• Re: Texas gunman fantasized over race wars on social media before mass

    From Bill@21:1/5 to bruce bowser on Sun May 21 16:46:26 2023
    bruce bowser <bruce1.9bowser@gmail.com> wrote:
    On Monday, May 8, 2023 at 9:59:02 PM UTC-5 Herman Adler wrote in political-euwetopia:
    The shooter, Mauricio Garcia, enlisted briefly in the Army but was
    ‘terminated’ after three months

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2023/05/08/texas-mall-shooting/

    ALLEN, Tex. — The gunman who killed eight people at an outlet mall in
    suburban Dallas posted photographs of the shopping center three weeks
    before the attack on a social media account where he fantasized about
    race wars and the collapse of society.

    The social media posts, the last of which went online Saturday shortly
    before he stormed into the shopping mall, included violent, hateful
    references that included singling out Asians with slurs. Mauricio
    Garcia, 33, also used his account on Odnoklassniki, a Russian social
    media platform, to reference “the noble war,” a phrase that many white >> supremacists use to describe their belief in an impending race war.

    On Monday, as Texans grieved over the state’s second mass killing in a
    little more than a week, authorities largely avoided discussing a
    possible motive for Garcia’s rampage. But details of his background
    continued to trickle out, including news that he briefly received
    military training but was discharged from the U.S. Army over a mental
    health condition after three months of service.

    Heather J. Hagan, an Army spokesperson, said Garcia joined the Army in
    June 2008 but was “terminated” three months later, failing to complete >> his initial training.

    Garcia was separated for an unspecified mental health issue, according
    to another Army official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity
    because of the sensitive nature of personnel records.

    Texas officials have offered few details about what might have prompted
    Garcia to launch his attack, which lasted until he was confronted by a
    police officer who shot and killed him. The shooting, the country’s 22nd >> mass killing so far this year, horrified the diverse, affluent
    communities that make up the northern suburbs of Dallas. The killings
    are also reigniting debate over whether Texas gun laws are stringent enough.

    The victims include an engineer from India, a 20-year-old mall security
    guard, three out of four family members, and two elementary-school-age sisters.

    At the Texas Capitol in Austin, the shooting reverberated in the
    legislature as a House committee voted to advance a bill raising the
    minimum age to buy certain types of firearms to 21, up from 18. But the
    legislation is expected to face an uphill battle on the House floor and
    in the state Senate.

    In Washington, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre reiterated
    calls for Congress to consider stricter gun laws nationwide.

    “Schools, shopping malls, churches, movie theaters, grocery stores,
    temples, places that are part of our everyday lives — that are essential >> to our everyday lives — day after day are coming under attack from
    weapons of war,” she said.

    Garcia walked up to Allen Premium Outlets in Allen carrying multiple
    weapons and had five additional guns in a vehicle in the mall’s parking
    lot, people familiar with the investigation told The Washington Post.

    Authorities said seven people ranging in age from 5 to 61 were also
    wounded in the attack. Medical City Healthcare, a network of Dallas-area
    hospitals, said Monday that it was still treating six of those wounded,
    including three who were in critical condition.

    Authorities have not released a motive for Garcia’s rampage, but they
    are investigating his suspected links to white supremacists and neo-Nazi
    beliefs. Garcia arrived at the mall wearing a tactical vest with a patch
    that read “RWDS,” which stands for Right Wing Death Squad. The phrase is >> popular with extremist groups including neo-Nazis and white
    supremacists, and authorities are trying to determine whether Garcia
    carried out a hate crime.

    On Monday, the Allen Police Department declined to answer additional
    questions about the investigations, referring calls to the Texas
    Department of Public Safety. A spokesperson for the Department of Public
    Safety did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

    Mauricio Garcia’s social media posts before the shooting

    According to his social media posts, Garcia appeared to have staked out
    the mall using Google to determine the busiest times.

    Garcia’s social media account was first reported by the New York Times
    and expanded upon in a thread on Twitter by Aric Toler of the
    open-source investigation group Bellingcat. Toler noted that Garcia used
    the forum for diary-style entries and might have picked that platform
    “because it has virtually zero content moderation.”

    The last post on Garcia’s account, dated Saturday, resembled a suicide
    note and included more than 500 words of violent, hateful fantasies,
    self-aggrandizement and pop-culture references. Older entries expressed
    admiration for other mass killers and described a dark worldview that
    included apocalyptic “accelerationist” ideology, which is associated
    with calls for a violent collapse of society.

    Other posts on the account showed off tattoos, including a swastika and
    other Nazi symbols.

    Although Army officials declined to specify why Garcia had been
    discharged, administrative separations like the one he received are
    meant to quickly force out recruits who can’t perform military duties as >> a result of various physical or behavioral conditions. They are not
    typically punishments and would not show up on background checks.
    Recruits who leave the service before they finish training don’t receive >> military or veterans benefits.

    Victims in the Allen, Texas, mall shooting released

    Authorities released the names of the adults killed but only the ages of
    the children who died. Some of their identities have been confirmed by
    family members, friends and others.

    They include three members of the Cho family of Dallas: Kyu Song Cho,
    Cindy Cho and their 3-year-old son. A GoFundMe page said their
    3-year-old was named James, while their 6-year-old son, William, was
    injured but was out of intensive care.

    Elementary students Daniela and Sofia Mendoza were at the mall with
    their mom, Wylie Independent School District officials said. The girls
    were fatally shot; their mother, Ilda, remained in critical condition Monday.

    Daniela, a fourth-grader, and Sofia, a second-grader, were “rays of
    sunshine,” Cox Elementary School principal Krista Wilson said in a
    message to parents. She called them “the kindest, most thoughtful students.”

    Aishwarya Thatikonda, the engineer, who lived in McKinney, Tex., was
    days from her 27th birthday, her boss said. She had come to the United
    States from India about five years ago in pursuit of opportunities in
    engineering, said Ashok Kolla, a volunteer for the Indian American
    nonprofit Telugu Association of North America who was representing the family.

    Thousands of miles away in India, her parents grew concerned when they
    couldn’t reach her Saturday. Kolla drove from hospital to hospital over
    the weekend, then to the shooting scene, then finally to the medical
    examiner’s office, where, after seven hours of waiting, he learned that
    Thatikonda was among the dead.

    “All of us had hoped she was somewhere in the hospital,” Kolla said. On >> Monday, he was sorting through the logistics of having her remains sent
    home to India, trying to help her devastated parents and brother. He
    said the killing had sent shock waves through the Indian community,
    which has had little experience with the mass shootings that haunt America.

    “This girl had a long way to go, being a brilliant and well-educated
    kid,” Kolla said. “She had a long way to go.”

    Christian LaCour, the security guard, “was tragically killed while
    protecting the customers and employees of the Allen Premium Outlets,”
    his employer, Allied Universal, said in a statement. A relative
    described the 20-year-old as “more amazing than anyone would ever truly
    know,” declining to comment further. Also killed was Elio Cumana-Rivas
    of Dallas, who was 32, according to the Texas Department of Public Safety.

    Texas lawmakers advance bill to raise age to buy certain firearms

    The Allen shooting occurred a little more than a week after a gunman,
    armed with an AR-15-style weapon, shot and killed five of his neighbors
    in Cleveland, Tex. The family had asked the man, who was arrested after
    an extensive manhunt, to stop firing his weapon so they could sleep.

    The back-to-back mass killings — taking place about a year after 19
    students and two teachers were shot to death in a school in Uvalde, Tex.
    — have increased the pressure on Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) and GOP
    lawmakers to address gun violence. But with Texas’s biannual legislative >> session scheduled to conclude in late May, supporters of tougher rules
    face a steep hurdle to persuade the Republican-controlled legislature to take action.

    The committee vote Monday occurred after relatives of the Uvalde victims
    packed into the state House and urged lawmakers to raise the minimum age
    to buy certain types of firearms to 21, up from 18.

    After the vote to send the measure to the House floor, some relatives
    cheered while others sobbed.

    State Sen. Roland Gutierrez, a Democrat who represents the Uvalde area,
    celebrated with the Uvalde family members at lunch after the bill made
    it out of committee. Gutierrez said the committee vote, which included
    support from two Republicans, was the most significant progress on gun
    legislation that he’s seen in his 16 years in Austin.

    But he said he and other Democratic lawmakers are tempering their
    optimism, knowing that the legislation still faces an uphill slog on the
    House floor and in the Senate.

    “Hope springs eternal,” Gutierrez said. “As I told the families, there >> never has been a bill in my time that has been a pro-gun-safety bill
    that has even had a hearing in committee. This happened because of these
    families’ efforts.”

    "Donald Trump's latest reported musings on the death penalty, including
    firing squads and public executions, are clearly deranged."

    ----------------------------------------
    Trump’s deranged death penalty musings could run into a problem: The law MSNBC - Feb 16, 2023
    -- https://www.msnbc.com/deadline-white-house/deadline-legal-blog/trump-public-executions-firing-squads-rcna70751


    Depends on the state. Utah has firing squad option. Gary Gilmore took the option.

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