Archive for the 'Columbine' Category

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Wish fulfilled?

Sensational:

This is a letter to the editor at the Wisnton-Salem Journal about the recent slew of news reports about the Columbine documents…

It saddens me to see the media fulfill the dreams of the two Columbine killers (I will not mention their names) with the continued coverage of their actions and publication of their names and faces at almost every “appropriate” opportunity (“Documents show progression of hate,” July 7). I read an excerpt from one of the killers’ writings shortly after the event that stated that one of his goals was to become famous through his actions and become immortalized by the media.

The media in their never-ending pursuit of the sensational has fulfilled their perverted dreams and goals by keeping their faces and names in the headlines. This could give others similar goals, knowing that they will be made famous through media attention. The Columbine story could be told in such a way as to help pass on its lessons, learned at such a heavy price, without plastering the names and faces of the perpetrators and keeping them “famous.”

PAUL S. MARLEY

Tobaccoville

While I do agree the media has more than sensationalized these stories I have to disagree with the words famous and fame. The more appropriate words are infamous and infamy. Fame implies that they’ve done something noteworthy or something that people enjoyed. While there are those dregs of society I refer to as mutants who do take pleasure in Columbine, they are but the smallest of minorities. Infamy refers to notoriety through heinous or despicable acts. And it really doesn’t matter if their wish can be viewed as fulfilled or not. There’s not a whole lot they can do with that wish in hell.

The penultimate insult

Attack plan on school server:

One of the Columbine killers apparently downloaded plans for a spree of violence into a school computer the day before the shootings, possibly a final act of defiance that might have derailed the massacre if someone had checked the files.

At least 18 pages found in Eric Harris’ school computer files are dated April 19, 1999, about 8:30 a.m. Among the clearest indicators of the rampage that he and Dylan Klebold carried out the next day is a sort of crude list that mentions, “prepare explosives” and “shells.” Another sheet carries the notations “cannon fuse” and “napalm tests.” Drawings of battle gear and what appear to be a swastika are on other pages.

“Had myself or anyone in a position of authority seen these, there would have been a definite confrontation, immediately,” Richard Long, former head of technology for Columbine High School, said Friday. “We would have certainly talked to those individuals.”

But such a scenario was unlikely. The school did not routinely check student computer files partly because it would take so long, Long said. Such files were accessed by authorities only in response to suspicious activity.

Long was also familiar with Harris and Klebold. They were his student assistants for their first two and a half years at Columbine before they got busted for hacking into the computer system and stealing locker combinations.

Long saw the two boys change from “bright-eyed” freshmen to teens with darker attitudes. He believes that downloading the material the day before the shootings – if that is indeed what happened – may have been one way of thumbing their noses at authority.

“They carried propane bottles into the school,” he added. “How much more bold can you be?”

The last sign to go unheeded.

Of God and the Psychopath

The Columbine Diaries: Old Wounds … New Passions:

I’m usually not to one to force my religious beliefs on others but I don’t hide the fact that I’m a Christian. And by Christian I mean one who tries to follow in the teachings of Christ and believes that Christ is the son of God. Not, “bibile-beating zealot who thinks you’re going to hell because you don’t believe in the same things I do”. Now having said that let me share this article with you about a youth pastor from Littleton, Colorado…

I was a youth pastor in Littleton with a youth group made up primarily of Columbine students. In fact, for a time the Bernall family attended our church and Cassie attended some of our meetings. I had made an appointment to meet a student on the Columbine campus for lunch on April 20th, but that morning I woke up feeling very sick and decided to stay home. At 11:30 I got a phone call from one of my interns who was sobbing and urging me to turn on the television.

At first the images struck me as a fire at the school, but within seconds the cold hard reality of what was really going on sunk in to my conscious mind.

The unthinkable was happening. If you were old enough to remember that day, you know what I’m talking about. A quiet suburban neighborhood was transformed into a war zone, except instead of soldiers being shot, there were innocent teens going through hell on earth.

Over the next several months I met with each of my students who were there to let them pour out their anger and grief, and somehow try to answer the unanswerable question of why God would allow this to happen.

Now seven years later the old wounds are reopened with the release of over 900 pages of documents from the killers. Inside you’ll find what you probably expected…angst, hate, vitriolic diatribes, and even a glimpse into the thinking patterns of a psychopath and a depressive.

I’ll be honest, I wasn’t excited about the release of these diaries, I don’t enjoy reliving the feelings of that day. Yet as I have processed things the past few days, I was given an insight that hadn’t occurred to me before.

Perhaps sometimes when old wounds are opened, new passion is born. And that is the case with me today. I work with a ministry that is trying to reach every teen in America with the life changing message of the gospel, and we believe with all our hearts that the message of Christ is the answer to violence in the schools.

One of saddest entries in these diaries is from one of the killers who hoped to find peace in the afterlife. The tragedy of that is that the peace he sought was available to him in this life, and perhaps if he would have found it, 15 families would still have their loved ones. Our hope and prayer is that God will take the calamity and heartbreak of Columbine and use it to reach thousands, even millions of anger ridden students who may simply be looking for peace.

Say what you will about religion but maybe if Harris and Klebold had a little more “Thou shalt not kill” in their lives we wouldn’t even be discussing this.

Media reaction to the records

Some media reactions to the Columbine records…

NPR:

NPR reporter Jeff Brady has read through much of the material. He says it is sometimes difficult to tell who wrote what, but he says he believes that this line came from the journal of gunman Eric Harris:

“I am full of hate and I love it. I hate people and they better f—— fear me if they know what’s good for them.”

Jeff says the writings depict Harris as an emotional person whose “thought processes are really deep but really disturbing at the same time.”

Washington Post:

The newly released papers suggest that the two seniors dropped several clues about their plans in advance. But they were not enough to prompt intervention.

I disagree that they weren’t enough to prompt investigation. There was too much evidence for not one person to notice.

Scripps:

If we didn’t all know that in this case, it ended in bloody mayhem, this could be any parent agonizing over an adolescent’s serious misbehavior and trying to make certain the young person faces up to the consequences and learns better. Which Harris appeared to do, while he was in the program and conforming to its requirements, but secretly he was boiling with rage. He lied to everyone, he was proud of the lies and he fooled the people who were doing what they could to rescue him.

How can any parent read these lines and not wonder, “Could that be my child?”

Kotaku:

The video game references that I’ve read in excerpts (not having had time to consume the entire document yet) paint Harris more as an obsessive fanboy, period, than particularly driven by the game itself.

Time Magazine:

The parents of Columbine killers Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold have often been portrayed as disengaged from the lives of their sons and unaware of the dark paths lying ahead. But 936 pages of evidence taken from the killers’ homes and cars were released by the Jefferson County Sheriff’s office on Thursday, and a notebook kept by Eric’s father, Wayne, details a parent’s involvement in his child’s downward spiral.

But was still clueless to everything.

Denver Post:

In one passage, he foreshadows the blame game that would follow the shootings. “I know I could get shot by a cop after only killing a single person, but hey … I chose to kill that one person so get over it! It’s MY fault! Not my parents, not my brothers, not my friends, not my favorite bands, not computer games, not the media, it is MINE!”

Harris was right. It was his fault. But plenty of others failed along the way.

My thoughts on the records.

Here are my quick thoughts on the journals and other documents that were released today.

Wayne Harris definitely had the “not my kid” syndrome. Eric Harris broke Brooks Brown’s windshield and yet Wayne Harris claims that his family is being victimized and that Brooks Brown is a manipulative con man.

Eric Harris was definitely a racist and a homophobe even though on his website he claimed he hated racism. Which would also make him a liar. I would almost say a pathological one.

Harris wrote reports about Charles Manson and The Third Reich that were almost favorable towards their subjects. Granted hindsight is 20/20 but if I was a teacher that definitely would have set off some red flags.

With all the references to killing and drawing of weapons and the like Harris made in his school work for at least a year you would think that some adult in his life, be it teacher or parent, would have noticed his unhealthy obsession.

They got their guns in November of 1998. That’s 6 months before the massacre. That should have given the parents ample opportunity to discover the guns. If my kids had records for theft and the like they would have been under the proverbial microscope.

These documents should put the final nail in the coffin of the bullying myth. Harris talked about how he was excluded not bullied. He was jealous of the popular kids. Like I’ve said before, the impression I got is that he wanted to be a prep or jock or whatever and was jealous that they didn’t accept him. They didn’t just snap. This was planned at least a year in advance. It was all about hate and egomania on the part of Harris and his Svengali like hold over Klebold.

The most preventable tragedy in history.

Dave Cullen on the records

Author and journalist Dave Cullen, the writer of the definitive article about Columbine The Depressive and the Psychopath, offers his opinion on the Eric Harris journal.

View the records

All 900+ pages of them can be read here. (pdf format)

I’ll have my thoughts on them later.

Records released

Re: Additional Columbine documents to be released:

Who: Jefferson County Sheriff Office

What: The release of 936 pages of documents seized from the Klebold and Harris homes and
vehicles after the 1999 Columbine High School shootings. The documents have been
scanned onto a CD-ROM, which can be purchased by cash, check or credit card for $5.(Additional fees apply if received by mail)

When: July 6, 2006 at 8 a.m.

Where: Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office
200 Jefferson County Parkway, Golden
Records Unit, main floor lobby

I’ll give it until noon today before they’re all over the net.

Or maybe one family will appeal

Klebold’s parents forgo challenge:

I guess we’re going to have another lesson in journalism. Previously it was reported that neither parents of the Columbine killers would appeal the Columbine evidence being released. Now the Rocky Mountain News is saying that for right now only the Klebolds are not appealing…

The parents of Columbine killer Dylan Klebold have decided not to challenge the release of more than 900 pages of documents taken from their home and that of fellow killer Eric Harris, their attorney said this morning.

Gary Lozow said that Tom and Sue Klebold hope that their decision will help bring an end to the litigation that has surrounded Columbine since the two seniors opened fire on April 20, 1999, killing a dozen students and a teacher and wounding more than 20 others.

“I think one of the kinds of thoughts that was important was simply to put an end to all of the litigation,” Lozow said. “Hopefully that will be part of what happens here — we’ll have to see.”

The documents are expected to be released Thursday, the Jefferson County sheriff said.

The Harris family has not yet filed any challenge to Jefferson County Sheriff Ted Mink’s decision to release the documents.

Today is the deadline.

As of what time today remains unknown.

Killers’ families will not appeal

Lawyers: No Challenge To Columbine Papers Release:

Color me shocked…

(CBS4) LITTLETON, Colo. The families of Columbine gunmen Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold have decided not to challenge a decision to release more than 900 pages of materials taken from their home, CBS4 reported Wednesday.

Wednesday was the deadline for any challenge to be filed.

Attorneys for families of Harris and Klebold told CBS4′s Rick Sallinger about their decision on Wednesday. Jefferson County Sheriff Ted Mink made the decision to release the materials last month.

The gunmen’s families went all the way to the Colorado Supreme Court to try and block the release of the materials from their homes, but failed.

Mink planned to make an announcement soon about when the actual release of the materials would take place.

I almost find it suspicious that they’re not appealing this after fighting for so long to keep it under wraps.



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