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- Subject: interesting news story re: virginia tech shooting - civil suit
- Date: Wed, 14 Mar 2012 09:58:36 -0400 (EDT)
3/13/12 Charleston Gazette & Daily Mail (WV) 3A
2012 WLNR 5402211
Loaded Date: 03/13/2012
Charleston Gazette (WV)
Copyright 2012 Charleston Newspapers
March 13, 2012
Police thought Va. Tech shootings had
signs of domestic violence
CHRISTIANSBURG, Va. - Law enforcement
officials and a campus safety expert on Monday defended the police conclusion
on the morning of the Virginia Tech mass killings in April 2007 that the first
two shootings had all the signs of domestic violence and not the
work of a deranged gunman.
The witnesses testified for the state
as it began its defense in a wrongful death civil trial brought by the parents
of two of the student victims. The testimony is intended to bolster the claims
of Virginia Tech officials that they believed the first shootings did not pose
a risk to the wider campus.
The families of Julia K. Pryde and
Erin N. Peterson are each seeking $100,000 and official accountability for what
they say was the university's slow response to two shootings at a dormitory on
the Blacksburg campus of Virginia Tech. Their lawsuit alleges their daughters
and other students might have survived the deadliest mass shooting in modern
U.S. history if officials had warned the campus of the dorm shootings earlier.
Seung-Hui Cho began his April 16,
2007, campus rampage by shooting Emily Hilscher and Ryan Clark in West Ambler
Johnston Hall shortly after 7 a.m. that morning. He then went to his dorm,
changed his blood-stained clothing and concluded his carnage 2 { hours later at
Norris Hall, a classroom building where he killed 30 student and faculty and
them himself.
The state presented testimony from
Blacksburg Police Chief Kimberley S. Crannis and two of her officers who were
at the scene of the dorm shootings. They all testified that there were no signs
of a forced entry to the dorm room where the two were shot, no evidence of
drugs and nothing of value missing. That led them to believe the gunman knew
one or both of them.
"It appeared to me at the time
it was targeted at the two people and probably domestic," Blacksburg
Police Capt. Bruce Bradbery said under questioning from William G. Broaddus,
one of the state's attorneys.
Police say they pursued the boyfriend
of Hilscher as a "person of interest." The boyfriend was stopped by
police as he approached the Tech campus in his pickup truck and began
questioning him as shots rang out at Norris.
Retired FBI agent James A. Wright,
who has consulted on Hollywood films and has investigated hundreds of
homicides, agreed with the conclusions of the police who responded to the dorm
shootings.
Broaddus asked Wright if he believed
the wider campus was at no risk, since the first two shootings were domestic.
"That's my opinion," Wright
responded.
-The Associated Press
Steven J. Healy, a campus security
expert who has either commanded or held high-ranking police positions at
Syracuse University and Princeton, agreed that police made "a reasonable
conclusion" that the dorm killing was domestic in nature.
Under questioning by Robert T. Hall,
an attorney for the parents, Healy acknowledged that the initial finding was
wrong.
The day ended on a combative note
when Hall asked the Virginia Tech counsel, Kay K. Heidbreder, if she had known
university President Charles Steger to lie. The question drew an objection from
the state and a halt to the testimony.
The state said it only has a few
witnesses left to call and the plaintiff's attorney has one rebuttal witness.
The case could go to jurors later today or early Wednesday.
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- interesting news story re: virginia tech shooting - civil suit, wmurphylaw, 03/14/2012
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