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Jeffrey Graves, UT's associate vice president of legal affairs, said Wednesday that the university had no record of Tooley being flagged for behavioral concerns before the incident. UT has a behavioral assessment team, which meets to discuss and address student behavioral issues, and an advice line that takes calls about concerns anyone might have about an individual, university officials said. "He was not on our radar," Graves said. "We checked into that as soon as we had the name. Not in any of our databases." Although the Tooley family kept to themselves and weren't particularly well known, neighbors rallied around them Tuesday night, putting more than a dozen candles on the sidewalk in front of their home. Family members responded by briefly emerging to acknowledge the vigil. "Our neighborhood is heartbroken," Drake said. "We know that they are a very close and loving family. It's a mystery to everyone why such a promising young man would perform such a desperate act."
[Associated
Press;
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