Maryland shooting suspect battled
newspaper in court and lost
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[June 29, 2018]
By Diana Kruzman
(Reuters) - The 38-year-old man suspected
of killing five people at the offices of a Maryland newspaper group on
Thursday had a long-running feud with Capital Gazette, attacking the
Annapolis-based family of publications in the courts and on social
media.
Law enforcement sources told the Capital Gazette that police had
identified the suspect as Jarrod Warren Ramos, a resident of Laurel,
Maryland, who sued the newspaper and one of its journalists in 2012,
alleging defamation.
Almost a year earlier, Thomas Hartley, a former columnist for The
Capital, the group's flagship paper, wrote a column describing the
suspect's interactions with an unnamed woman Ramos contacted over
Facebook, court documents showed. Hartley said Ramos had sent her
numerous emails in which he called her vulgar names and told her to kill
herself.
The lawsuit named Hartley, its then editor-publisher Thomas Marquardt,
and Capital-Gazette Communications, then the parent company of the
paper.
Ramos had pled guilty to criminal harassment five days before Hartley
published his column, records showed. He claimed in court documents that
his perspective was not fairly represented. His lawsuit was dismissed in
2013, and an appellate court upheld the dismissal in 2015.
As the case made its way through the courts, a Twitter user calling
himself Jarrod W. Ramos posted numerous tweets critical of Capital
Gazette, Hartley and the Maryland judges.
"Yes, Eric Thomas Hartley, you moved to ... oh just go ahead and kill
yourself already before I do (legally in court)," the user tweeted in
2014.
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Police gather near the Capitol Gazette newspaper office where a
shooting occurred in Annapolis, Maryland, U.S., June 28, 2018.
REUTERS/Joshua Roberts
The account went silent from January 2016 until Thursday, just
before the shooting at the newsroom.
An archived version of a website under Ramos' name featured court
documents as well as messages apparently signed by Ramos as recently
as 2014.
One message titled "Open Season" mentioned 2000 Capital Drive, the
address of Capital-Gazette Communications, and linked to several
articles about the Capital.
"They call themselves an important watchdog, but who watches the
watchers?" the message said. "Even kings must answer to God, and a
modern day Inquisition is at hand. The potential judgment is no less
severe; the carnage differs only in literal terms."
A 2015 court document quoted Ramos' lawyer as saying that Ramos had
a degree in computer engineering and had worked for the U.S. Bureau
of Labor Statistics for six years.
(Reporting by Diana Kruzman Editing by Frank McGurty, Toni Reinhold)
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