Texas church gunman escaped mental
facility in 2012 while facing court-martial
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[November 08, 2017]
By Jon Herskovitz and Lisa Maria Garza
SUTHERLAND SPRINGS, Texas (Reuters) - The
former U.S. serviceman who committed the deadliest mass shooting on
record in Texas escaped from a mental hospital in 2012 as he faced
court-martial on domestic violence charges for which he was later
convicted, a police report revealed on Tuesday.
The report also disclosed that police who were alerted to Devin Kelley's
escape were advised that he posed a "danger to himself and others" after
being "caught sneaking firearms" onto the U.S. Air Force base in New
Mexico where he was stationed.
The person who reported the escape, according to the report, further
warned that Kelley, then aged 21, had been "attempting to carry out
death threats" against his military commanders and "suffered from mental
disorders."
He was apprehended without incident at an El Paso, Texas, bus station
shortly after he had run off, according to a police report filed in that
city.
Kelley's troubled Air Force background has been a focus of investigators
in the tiny Texas town of Sutherland Springs since he stormed into a
church there on Sunday with a semi-automatic assault rifle and opened
fire on worshipers.
Authorities have said 26 people were killed in the assault, including
the unborn child of a pregnant woman who was among the dead. Another 20
people were wounded, half of them still listed in critical condition as
of Tuesday.
Officials said Kelley, 26, killed himself during a failed getaway
attempt after he was wounded by an armed civilian who tried to stop him.
Two handguns belonging to the killer also were recovered.
A major sporting goods dealer in San Antonio later confirmed that Kelley
twice passed a required criminal background check when he bought guns
there during the past year, despite having a criminal record that should
have prevented those purchases.
Kelley was found guilty by court-martial in 2012 of assaulting his first
wife and a stepson while serving at Holloman Air Force Base, where he
was assigned to a logistics readiness unit, the Pentagon reported on
Monday.
But the Air Force also acknowledged it inexplicably failed to enter his
conviction into a government database that all licensed firearms dealers
are required to use to screen prospective gun buyers for their criminal
history.
Federal law prohibits anyone from selling a gun to someone who has been
convicted of a crime involving domestic violence against a spouse or
child.
On Capitol Hill, the Republican chairman of the U.S. House Armed
Services Committee, Representative Mac Thornberry of Texas, called the
failure to transmit Kelley's record into the National Criminal
Information Center (NCIC) system an "appalling" lapse.
The Air Force has opened an inquiry into the matter, and the U.S.
Defense Department has requested a review by its inspector general to
ensure other criminal cases have been reported correctly, Pentagon
officials said.
Two U.S. senators, Republican Jeff Flake of Arizona and Democratic
Martin Heinrich of New Mexico, said they planned to co-sponsor
legislation aimed at ensuring that anyone convicted of domestic
violence, whether in civilian or military court, would be blocked from
legally purchasing a gun.
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Pastor Oscar Dean prays with others near the site of the shooting.
REUTERS/Rick Wilking
Firearms experts said the case involving Kelley, who spent a year in
military detention before his bad-conduct discharge from the Air
Force in 2014, exposed a previously unnoticed weak link in the
system of background checks.
BEHAVIOR PROBLEMS AS STUDENT
Texas public school records also showed Kelley had numerous behavior
problems as a student, including nine suspensions for such issues as
drugs, insubordination, profanity, skipping classes and dishonesty
between sixth grade and high school graduation.
His private adult life appears to have likewise been marked by
turbulence.
After divorcing the woman he was convicted of assaulting, Kelley
remarried in 2014, but authorities have said he became embroiled in
some unspecified domestic dispute with her parents that involved him
sending threatening text messages to his mother-in-law.
Kelley's in-laws occasionally attended services at the First Baptist
Church in Sutherland Springs but were not there when he attacked
worshipers during Sunday prayers, authorities said.
"We have some indication of what the conflict was between the
family," Freeman Martin, spokesman for the Texas Department of
Public Safety, told a Tuesday news conference. It was not clear what
role, if any, the dispute played as a motivating factor in Sunday's
violence.
Kelley's cell phone was sent to the Federal Bureau of
Investigation's crime lab at Quantico, Virginia, but specialists
were not immediately able to gain electronic access to the device,
said Christopher Combs, the FBI's special agent in charge in San
Antonio.
The massacre, which ranked as the deadliest mass shooting by a
single gunman in Texas history, and one of the five most lethal ever
in the United States, rekindled an ongoing debate over gun
ownership, which is protected by the Second Amendment of the U.S.
Constitution. Guns are part of the fabric of life in rural areas.
U.S. President Donald Trump told reporters he believed stricter
reviews of gun purchases would not have stopped Sunday's rampage.
"There would have been no difference," Trump said during a visit to
South Korea. He added that stricter gun laws might have prevented
the man who shot Kelley from acting as he did. "You would have had
hundreds more dead."
(Additional reporting by Andrew Hay in New York, Patricia Zengerle
in Washington and Idrees Ali traveling with U.S. Defense Secretary
Mattis; Writing by Scott Malone and Steve Gorman; Editing by Jeffrey
Benkoe and Lisa Shumaker)
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