Lupica: Morbid find suggests murder-obsessed gunman Adam Lanza plotted Newtown, Conn.'s Sandy Hook massacre for years
Law enforcement reportedly discovers a sickeningly thorough 7-foot-long, 4-foot-wide spreadsheet with names, body counts and weapons from previous mass murders and even attempted killings. 'It sounded like a doctoral thesis, that was the quality of the research,' an anonymous law enforcement veteran said.
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Published: Sunday, March 17, 2013, 8:11 PM
Updated: Monday, March 18, 2013, 10:05 AM
KEVIN P. COUGHLIN/FlyingDogPhotos.com
Authorities believe Adam Lanza targeted Sandy Hook, because a school
would provide little resistance, allowing him to rack up victims in a
quest for notoriety.
It is three months since the killings in Newtown, since 20 children and
six adults were gunned down at Sandy Hook Elementary School less than
two weeks before Christmas. And as bad as the story was, and will always
be, it is even worse than we originally knew because now we discover
that this was slaughter by spreadsheet.
It has been reported previously that law enforcement found research about previous mass murderers at the Newtown, Conn., home the shooter, video gamer Adam Lanza, shared with his mother, the first victim of Dec. 14.
It was more than that, and worse than that.
What investigators found was a chilling spreadsheet 7 feet long and 4
feet wide that required a special printer, a document that contained
Lanza’s obsessive, extensive research — in nine-point font — about mass
murders of the past, and even attempted murders.
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But it wasn’t just a spreadsheet. It was a score sheet.
“We were told (Lanza) had around 500 people on this sheet,” a law
enforcement veteran told me Saturday night. “Names and the number of
people killed and the weapons that were used, even the precise make and
model of the weapons. It had to have taken years. It sounded like a
doctoral thesis, that was the quality of the research.”
The law enforcement vet attended the International Association of Police Chiefs and Colonels mid-year meeting in New Orleans last week, a conference where state police colonels share information with each other, and learn from each other. One of the speakers this year was Danny Stebbins, a colonel from the Connecticut State Police.
Stebbins spoke for a long time about the morning of Dec. 14 at Sandy Hook Elementary.
PHOTOS: GUNMAN KILLS 26 AT CONN. ELEMENTARY SCHOOL
Those in the room were told of first responders in Newtown who have since quit their jobs, so shattered were they by what they found when they got to the school that morning, when they saw dead teachers with their arms wrapped around the children they had tried in vain to save.
The man to whom I spoke, a tough career cop who did not wish to see his name in the newspaper, was in the room when the state cop from Connecticut spoke, said the man was well into his presentation when he began to talk of the spreadsheets that had been found at “the shooter’s” home.
He didn’t use Lanza’s name, saying he did not want to give him even an
hour more of fame, just because that is what Lanza wanted; what all
these shooters want, from Tucson to Newtown to Virginia Tech.
“We keep calling them mass murderers,” the veteran cop to whom I spoke said. “But there should be a new way of referring to them: Glory killers.
RELATED: DAD OF NEWTOWN VICTIM BEGS SENATORS TO BAN ASSAULT WEAPONS
“They don’t believe this was just a spreadsheet. They believe it was a
score sheet,” he continued. “This was the work of a video gamer, and
that it was his intent to put his own name at the very top of that list.
They believe that he picked an elementary school because he felt it was
a point of least resistance, where he could rack up the greatest number
of kills. That’s what (the Connecticut police) believe.”
The man paused and said, “They believe that (Lanza) believed that it was the way to pick up the easiest points. It’s why he didn’t want to be killed by law enforcement. In the code of a gamer, even a deranged gamer like this little bastard, if somebody else kills you, they get your points. They believe that’s why he killed himself.
“They have pictures from two years before, with the guy all strapped with weapons, posing with a pistol to his head. That’s the thing you have to understand: He had this laid out for years before.”
Another pause.
RELATED: FACEBOOK AGREES TO REMOVE SOME NEWTOWN PAGES
“He didn’t snap that day, he wasn’t one of those guys who was mad as hell and wasn’t going to take it anymore,” the man said. “He had been planning this thing forever. In the end, it was just a perfect storm: These guns, one of them an AR-15, in the hands of a violent, insane gamer. It was like porn to a rapist. They feed on it until they go out and say, enough of the video screen. Now I’m actually going to be a hunter.”
Those who didn’t know about Lanza’s life on its way to the gates of
hell were told in New Orleans about the plastic that covered his own
windows in Newtown, the Connecticut town he would make famous as a way
of making himself, the newest glory killer, famous. Were told about how
in the last days of his life, not a single ray of light could get into
his room.
He was finished with his spreadsheet by then, the old score sheet, one that did not yet have his name on it.
“The whole thing was chilling and riveting,” the law enforcement official said.
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“The fascination (Lanza) had with this subject matter, the complete and total concentration. There really was no other subject matter inside his head. Just this: Kill, kill, kill.
“It really was like he was lost in one of his own sick games. That’s what we heard. That he learned something from his game that you learn in (police) school, about how if you’re moving from room to room — the way he was in that school — you have to reload before you get to the next room. Maybe he has a 30-round magazine clip, and he’s only used half of it. But he’s willing to dump 15 rounds and have a new clip before he arrives in the next room.”
The career law enforcement veteran paused again, and when he started speaking again his voice was shaking, like a wind had blown through it.
“They believe he learned the principles of this — the tactical reload — from his game. Reload before you’re completely out. Keep going. When the strap broke on his first weapon (the AR-15), he went to his handgun at the end. Classic police training. Or something you learn playing kill games.”
The police in Connecticut believe that Lanza’s mother, a gun lover herself, was an enabler of her son’s increasing obsession with guns, that she was making straw purchases of guns for him all along, and ignoring the fact that he was getting more and more fixated on them.
At this point I asked the man what we can possibly learn from what happened with Adam Lanza and his mother and what finally happened at Sandy Hook Elementary on that Friday morning in December.
He said, “The amazing thing is, as much of a tragedy as it was, it really could have been much worse. We heard that in New Orleans, too. Those teachers . . . the whole school . . . they did everything they could. There is nothing more they could have done. Despite the great loss of lives, they did save lives by acting the way they did.”
He said when the presentation was over that day, he walked out of the hotel and into the New Orleans morning, three months removed from Sandy Hook Elementary but unable now to shake what he called the “visual” of Adam Lanza’s spreadsheets, the seemingly endless list of names and numbers compiled for God knows how long; the list on which he wanted his name at the top, because of all the easy kills he thought he could get at an elementary school.
“Then I called my wife,” he said, “and told her about it, and started to cry about Newtown all over again.”
It has been reported previously that law enforcement found research about previous mass murderers at the Newtown, Conn., home the shooter, video gamer Adam Lanza, shared with his mother, the first victim of Dec. 14.
It was more than that, and worse than that.
EPA
Following the Sandy Hook massacre first responders quit after seeing dead teachers with their arms wrapped about the children they tried to save.
RELATED: PAPER-COVERED WINDOW SPARES ENTIRE NEWTOWN CLASSROOM FROM SHOOTER ADAM LANZA: REPORT
But it wasn’t just a spreadsheet. It was a score sheet.
Getty Images
Nancy J. Lanza, Adam Lanza's mother and his first victim. A law enforcement veteran had some jarring words about what the tragedy has taught us about Adam and Nacy Lanza. He said, 'The amazing thing is, as much of a tragedy as it was, it really could have been much worse.'
The law enforcement vet attended the International Association of Police Chiefs and Colonels mid-year meeting in New Orleans last week, a conference where state police colonels share information with each other, and learn from each other. One of the speakers this year was Danny Stebbins, a colonel from the Connecticut State Police.
Stebbins spoke for a long time about the morning of Dec. 14 at Sandy Hook Elementary.
An AR-15 rifle. Video games may have given Lanza his strategy. The 20-year-old reloaded before entering new rooms, even if he had not exhausted the ammunition he was using.
Those in the room were told of first responders in Newtown who have since quit their jobs, so shattered were they by what they found when they got to the school that morning, when they saw dead teachers with their arms wrapped around the children they had tried in vain to save.
The man to whom I spoke, a tough career cop who did not wish to see his name in the newspaper, was in the room when the state cop from Connecticut spoke, said the man was well into his presentation when he began to talk of the spreadsheets that had been found at “the shooter’s” home.
AP Photo
Carlee Soto says the above photo is a painful reminder of the moments before she learned her sister, Victoria Soto, died in the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School.
“We keep calling them mass murderers,” the veteran cop to whom I spoke said. “But there should be a new way of referring to them: Glory killers.
RELATED: DAD OF NEWTOWN VICTIM BEGS SENATORS TO BAN ASSAULT WEAPONS
AP
Adam Lanza was repeatedly supplied guns by his mother, a gun enthusiast herself, who ignored his growing fixation with them, law enforcement said.
The man paused and said, “They believe that (Lanza) believed that it was the way to pick up the easiest points. It’s why he didn’t want to be killed by law enforcement. In the code of a gamer, even a deranged gamer like this little bastard, if somebody else kills you, they get your points. They believe that’s why he killed himself.
“They have pictures from two years before, with the guy all strapped with weapons, posing with a pistol to his head. That’s the thing you have to understand: He had this laid out for years before.”
Mark Borderud
Col. Danny Stebbins of the Connecticut State Police recalled the morning of Dec. 14 during a conference of police chiefs in New Orleans.
RELATED: FACEBOOK AGREES TO REMOVE SOME NEWTOWN PAGES
“He didn’t snap that day, he wasn’t one of those guys who was mad as hell and wasn’t going to take it anymore,” the man said. “He had been planning this thing forever. In the end, it was just a perfect storm: These guns, one of them an AR-15, in the hands of a violent, insane gamer. It was like porn to a rapist. They feed on it until they go out and say, enough of the video screen. Now I’m actually going to be a hunter.”
Reuters
The Lanza home in Newtown, Conn. Police believe Lanza, immersed in a pervese video game world, killed himself to prevent law enforcement from taking his "points."
He was finished with his spreadsheet by then, the old score sheet, one that did not yet have his name on it.
“The whole thing was chilling and riveting,” the law enforcement official said.
Getty Images
Lanza obsessed over shooter video games and kept a spreadsheet of real-life mass killings.
“The fascination (Lanza) had with this subject matter, the complete and total concentration. There really was no other subject matter inside his head. Just this: Kill, kill, kill.
“It really was like he was lost in one of his own sick games. That’s what we heard. That he learned something from his game that you learn in (police) school, about how if you’re moving from room to room — the way he was in that school — you have to reload before you get to the next room. Maybe he has a 30-round magazine clip, and he’s only used half of it. But he’s willing to dump 15 rounds and have a new clip before he arrives in the next room.”
The career law enforcement veteran paused again, and when he started speaking again his voice was shaking, like a wind had blown through it.
“They believe he learned the principles of this — the tactical reload — from his game. Reload before you’re completely out. Keep going. When the strap broke on his first weapon (the AR-15), he went to his handgun at the end. Classic police training. Or something you learn playing kill games.”
The police in Connecticut believe that Lanza’s mother, a gun lover herself, was an enabler of her son’s increasing obsession with guns, that she was making straw purchases of guns for him all along, and ignoring the fact that he was getting more and more fixated on them.
At this point I asked the man what we can possibly learn from what happened with Adam Lanza and his mother and what finally happened at Sandy Hook Elementary on that Friday morning in December.
He said, “The amazing thing is, as much of a tragedy as it was, it really could have been much worse. We heard that in New Orleans, too. Those teachers . . . the whole school . . . they did everything they could. There is nothing more they could have done. Despite the great loss of lives, they did save lives by acting the way they did.”
He said when the presentation was over that day, he walked out of the hotel and into the New Orleans morning, three months removed from Sandy Hook Elementary but unable now to shake what he called the “visual” of Adam Lanza’s spreadsheets, the seemingly endless list of names and numbers compiled for God knows how long; the list on which he wanted his name at the top, because of all the easy kills he thought he could get at an elementary school.
“Then I called my wife,” he said, “and told her about it, and started to cry about Newtown all over again.”
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