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Jared Lee Loughner

American mass murderer (born 1988)


American mass murderer (born 1988)

FieldValue
imageJared Loughner USMS.jpg
image_uprightyes
image_size240px
captionMug shot of Loughner taken by U.S. Marshals on January 22, 2011
birth_nameJared Lee Loughner
birth_date
birth_placeTucson, Arizona, U.S.
death_date
educationMountain View High School (dropped out)
Pima Community College (withdrew)
known_for2011 Tucson shooting
conviction_penalty7 life sentences without parole plus 140 years
parents
targetsGabby Giffords
fatalities6
injuries13
weaponsGlock 19 9mm
apprehended
imprisonedFederal Medical Center, Rochester
convictionFirst degree murder of a federal employee (2 counts)
Attempted assassination of a member of Congress
Attempted murder of a federal employee (2 counts)
Interference with a federally protected activity resulting in death (4 counts)
Interference with a federally protected activity resulting in bodily injury (10 counts)
criminal_statusIncarcerated

Pima Community College (withdrew) Attempted assassination of a member of Congress Attempted murder of a federal employee (2 counts) Interference with a federally protected activity resulting in death (4 counts) Interference with a federally protected activity resulting in bodily injury (10 counts)

Jared Lee Loughner (; born September 10, 1988) is an American mass murderer who pleaded guilty to 19 charges of murder and attempted murder in connection with the January 8, 2011, Tucson shooting, in which he shot and severely injured U.S. representative Gabby Giffords, and killed six people, including Chief U.S. District Court judge John Roll.*

  • Loughner shot and injured a total of 13 people, including one man who was injured while subduing him.

Born in 1988, acquaintances say that Loughner's personality had changed markedly in the years prior to the shooting, a period during which he was also abusing alcohol and drugs. He had been suspended from Pima Community College in September 2010 because of his bizarre behavior and disruptions in classes and the library. After his arrest, two medical evaluations diagnosed Loughner with paranoid schizophrenia and ruled him incompetent to stand trial. He was placed on medication while in jail, as part of his treatment. He was again judged incompetent in May 2012.

In August 2012, Loughner was judged competent to stand trial, and at the hearing, he pleaded guilty to 19 counts. In November 2012, he was sentenced to life plus 140 years in federal prison.

Background

Jared Lee Loughner was born on September 10, 1988, and is the only child of Randy and Amy (née Totman) Loughner. They were described by a neighbor as a very private family. Amy Loughner worked for the Pima County Parks Department as a horticulturalist. Randy Loughner was a retired truck driver, but journalists did not determine if he worked outside the house at the time of the shooting. While Loughner had friends in high school, neighbors noted that in the following years, he kept more to himself and rarely spoke to others.

Behavior change

Loughner attended Mountain View High School in Tucson, Arizona, and dropped out in 2006. Around this time, when he was about eighteen years old, those who knew him noted a change in his personality. Kelsey Hawkes, who dated Loughner for several months in high school, later said she was shocked after hearing of his arrest. "I've always known him as the sweet, caring Jared," said Hawkes, 21 at the time and then a student at the University of Arizona.

Loughner's former classmate and friend Tong Shan stated that her last encounter with Loughner was in October 2010, after he was suspended and dropped out of college and just before he purchased the semi-automatic handgun used in the shooting. She said that while Loughner was "anti-government", he never appeared violent, nor did he mention his plans to buy a gun.

At some point, Loughner was fired from his job at a Quiznos restaurant, with his manager saying he had undergone a personality transformation. After this, Loughner briefly volunteered at a local animal shelter, walking dogs, but he was eventually asked not to return. The shelter manager later said, "He was walking dogs in an area we didn't want dogs walked...he didn't understand or comprehend what the supervisor was trying to tell him. He was just resistant to that information."

According to court records, Loughner had two previous offenses: in October 2007, he was cited in Pima County for possession of drug paraphernalia and on October 13, 2008, he was charged after defacing a street sign in Marana, near Tucson (a charge that was dismissed following the completion of a diversion program in March 2009). The police report noted that he drew a stylized CX, which Loughner said were Christian symbols.

Substance use

Zach Osler, a high-school classmate of Loughner's and his closest friend, indicated that Loughner's life began to unravel after his high-school girlfriend broke up with him. He began to abuse alcohol and other drugs, including cannabis (marijuana), cocaine, psychedelic mushrooms, LSD, and Salvia divinorum (a hallucinogen legal in Arizona).

Former classmate Caitie Parker remembers Loughner as a "pot head". Loughner had a history of drug use, having been arrested in September 2007 for possession of marijuana and drug paraphernalia. "I haven't seen him in person since '07," Parker recalled in early 2011. "I'm looking back at this [as] a 14–19-year-old...who knows if any of us knew what for sure we were yet?"

After struggling with drugs for more than two years, Loughner gave up alcohol, tobacco, and recreational drugs in late 2008 and has not used since, according to one of his longtime friends. The U.S. Army confirmed that Loughner had been rejected as "unqualified" for service in 2008. According to military sources, Loughner admitted to marijuana use on numerous occasions during the application process.

In the months leading up to the shooting, Loughner's parents became increasingly alarmed at their son's behavior; at one point, they resorted to disabling his car every night in order to keep him at home. On one occasion, his father confiscated his shotgun and both parents urged him to get psychiatric help. Loughner also became obsessed with controlling what he perceived to be lucid dreams.

Suspension from college

From February to September 2010, while a student at Pima Community College, Loughner had five contacts with campus police for classroom and library disruptions. Some of his teachers complained to the administration about his disruptions and bizarre behavior, as they thought it a sign of mental illness and feared what he might do. On September 29, 2010, college police also discovered a YouTube video shot by Loughner, in which his spoken commentary stated that the college was illegal according to the United States Constitution. He described his school as "one of the biggest scams in America".

The college decided to suspend Loughner and sent a letter to his parents, to consult with them and him together. The college told Loughner that if he wanted to return, he needed to resolve his code of conduct violations and obtain a mental health clearance (indicating, in the opinion of a mental health professional, that his presence did not constitute a danger to himself or others). On October 4, Loughner and his parents met with campus administrators and Loughner indicated he would withdraw from the college. During Loughner's time at Pima, a classmate said she worried that he might commit a school shooting. One of his teachers has claimed a similar suspicion after the Tucson shooting. He never submitted to a mental health evaluation and did not return to the college.

Several college classmates recalled an incident in which Loughner, during a class discussion, had mocked and laughed at a young woman who was describing her abortion. One classmate described Loughner's reaction as "wildly inappropriate". "(Loughner) started making comments about terrorism and laughing about killing the baby," former classmate Don Coorough recalled to ABC News. Yet another classmate, Lydian Ali, recalled that "a girl had written a poem about an abortion. It was very emotional and she was teary eyed and he said something about strapping a bomb to the fetus and making a baby bomb out of it."

Expressed views

Views on politics

Records show that Loughner was registered as an independent and voted in 2006 and 2008, but not in 2010.

Loughner's high-school friend Zach Osler said, "He did not watch TV; he disliked the news; he didn't listen to political radio; he didn't take sides; he wasn't on the Left; he wasn't on the Right." Zane Gutierrez, a friend, later told The New York Times that Loughner's anger would also "well up at the sight of President George W. Bush, or in discussing what he considered to be the nefarious designs of government."

Misogyny and sexism

According to a former friend, Bryce Tierney, Loughner had expressed a longstanding dislike for Gabby Giffords. Tierney recalled that Loughner had often said that women should not hold positions of power. He repeatedly derided Giffords as a "fake". This belief intensified after he attended her August 25, 2007, event when she did not, in his view, sufficiently answer his question: "What is government if words have no meaning?" Loughner kept Giffords's form letter, which thanked him for attending the 2007 event, in the same box as an envelope which was scrawled with phrases like "die bitch" and "assassination plans have been made".

Conspiracy theories

His friend Zach Osler noted that conspiracy theories had a profound effect on Loughner. He was a member of the message board Above Top Secret, which discusses conspiracy theories; members of the site did not respond warmly to posts believed to be from his account. Loughner espoused conspiracy theories about the 9/11 attacks, the New World Order, and believed in a 2012 apocalypse, among other controversial viewpoints.

In the aftermath of the shooting, the Anti-Defamation League reviewed messages by Loughner, and concluded that there was a "disjointed theme that runs through Loughner's writings", which was a "distrust for and dislike of the government." It "manifested itself in various ways" – for instance, in the belief that the government used the control of language and grammar to brainwash people, the notion that the government was creating "infinite currency" without the backing of gold and silver, or the assertion that NASA was faking spaceflights. Reporters who study right-wing militia groups and the so-called "Patriot Movement" found Loughner's comments on subjects like the American currency and the Constitution, which he posted online in various video clips, strikingly similar in language and the Internet's more paranoid, extremist, corners.

Views on religion

Journalists had speculated that Loughner was antisemitic due to his attack on Rep. Giffords, who is Jewish, but the Anti-Defamation League's analysis of the messages by Loughner found that he had a more generalized dislike of religion, and of government, along with women in power. A police report noted that he had previously been caught making graffiti associated with anti-abortion groups.

Contrary to rumors spread at the time, Loughner was not in fact born Jewish. Loughner has been described as an anti-theist by those who knew him. Loughner declined to state his religion in his Army application. In his "Final Thoughts" video, Loughner stated, "No, I don't trust in God!", in reference to the United States national motto printed on coins and paper currency, "In God We Trust". He expressed a dislike for all religions, and was particularly critical of Christians.

Tucson shooting

Main article: 2011 Tucson shooting

Preparation

Loughner allegedly purchased the 9mm Glock pistol used in the shooting from a Sportsman's Warehouse in Tucson on November 30, 2010. The night before the shooting, at 2:05 a.m. he left a message on a friend's voicemail saying, "Hey man, it's Jared. Me and you had good times. Peace out. Later." In a MySpace post the morning of the shooting at 4:12 a.m. he wrote, "Goodbye friends. Please don't be mad at me. The literacy rate is below 5%. I haven't talked to one person who is literate. I want to make it out alive. The longest war in the history of the United States. Goodbye. I'm saddened with the current currency and job employment. I had a bully at school. Thank you. P.S. – plead the fifth!"

The MySpace page showed a close-up photo of a handgun sitting atop a document titled "United States History."

Attack

Roadside sign at the scene the day of the shooting

On January 8, 2011, at 7:04 a.m. MST, Loughner went to a Walmart store near the Foothills Mall to purchase ammunition, but left that store and completed his purchase at Walmart on North Cortaro Road at 7:28 a.m. He was stopped by Arizona Game and Fish Department officer Alen Edward Forney at 7:34 a.m. for running a red light, but once the officer determined there were no outstanding warrants for Loughner, he was allowed to proceed to his destination with a warning to drive carefully. Loughner took a taxi to a Safeway supermarket location in Casas Adobes, where Rep. Giffords was holding a constituents meeting. The shooting occurred at 10:10 a.m. MST.

Loughner opened fire on Giffords from close range, hitting her as well as numerous bystanders, and killing six people. Thirteen other people were injured by gunfire, and one person was injured while fleeing the scene of the shooting. Giffords, the target of the attack, was shot in the head and critically injured.

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References

  1. (January 11, 2011). "Jared Loughner's Parents Randy and Amy: Did They Know About His Mental Illness?". The Daily Beast.
  2. (January 9, 2011). "Jared Loughner Radically Changed Before Alleged Shooting, Friend Says – ABC News". Abcnews.go.com.
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  7. (January 9, 2011). "Who is Jared Lee Loughner? Caitie Parker's tweets". There Live.
  8. (March 27, 2013). "New details: Loughner's parents took gun, disabled car to keep him home". CNN.
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  10. (January 11, 2011). "A troubled mind in Tucson". Los Angeles Times.
  11. (January 12, 2011). "Jared Loughner: A Puzzle, Even Before Arizona Shooting". NPR.
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  14. (January 12, 2011). "Sebelius: Some Take Rhetoric as 'Call to Action'". National Review.
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  25. The Mindset of Jared Lee Loughner: [https://web.archive.org/web/20110114232701/http://www.adl.org/main_Extremism/jared_lee_loughner.htm?Multi_page_sections=sHeading_4 Loughner and Religion], Retrieved August 7, 2012.
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  40. [http://www.ca9.uscourts.gov/datastore/general/2011/07/12/11-10339_order.pdf USA v Jared Lee Loughner – Order July 12, 2011] – US Court of Appeals for the Ninth District {{webarchive. link. (January 25, 2012)
  41. Thompson, Scott (July 13, 2011). [http://www.cnn.com/2011/CRIME/07/13/loughner.forced.medication/index.html Court: Jared Loughner can refuse anti-psychotic medication.] ''[[CNN]]''
  42. Emshwiller, John R.; Audi, Tamara (July 12, 2011). [https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424052702303678704576442641078371886 Federal Court Sides With Loughner in Drug Debate], ''[[Wall Street Journal]]''.
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  46. The request for an injunction was denied by the court, allowing treatment to continue pending a full hearing into the matter.[https://web.archive.org/web/20111105173950/http://www.ca9.uscourts.gov/datastore/general/2011/07/22/11-10339_order_dnyng_emrgnc_mtn.pdf ''USA v Loughner'': Order denying emergency motion for injunctive relief. July 22, 2011] – US Courts for the Ninth District
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  55. Stein, Sam. (July 29, 2014). "Gabrielle Giffords Opposed Death Penalty For Her Shooter". Huffington Post.
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