Why is he shot the 24 people in US primary School
The mother of the loner who massacred 26 pupils and staff at
a US primary school may have played a major part in his catastrophic mental
breakdown, it emerged last night.
Friends and family portrayed Adam Lanza’s mother Nancy as a
paranoid ‘survivalist’ who believed the world was on the verge of violent,
economic collapse.
She is reported to have been struggling to hold herself
together and had been stockpiling food, water and guns in the large home she
shared with her 20-year-old son in Connecticut.
Mrs Lanza, 52, was a ‘prepper’ – so called because they are
preparing for a breakdown in civilised society – who apparently became obsessed
with guns and taught Adam and his older brother, Ryan, how to shoot, even
taking them to local ranges.
That backfired horrifically on Friday when Adam Lanza began
his killing spree by shooting his mother dead in bed.
He fired four bullets into her head – possibly as she slept
– then took three of her guns to Sandy Hook elementary school in Newtown,
Connecticut, where he killed 20 children and six staff.
Lanza’s aunt Marsha said Nancy was ‘self reliant’ and that
they talked a lot about how she was preparing for the economic meltdown.
She said her former sister-in-law was meticulous about never
leaving guns out, but made no secret of having an imposing firearm collection.
It included not only the two handguns and semi-automatic
assault rifle used in the killings but also two traditional hunting rifles.
She would boast about them in a local bar and also showed
them off to her landscape gardener.
‘She told me she liked the single-mindedness of shooting,’
said Dan Holmes, who looked after the large garden around her rambling home. He
also recalled how Mrs Lanza would go target shooting with her boys ‘pretty
often’.
Mr Holmes revealed how Mrs Lanza – who divorced Adam’s
father Peter, a wealthy senior executive
at a financial services company, in 2008 – never liked people to see inside her
house.
‘I would ring the bell on the front door and she would come
out the side and meet me,’ he said. ‘It was a little weird. It’s stranger now
thinking back on what happened.’
As for her son, he was described yesterday as a ‘ghost’ – an
autistic genius, according to former school fellows, but also a ‘deeply
disturbed’ young man who was so withdrawn that even many of his closest
relatives hadn’t set eyes on him for years.
It emerged last night that police are trying to repair a
computer hard drive which was found shattered on the floor in the killer’s
bedroom but which they believe may hold vital clues to his motives.
Friends who regularly played Mrs Lanza at a dice game said
they too never managed to see the inside of her home.
During 15 years of playing together at alternating homes,
Mrs Lanza’s turn to host the game was always skipped, said Rhonda Collens.
Fellow players and her neighbours described her as generous
but reserved, a ‘nice lady’ who loved to make small talk about their gardens.
But others noted that beneath the mellow exterior, she was
highly-strung and appeared to be ‘holding herself together’.
Like Mr Holmes, they never met Adam, a reclusive youth who
had few if any friends and spent most of his time in two adjoining bedrooms in
the family home.
There he would spend hours on his computer, much of the time
devoted to playing violent games.
Neighbours said Mrs Lanza, who grew up on a New Hampshire
farm, recently took time off from a job in finance to spend more time with her
troubled younger son.
Despite initial reports that she was a kindergarten teacher
at the school her son attacked, she had no connection with it and was described
by a neighbour as ‘just a stay-at-home mom’.
While her older son Ryan, 24, had a successful career in a
New York finance house, there is no evidence that the 20-year-old killer ever
had a job. And despite his addiction to the computer, he kept away from social
networks and had neither a Facebook page or a Twitter account.
Ryan Kraft, who babysat for Mrs Lanza when Adam was ten,
said the boy was prone to serious temper tantrums. The fiercely protective Mrs
Lanza insisted the babysitter never left Adam on his own for a moment, even to
go to the lavatory.
But he remembered her as an ‘engaged’ mother who did her
best to arrange playdates for her sons.
Marsha Lanza, the killer’s aunt, described him as a ‘nice,
quiet’ and ‘very, very bright’ boy who had issues with learning.
That verdict tallies with the accounts of fellow school
pupils who said he was very bright, particularly at maths, but painfully shy.
Catherine Urso said her son, who was at school with him,
described him as ‘very thin, very remote and one of the goths’.
Kate Leen, who was at school with him in their early teens,
added: ‘You would say ‘‘hi’’ and he would say ‘‘hi’’ back but he didn’t give
you a lot to work with. He wasn’t exactly welcoming.’
Alex Israel, who was in his class at Newtown High School,
said she was convinced he was a ‘genius’, adding: ‘He was always different –
keeping to himself, fidgeting and very quiet. His parents – particularly his
mother – reportedly drove him hard to succeed.’
Others recalled that he carried a black briefcase when
everyone else had backpacks, joined a technology club, cementing his reputation
as one of the school nerds, and declined to be photographed for the school
yearbook.
His school years came to an abrupt end when his mother had a
dispute with local education officials and ended up having her son
home-schooled.
The Lanzas moved to Sandy Hook in around 1998 but Mrs Lanza
and her husband divorced ten years later amid rumours that their difficult
younger son had put a heavy strain on their marriage.
She had no real need to work again after reportedly
extracting $200,000 a year in support from her husband.
It appears she was not only estranged from her ex-spouse but
also possibly from her older son. Before he was questioned by police over his
brother’s crime, Ryan Lanza claimed he had not seen Adam since 2010.
Mrs Lanza’s brother, a former police officer named James
Champion, said he hadn’t seen his younger nephew in eight years.
Police say a member of Adam’s family – probably his brother
– has told them he suffered from Asperger’s Syndrome, a form of autism.
Experts have insisted the condition, while prompting the
sufferer to withdraw into his own world, would not be responsible on its own
for making him go on a homicidal spree.
That said, the experts note that if he had mental problems,
these, combined with years of social isolation, inadequacy and the easy
availability of an arsenal of firearms, could have been a recipe for disaster.
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