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A 17-year-old who would give only his first name, Aki, said he had been studying this year with the shooter at a private business school, and described him as a quiet, reserved person. Aki said the two played poker together, both in person and online, as well as a multiplayer video game called "Counter-Strike" that involves killing people to complete missions. He was good at it, Aki said. Brenner said that authorities had searched Kretschmer's computer and found violent video games on it, but was not more specific. The dark-haired teen, shown wearing glasses in pictures on German television, apparently took the weapon from his father's collection of 15 firearms along with a "multitude of ammunition," police said. His father, a businessman, was a member of the local gun club and kept the weapons locked away except for the pistol, which was kept in the bedroom. A 19-year-old, whose name was not given, was quoted by Bild as saying his parents were friends with Kretschmer's and that they had asked him to play with him "because he had no friends." He said Kretschmer had at least 30 air guns that shot plastic pellets in his room, and that his father had built a shooting range in his basement for him to practice with them, Bild reported. "When we went outside he shot at us with the air pistols and wouldn't stop," the boy was quoted as saying. "It really hurt
-- so nobody wanted to play the game any more."
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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