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Examining the actions of an adolescent killer

BY BILL DEDMAN
Chicago Sun-Times

"His behavior did not appear obviously different from that of other early adolescents," wrote a psychiatrist who examined Loukaitis, "until he walked into his junior high school classroom and shot four people, killing three people."

But Loukaitis' behavior was different. He had spoken often, to at least eight friends, for as much as a year, of his desire to kill people.

He had asked his friends how to get ammunition. He had shopped for a long coat to hide the gun; unknowing, his mother took him to seven stores to shop for the right one. He had complained of teasing, but no teacher intervened. His poems were filled with death.

Many teenagers write frightening poetry. Loukaitis also told his friends just what he planned.

"He said that it'd be cool to kill people," one said. "He said he could probably get away with it."
Q. How long ago was this?
A. For the last year, probably. I didn't think anything of it.
Q. And when he showed you the sawed-off shotgun?
A. I kind of blew that off, too.

The teacher Loukaitis killed, Leona Caires, 49, had written on the report card of the A student: "pleasure to have in class."

Why is the Secret Service studying school shootings?

The Service once believed in profiles. Assassins were presumed to be male, loners, insane. That profile was changed by Squeaky Fromme and Sara Jane Moore, who each tried to kill President Gerald R. Ford in San Francisco in 1975. The night before Moore's attack, the Secret Service had taken away her gun, but she bought another gun and was allowed to approach Ford outside the St. Francis Hotel. She didn't know that her new gun fired high and to the right.

In that same hotel last year, Secret Service agents were briefed on the results of a study by the Service's Protective Intelligence Division. The Service studied all 83 people who tried to kill a public official or celebrity in the United States in the last 50 years

Assassins, the team found, fit no profile. They rarely threaten. They often change targets. Even if mentally ill, they plan rationally.

But because they follow a path toward violence--stalking, acquiring weapons, communicating, acting in ways that concern those around them--it may be possible to intervene

 As the team presented its findings around the country, its audience often made connections to other kinds of targeted violence: workplace attacks, stalking and school shootings.

School violence decreased in the 1990s, but the rare school shootings increased in the 1990s. And then came Columbine High School, where 15 died.

The Service established the National Threat Assessment Center, a sliver of the Secret Service headquarters, just around the corner from Ford's Theater in Washington.

"My hope," said the director of the Secret Service, Brian L. Stafford, "is that the knowledge and expertise utilized by the Secret Service to protect the president may aid our nation's schools and law enforcement communities to safeguard our nation's children."

Kids are kids, of course, not presidential assassins. Fewer of the school shooters show signs of mental illness, which often starts in late adolescence or beyond. The children talk more with peers, perhaps testing and probing for the reaction their
action will bring.

After seeing that the young shooters didn't just snap, the researchers believe that more responsibility for the shootings rests with adults.

"If kids snap, it lets us off the hook," said Bryan Vossekuil, a former agent on President Reagan's protective detail and executive director of the Service's threat assessment center.

"If you view these shooters as on a path toward violence, it puts the burden on adults. Believing that kids snap is comforting."

Although there is no profile, the shooters do share one characteristic.

"I believe they're all boys because the way we bring up boys in America predisposes them to a sense of loneliness and disconnection and sadness," said William S. Pollack, a psychologist and consultant to the Secret Service.

"When they have additional pain, additional grievances, they are less likely to reach out and talk to someone, less likely to be listened to. Violence is the only way they start to feel they can get a result."

"My depression has reached an all-time low, and I don't know why. I do know one thing though, something is going to happen tomorrow"


"Reprinted with special permission from the Chicago Sun-Times Inc. @2001"

Journals, poetry scream of violence, despair

Voices of the killers are seldom heard.  here are some excerpts from poems by two boys before the shooting

Suicide or homicide
Homicide and suicide
Into sleep I'm sinking
Why me I'm thinking
Homicidal and suicidal
Thoughts, intermixing
My life's not worth fixing

A second poem:

He loses his lust for life
Becomes more dangerous
He kills with the cold
Ruthlessness of a machine
And surrenders he
Satisfaction of reflection
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