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Cohen's neighbor in Cockeysville, Md., couldn't believe it when she heard about what happened. "It was very scary," Jennifer Wickwire said. "It's very upsetting to think it's somebody from this area." The hospital uses hand-held metal detectors to screen patients and visitors known to be high-risk, said Harry Koffenberger, vice president of security. However, with 80 entrances and 80,000 visitors a week, it is not realistic to place metal detectors and guards everywhere. "Not in a health-care setting," Koffenberger said. The hospital will review procedures and look again at the use of metal detectors, he said. Gibson said his brother had never been in trouble and didn't mess around with guns, though when they were young, he liked to hunt and fish. Thomas Robinson, 67, had known Jean Davis since he was a child. "She used to be quite a horsewoman when she was young," he said. But she was not able to get around too well on her own in recent years. "She was in good spirits, but she was getting weaker all the time." Robinson, who is Gibson's neighbor, was perplexed by Pardus' actions. "Why would he blame the doctor?" he asked. "That's what I don't understand."
[Associated
Press;
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