This is something the board should know about and be discussed," Sabatini said.