User Panel
Quoted:
View Quote If true, the school needs to be held accountable also. They should have immediately gone and got the kid and escorted him to the office. |
|
Quoted: Add another one. Our small county closed school today due to a 14 year old threat on Tic Toc. Allegedly. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: according to a reliable source... 12 kids have been arrested for threats this week Add another one. Our small county closed school today due to a 14 year old threat on Tic Toc. Allegedly. Good. These kids need to have their lives publicly flipped upside down. |
|
Quoted: If true, the school needs to be held accountable also. They should have immediately gone and got the kid and escorted him to the office. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted:
If true, the school needs to be held accountable also. They should have immediately gone and got the kid and escorted him to the office. Was this the same call that said 5 schools would be shot up that day? Or did the mom call after that warning came in? |
|
Quoted: Was this the same call that said 5 schools would be shot up that day? Or did the mom call after that warning came in? View Quote From this article: Washington Post (will not let me link for some reason) After this story was published online, Marcee Gray reached out to The Post to confirm the details in the texts and phone logs. She declined to elaborate on what had prompted her to call in the warning to the school, but said she had shared that information with law enforcement. She called the shooting “absolutely horrific” and expressed remorse for the students and parents affected. |
|
Quoted: From this article: Washington Post (will not let me link for some reason) After this story was published online, Marcee Gray reached out to The Post to confirm the details in the texts and phone logs. She declined to elaborate on what had prompted her to call in the warning to the school, but said she had shared that information with law enforcement. She called the shooting “absolutely horrific” and expressed remorse for the students and parents affected. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Was this the same call that said 5 schools would be shot up that day? Or did the mom call after that warning came in? From this article: Washington Post (will not let me link for some reason) After this story was published online, Marcee Gray reached out to The Post to confirm the details in the texts and phone logs. She declined to elaborate on what had prompted her to call in the warning to the school, but said she had shared that information with law enforcement. She called the shooting “absolutely horrific” and expressed remorse for the students and parents affected. Sounds like the school was warned twice that morning. |
|
Quoted: From this article: Washington Post (will not let me link for some reason) After this story was published online, Marcee Gray reached out to The Post to confirm the details in the texts and phone logs. She declined to elaborate on what had prompted her to call in the warning to the school, but said she had shared that information with law enforcement. She called the shooting “absolutely horrific” and expressed remorse for the students and parents affected. View Quote Did they believe what she was saying, if it was specific, or did they chalk it up to Methany calling in actin crazy again? |
|
Quoted: Did they believe what she was saying, if it was specific, or did they chalk it up to Methany calling in actin crazy again? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: From this article: Washington Post (will not let me link for some reason) After this story was published online, Marcee Gray reached out to The Post to confirm the details in the texts and phone logs. She declined to elaborate on what had prompted her to call in the warning to the school, but said she had shared that information with law enforcement. She called the shooting “absolutely horrific” and expressed remorse for the students and parents affected. Did they believe what she was saying, if it was specific, or did they chalk it up to Methany calling in actin crazy again? hard to trust much info from a meth addict |
|
Quoted: Has anyone confirmed that the class door was open? The only place I’ve seen that stated was from the interview of the girl that was sitting next to him in class. She talks about him coming back to the door and a classmate refusing to open it, then she said ‘he realized we weren’t going to let him in so I guess he started shooting into the next class that was open.’ But all four deaths were from people in the hallway. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: If you read the story, the school admin went to his classroom to pull him out of class but he wasn't in there, he had left just minutes before. The kid with a similar name wasn't in the classroom either so they took that kids back pack. Shooter tried to get back into his classroom, to start the shooting, but the door was closed & locked & the student sent to open it for him saw him pull out the gun & didn't open it so he went to the classroom next door, which was open, & that's where he started shooting. And if they felt there was enough reason to even go check on him in class, why were there doors still open? Character vs player knowledge. She was in the classroom behind a door, doubt she actually saw where he went, just heard the shots. You’d think that the first response to a call like that, would be to make sure things are secure, and at the very least, make sure there aren’t doors left open. Has anyone confirmed that the class door was open? The only place I’ve seen that stated was from the interview of the girl that was sitting next to him in class. She talks about him coming back to the door and a classmate refusing to open it, then she said ‘he realized we weren’t going to let him in so I guess he started shooting into the next class that was open.’ But all four deaths were from people in the hallway. |
|
Quoted: Did they believe what she was saying, if it was specific, or did they chalk it up to Methany calling in actin crazy again? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: From this article: Washington Post (will not let me link for some reason) After this story was published online, Marcee Gray reached out to The Post to confirm the details in the texts and phone logs. She declined to elaborate on what had prompted her to call in the warning to the school, but said she had shared that information with law enforcement. She called the shooting “absolutely horrific” and expressed remorse for the students and parents affected. Did they believe what she was saying, if it was specific, or did they chalk it up to Methany calling in actin crazy again? Considering this was his first week enrolled in the school and only second day to show up, I find it hard to believe they just chalked it up to some mom being all methed up. |
|
|
Quoted: Thanks. I'll stand by previous posts. Negligent homicide charge for the father. 25 years in prison should do it. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Dad got it for him for Christmas Thanks. I'll stand by previous posts. Negligent homicide charge for the father. 25 years in prison should do it. Seems like a pretty slippery slope. Why does it matter if the dad bought the gun for Christmas vs any other time of year? I got a youth model 870 for my twelfth birthday. I know tons of people in real life, and on this forum, that have bought their kids their first gun. How is this father any more guilty than any other parent of a criminal? |
|
Quoted: Seems like a pretty slippery slope. Why does it matter if the dad bought the gun for Christmas vs any other time of year? I got a youth model 870 for my twelfth birthday. I know tons of people in real life, and on this forum, that have bought their kids their first gun. How is this father any more guilty than any other parent of a criminal? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Dad got it for him for Christmas Thanks. I'll stand by previous posts. Negligent homicide charge for the father. 25 years in prison should do it. Seems like a pretty slippery slope. Why does it matter if the dad bought the gun for Christmas vs any other time of year? I got a youth model 870 for my twelfth birthday. I know tons of people in real life, and on this forum, that have bought their kids their first gun. How is this father any more guilty than any other parent of a criminal? I got my Marlin Model 60 when I was 11. I never threatened to take it to school and shoot someone. After being interviewed by the Sherriff's Office the dad made some serious mistakes that I think held liability. |
|
Quoted: Seems like a pretty slippery slope. Why does it matter if the dad bought the gun for Christmas vs any other time of year? I got a youth model 870 for my twelfth birthday. I know tons of people in real life, and on this forum, that have bought their kids their first gun. How is this father any more guilty than any other parent of a criminal? View Quote Did you make online threats to shoot up a school, and get investigated by the FBI for it? |
|
Quoted: I got my Marlin Model 60 when I was 11. I never threatened to take it to school and shoot someone. After being interviewed by the Sherriff's Office the dad made some serious mistakes that I think held liability. View Quote Perhaps - But what did the police and FBI conclude and offer? If he had had the guns in home (gifts or not) did the FBI offer advice to keep them under better control or remove them from home? Did the father believe the FBI's conclusion that his son was not involved (denial) and go in as normal? - with guns in home under reasonable control locked in a safe or closet?)- A teen can steal keys if they want to. |
|
Quoted: Perhaps - But what did the police and FBI conclude and offer? If he had had the guns in home (gifts or not) did the FBI offer advice to keep them under better control or remove them from home? Did the father believe the FBI's conclusion that his son was not involved (denial) and go in as normal? - with guns in home under reasonable control locked in a safe or closet?)- A teen can steal keys if they want to. View Quote What if the gun was under the son's control? Does that change anything? None of that is clear and will not be until they have a trial. Do I think they should charge him and figure that out? Yes. I get your point. Just because someone breaks into your house and steals a gun and murders someone does not make you liable. |
|
Quoted: Did you make online threats to shoot up a school, and get investigated by the FBI for it? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Seems like a pretty slippery slope. Why does it matter if the dad bought the gun for Christmas vs any other time of year? I got a youth model 870 for my twelfth birthday. I know tons of people in real life, and on this forum, that have bought their kids their first gun. How is this father any more guilty than any other parent of a criminal? Did you make online threats to shoot up a school, and get investigated by the FBI for it? Do you believe the dad is guilty because the son was investigated by the FBI, or because the dad bought his son the gun? My statement about it being a slippery slope was a response to your comment about the dad getting 25 years because the gun was purchased as a Christmas present. I was just pointing out that it is completely normal for a father to purchase their child their first gun (often times for Christmas, birthdays, etc.) |
|
Times have changed since a lot of us were kids.
Tough call for a parent regarding allowing access to firearms for teenagers. Social media is a huge problem in this regard. Kids have always talked. I can only imagine what I said when I was a teenager half a century ago. Now everything is posted, screenshotted, saved, tracked, and republished to billions of strangers. When a teenager talks about a firearm online, will those remarks be heard as some sort of threat? |
|
Quoted: Times have changed since a lot of us were kids. Tough call for a parent regarding allowing access to firearms for teenagers. Social media is a huge problem in this regard. Kids have always talked. I can only imagine what I said when I was a teenager half a century ago. Now everything is posted, screenshotted, saved, tracked, and republished to billions of strangers. When a teenager talks about a firearm online, will those remarks be heard as some sort of threat? View Quote no firearm posts come up all the time for me. it's about context. kid at the range, no foul. kid with general interest in weapons. yellow flag maybe if we have indications or reports of threats or other issues. gets reported but not a problem by itself kid with interest in weapons, pics at the range mixed with other posts such as drug use, violence behaviors or mental health issues... red flag threat analysis has to contain some key things: means... has a gun or access to tools to facilitate the threat motive ... has a reason opportunity.. has the ability to carry out the threat described. (location, time etc) for example... kid says he's going to kill another kid in a game session but live 3 states away. he has motive, he may have access to weapons but has no ability to get there or any other indications of violent actions. so digital threat exists but risk of physical threat is low. this is why continued monitoring is important. in the case above, report made case closed. we take the example above and discover dad bought him a new car 6 months later and his target will be in town for the weekend. now we have an actual opportunity IF the other parts are still relative. most of the time this will never be followed up on as the case was closed on the initial report. |
|
Mom of Georgia school shooter releases letter: "To the parents and families of those affected by the tragic events at Apalachee High School, I want to say that I am so sorry from the bottom of my heart ... If I could take the place of Mason and Christian, I would without a second thought ... We are all in a living nightmare right now, and I will personally never forgive myself for what has happened. My son Colt is not a monster. He is my oldest baby. He is quiet, thoughtful, caring, funny, and extremely intelligent. Please pray for him and the rest of our family, as I am praying for all of you every moment of every day." |
|
Quoted: Times have changed since a lot of us were kids. Tough call for a parent regarding allowing access to firearms for teenagers. Social media is a huge problem in this regard. Kids have always talked. I can only imagine what I said when I was a teenager half a century ago. Now everything is posted, screenshotted, saved, tracked, and republished to billions of strangers. When a teenager talks about a firearm online, will those remarks be heard as some sort of threat? View Quote And nowadays, it's not unheard of for students to be reprimanded/punished for posting photos from a gun range or hunting on the weekends. There have been many threads on this site about several of those cases. Could that have affected how serious the dad considered the visit to be? If the dad knew the kid was a danger, he should have to answer for that. But this case sounds more like the father being thrown under the bus in an attempt to keep blame off of the investigators. |
|
Quoted:
Mom of Georgia school shooter releases letter: "To the parents and families of those affected by the tragic events at Apalachee High School, I want to say that I am so sorry from the bottom of my heart ... If I could take the place of Mason and Christian, I would without a second thought ... We are all in a living nightmare right now, and I will personally never forgive myself for what has happened. My son Colt is not a monster. He is my oldest baby. He is quiet, thoughtful, caring, funny, and extremely intelligent. Please pray for him and the rest of our family, as I am praying for all of you every moment of every day." View Quote Maybe this will be her wake up call to sober up and get her shit together. |
|
|
I would like to know if Colt is her "oldest baby," I really wonder what the future holds for her kids Remington, Ruger, and Hi-Point.
|
|
Quoted: Do you believe the dad is guilty because the son was investigated by the FBI, or because the dad bought his son the gun? My statement about it being a slippery slope was a response to your comment about the dad getting 25 years because the gun was purchased as a Christmas present. I was just pointing out that it is completely normal for a father to purchase their child their first gun (often times for Christmas, birthdays, etc.) View Quote It is normal for a father to buy their son a rifle. It is not normal for a father to buy their son a rifle after the son threatens to commit mass murder. Knowing your son is a threat, and purchasing him the rifle anyway, is criminal negligence when the kid then uses it to shoot up a school. |
|
Regarding the fake threats, I heard this snippet from another parent today:
"Those investigations have already resulted in the arrest of nine students, who now face criminal charges. Please know that anyone who makes threats against our schools will be arrested and prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law." |
|
Quoted: Regarding the fake threats, I heard this snippet from another parent today: "Those investigations have already resulted in the arrest of nine students, who now face criminal charges. Please know that anyone who makes threats against our schools will be arrested and prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law." View Quote Forsyth, Hall and Gwinnett have reported recent investigation/allegations of school violence. I understand some dumbass 15 yr old has no concept or care at throwing out threat for the lulz or hoping to get out of tomorrow's math test but until there's severe consequences for these kids we're going to see more of this and make it harder for the authorities to filter through what's real and what's not. |
|
Quoted: It is normal for a father to buy their son a rifle. It is not normal for a father to buy their son a rifle after the son threatens to commit mass murder. Knowing your son is a threat, and purchasing him the rifle anyway, is criminal negligence when the kid then uses it to shoot up a school. View Quote Even if his dad thought all of that was BS, it was his responsibility to ask his son for his phone/computer and do a little forensic digging himself. I believe if he had he would have seen flags that would tell him to secure the guns up to be prudent. |
|
Quoted: Seems like a pretty slippery slope. Why does it matter if the dad bought the gun for Christmas vs any other time of year? I got a youth model 870 for my twelfth birthday. I know tons of people in real life, and on this forum, that have bought their kids their first gun. How is this father any more guilty than any other parent of a criminal? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Dad got it for him for Christmas Thanks. I'll stand by previous posts. Negligent homicide charge for the father. 25 years in prison should do it. Seems like a pretty slippery slope. Why does it matter if the dad bought the gun for Christmas vs any other time of year? I got a youth model 870 for my twelfth birthday. I know tons of people in real life, and on this forum, that have bought their kids their first gun. How is this father any more guilty than any other parent of a criminal? Did you threaten to shoot up a school right before it was purchased for you? Context matters. We should not be covering for criminally irresponsible behavior. |
|
Quoted: And nowadays, it's not unheard of for students to be reprimanded/punished for posting photos from a gun range or hunting on the weekends. There have been many threads on this site about several of those cases. Could that have affected how serious the dad considered the visit to be? If the dad knew the kid was a danger, he should have to answer for that. But this case sounds more like the father being thrown under the bus in an attempt to keep blame off of the investigators. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Times have changed since a lot of us were kids. Tough call for a parent regarding allowing access to firearms for teenagers. Social media is a huge problem in this regard. Kids have always talked. I can only imagine what I said when I was a teenager half a century ago. Now everything is posted, screenshotted, saved, tracked, and republished to billions of strangers. When a teenager talks about a firearm online, will those remarks be heard as some sort of threat? And nowadays, it's not unheard of for students to be reprimanded/punished for posting photos from a gun range or hunting on the weekends. There have been many threads on this site about several of those cases. Could that have affected how serious the dad considered the visit to be? If the dad knew the kid was a danger, he should have to answer for that. But this case sounds more like the father being thrown under the bus in an attempt to keep blame off of the investigators. Dad knew. Watch the interview posted. |
|
Georgia shooter's father enlisted his ex-cop sister to counsel son after FBI tip about high school attack threat - but he still went ahead and bought him the deadly weapon
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13833985/School-Shooters-Dad-Retired-Cop-Sister-FBI-Tip.html |
|
Quoted: Did you make online threats to shoot up a school, and get investigated by the FBI for it? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Seems like a pretty slippery slope. Why does it matter if the dad bought the gun for Christmas vs any other time of year? I got a youth model 870 for my twelfth birthday. I know tons of people in real life, and on this forum, that have bought their kids their first gun. How is this father any more guilty than any other parent of a criminal? Did you make online threats to shoot up a school, and get investigated by the FBI for it? I just listened to the body cam video of the two cops talking to the father and Colt. It's pretty weak, even the cops admit it could have been from somebody else and they weren't sure when the threats were made saying it could have been when there was different tenants in the place. No real evidence at all and they took Colt at his word and walked off. After watching that video it makes me more sympathetic to the father's position. If that is all the information he had, I think he's just being used as a scapegoat here. I do think it would have been prudent for him to lock up the guns, but I'm not sure it falls under the level of criminal negligence. I kind of thought the information in the video would have been worse. Was it ever confirmed if the guns were locked up or not anyway? |
|
Quoted: It is normal for a father to buy their son a rifle. It is not normal for a father to buy their son a rifle after the son threatens to commit mass murder. Knowing your son is a threat, and purchasing him the rifle anyway, is criminal negligence when the kid then uses it to shoot up a school. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Do you believe the dad is guilty because the son was investigated by the FBI, or because the dad bought his son the gun? My statement about it being a slippery slope was a response to your comment about the dad getting 25 years because the gun was purchased as a Christmas present. I was just pointing out that it is completely normal for a father to purchase their child their first gun (often times for Christmas, birthdays, etc.) It is normal for a father to buy their son a rifle. It is not normal for a father to buy their son a rifle after the son threatens to commit mass murder. Knowing your son is a threat, and purchasing him the rifle anyway, is criminal negligence when the kid then uses it to shoot up a school. I agree with you, however I'm not convinced that father necessarily knew his son had made a threat. It's a gray area case for sure here, the cops admit it could have been made from somebody else. He should have been more careful, but is it criminally negligent? I had kind of leaned in that direction until I watched the body cam video. |
|
Quoted: Even if his dad thought all of that was BS, it was his responsibility to ask his son for his phone/computer and do a little forensic digging himself. I believe if he had he would have seen flags that would tell him to secure the guns up to be prudent. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: It is normal for a father to buy their son a rifle. It is not normal for a father to buy their son a rifle after the son threatens to commit mass murder. Knowing your son is a threat, and purchasing him the rifle anyway, is criminal negligence when the kid then uses it to shoot up a school. Even if his dad thought all of that was BS, it was his responsibility to ask his son for his phone/computer and do a little forensic digging himself. I believe if he had he would have seen flags that would tell him to secure the guns up to be prudent. That's a good point that should have been done but would he have been able to find it? I doubt it. Honestly I'm kind of surprised the cops didn't take his phone or look through it. They would have had a better chance of finding it than Dad |
|
Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Times have changed since a lot of us were kids. Tough call for a parent regarding allowing access to firearms for teenagers. Social media is a huge problem in this regard. Kids have always talked. I can only imagine what I said when I was a teenager half a century ago. Now everything is posted, screenshotted, saved, tracked, and republished to billions of strangers. When a teenager talks about a firearm online, will those remarks be heard as some sort of threat? And nowadays, it's not unheard of for students to be reprimanded/punished for posting photos from a gun range or hunting on the weekends. There have been many threads on this site about several of those cases. Could that have affected how serious the dad considered the visit to be? If the dad knew the kid was a danger, he should have to answer for that. But this case sounds more like the father being thrown under the bus in an attempt to keep blame off of the investigators. Dad knew. Watch the interview posted. Hard to say. We don't know what was going through his head or what he believed. This is definitely a gray area case not near as straightforward as Crumbleys in Michigan. I support their conviction, not so sure about this one. It's definitely a slippery slope and if this is the trend people are going to get charged for weaker and weaker cases. |
|
Quoted: Even if his dad thought all of that was BS, it was his responsibility to ask his son for his phone/computer and do a little forensic digging himself. I believe if he had he would have seen flags that would tell him to secure the guns up to be prudent. View Quote they never do. they are usually either completely disengaged and don't care, or in complete denial and no matter what you show them they won't believe it. |
|
Quoted: Seems like a pretty slippery slope. Why does it matter if the dad bought the gun for Christmas vs any other time of year? I got a youth model 870 for my twelfth birthday. I know tons of people in real life, and on this forum, that have bought their kids their first gun. How is this father any more guilty than any other parent of a criminal? View Quote Did you you threaten to shot up a school and ha dthe police come to your house to talk to your father? The police came to the fathers house months before he bought his son an AR-15 and told the father that his son had made a threat to shot up a school. The father assured the police that all firearms were secure and he son did not have access to them. |
|
Quoted: Hard to say. We don't know what was going through his head or what he believed. This is definitely a gray area case not near as straightforward as Crumbleys in Michigan. I support their conviction, not so sure about this one. It's definitely a slippery slope and if this is the trend people are going to get charged for weaker and weaker cases. View Quote THere were other red flags that the father ignored. The kid was dealing with a terrible home life because of the problems of the mother. He know his son was being relentlessly bullied at school. Truancy from school. His kid checked many boxes of someone who would threaten to shot up a school and maybe do so. If I had an "at risk" 14 year old and the police knocked on my door to say he may have made threats to shot up a school I would not care what my kid told me to stay out of trouble. I would error on the side of caution considering what is at stake. |
|
Quoted: THere were other red flags that the father ignored. The kid was dealing with a terrible home life because of the problems of the mother. He know his son was being relentlessly bullied at school. Truancy from school. His kid checked many boxes of someone who would threaten to shot up a school and maybe do so. If I had an "at risk" 14 year old and the police knocked on my door to say he may have may threats to shot up a school I would not care what my kid told me to stay out of trouble. I would error on the side of caution considering what is at stake. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Hard to say. We don't know what was going through his head or what he believed. This is definitely a gray area case not near as straightforward as Crumbleys in Michigan. I support their conviction, not so sure about this one. It's definitely a slippery slope and if this is the trend people are going to get charged for weaker and weaker cases. THere were other red flags that the father ignored. The kid was dealing with a terrible home life because of the problems of the mother. He know his son was being relentlessly bullied at school. Truancy from school. His kid checked many boxes of someone who would threaten to shot up a school and maybe do so. If I had an "at risk" 14 year old and the police knocked on my door to say he may have may threats to shot up a school I would not care what my kid told me to stay out of trouble. I would error on the side of caution considering what is at stake. So would I but I am overly cautious about safety. I think it a much greyer case for criminal liability then the Crumbley case. I do think there is civil liability, the burden for that is much lower. You do make a good point about the other factors, I was basing my above comments just on the LE video. |
|
Quoted: I agree with you, however I'm not convinced that father necessarily knew his son had made a threat. It's a gray area case for sure here, the cops admit it could have been made from somebody else. He should have been more careful, but is it criminally negligent? I had kind of leaned in that direction until I watched the body cam video. View Quote Was the father not interviewed by the fbi? |
|
|
|
Quoted: Do you believe the dad is guilty because the son was investigated by the FBI, or because the dad bought his son the gun? My statement about it being a slippery slope was a response to your comment about the dad getting 25 years because the gun was purchased as a Christmas present. I was just pointing out that it is completely normal for a father to purchase their child their first gun (often times for Christmas, birthdays, etc.) View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Seems like a pretty slippery slope. Why does it matter if the dad bought the gun for Christmas vs any other time of year? I got a youth model 870 for my twelfth birthday. I know tons of people in real life, and on this forum, that have bought their kids their first gun. How is this father any more guilty than any other parent of a criminal? Did you make online threats to shoot up a school, and get investigated by the FBI for it? Do you believe the dad is guilty because the son was investigated by the FBI, or because the dad bought his son the gun? My statement about it being a slippery slope was a response to your comment about the dad getting 25 years because the gun was purchased as a Christmas present. I was just pointing out that it is completely normal for a father to purchase their child their first gun (often times for Christmas, birthdays, etc.) "smiled like a twelve year old kid who'd been handed a brand new hunting rifle just in time for opening day." Got kickback from a reader who instantly connected that line to school shootings. |
|
|
Quoted: If we were to wager, I would bet against it. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Maybe this will be her wake up call to sober up and get her shit together. If we were to wager, I would bet against it. |
|
Quoted: Did you threaten to shoot up a school right before it was purchased for you? Context matters. We should not be covering for criminally irresponsible behavior. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Dad got it for him for Christmas Thanks. I'll stand by previous posts. Negligent homicide charge for the father. 25 years in prison should do it. Seems like a pretty slippery slope. Why does it matter if the dad bought the gun for Christmas vs any other time of year? I got a youth model 870 for my twelfth birthday. I know tons of people in real life, and on this forum, that have bought their kids their first gun. How is this father any more guilty than any other parent of a criminal? Did you threaten to shoot up a school right before it was purchased for you? Context matters. We should not be covering for criminally irresponsible behavior. You're assuming the father believed his son had done that. There's evidence that he didn't. |
|
Quoted: That's a good point that should have been done but would he have been able to find it? I doubt it. Honestly I'm kind of surprised the cops didn't take his phone or look through it. They would have had a better chance of finding it than Dad View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: It is normal for a father to buy their son a rifle. It is not normal for a father to buy their son a rifle after the son threatens to commit mass murder. Knowing your son is a threat, and purchasing him the rifle anyway, is criminal negligence when the kid then uses it to shoot up a school. Even if his dad thought all of that was BS, it was his responsibility to ask his son for his phone/computer and do a little forensic digging himself. I believe if he had he would have seen flags that would tell him to secure the guns up to be prudent. That's a good point that should have been done but would he have been able to find it? I doubt it. Honestly I'm kind of surprised the cops didn't take his phone or look through it. They would have had a better chance of finding it than Dad |
|
|
Quoted: Did you you threaten to shot up a school and ha dthe police come to your house to talk to your father? The police came to the fathers house months before he bought his son an AR-15 and told the father that his son had made a threat to shot up a school. The father assured the police that all firearms were secure and he son did not have access to them. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Seems like a pretty slippery slope. Why does it matter if the dad bought the gun for Christmas vs any other time of year? I got a youth model 870 for my twelfth birthday. I know tons of people in real life, and on this forum, that have bought their kids their first gun. How is this father any more guilty than any other parent of a criminal? Did you you threaten to shot up a school and ha dthe police come to your house to talk to your father? The police came to the fathers house months before he bought his son an AR-15 and told the father that his son had made a threat to shot up a school. The father assured the police that all firearms were secure and he son did not have access to them. |
|
Quoted: It looks like I was mistaken. Interviewed by the Georgia police after the FBI received the tips of his threats? Is that accurate? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: No one was interviewed by the FBI. It looks like I was mistaken. Interviewed by the Georgia police after the FBI received the tips of his threats? Is that accurate? I believe so. |
|
Quoted: I'm 50/50 on it. The one thing that ties all ex addicts together is that they hit their personal bottom at some point. A point so low they were galvanized to change. Maybe having her oldest son going to prison for murdering his classmates is that point for her. Maybe not. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Maybe this will be her wake up call to sober up and get her shit together. If we were to wager, I would bet against it. I agree with you about them needing to hit bottom. My opinion is based upon nothing other than my own thinking, but given how selfish most addicts are, I imagine that something happening to a son she no longer lives with will be too external and abstract for her to feel as though she herself has hit bottom. I could be wrong, of course. |
|
Sign up for the ARFCOM weekly newsletter and be entered to win a free ARFCOM membership. One new winner* is announced every week!
You will receive an email every Friday morning featuring the latest chatter from the hottest topics, breaking news surrounding legislation, as well as exclusive deals only available to ARFCOM email subscribers.
AR15.COM is the world's largest firearm community and is a gathering place for firearm enthusiasts of all types.
From hunters and military members, to competition shooters and general firearm enthusiasts, we welcome anyone who values and respects the way of the firearm.
Subscribe to our monthly Newsletter to receive firearm news, product discounts from your favorite Industry Partners, and more.
Copyright © 1996-2024 AR15.COM LLC. All Rights Reserved.
Any use of this content without express written consent is prohibited.
AR15.Com reserves the right to overwrite or replace any affiliate, commercial, or monetizable links, posted by users, with our own.