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Months before Florida shooting, police received calls about Cruz being in crisis

Florida school shooter Nikolas Cruz appeared in court on February 19 2018.

Several weeks before last week’s mass shooting at a Florida high school, a woman close to the 19-year-old charged in the attack warned law enforcement authorities in a phone call about his escalating rage, violent outbursts and threats to kill others.

In a January call to police, an unknown woman who knew Cruz, warned authorities that she was concerned that Cruz might resort to slipping “into a school and just shooting the place up.”

“I know he’s going to explode,” she said according to a transcript of her call with the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

“If you go onto his Instagram pages, you’ll see all the guns,” the woman added.

Only forty days later, Cruz is accused of shooting dead of 17 people at his former high school in Parkland, Florida on February 14.

Last week, the FBI acknowledged it received such a call, which it said was from a person close to Cruz.

Students hold signs as the participate in a school walk for gun law change at Coral Glades High School in Coral Springs Florida on February 21, 2018. (Photo by AFP)

Cruz himself also called police back in November after a fight at the house where he was living, according to police records released this week.

“I kind of got mad and I started punching walls and stuff,” he told the dispatcher during a 5½ minute call. “The thing is I lost my mother a couple weeks ago, so like, I’m dealing with a bunch of [inaudible] right now.”

Rocxanne Deschamps, the woman who took in Cruz after the death of his mother, also expressed concern in a late November call to police that he was going to get a gun after an altercation with her adult son.

She told the dispatcher that Cruz already had about eight guns that he kept at a friend’s house.

“Because that’s all he wants is his gun, and that’s all he cares about is his gun,” the woman said in a recording of the call released by police.

After the calls, police helped calm the situation.and Cruz moved in with another family around that time.

In another phone call to police, an unidentified caller from Massachusetts warned that Cruz was collecting guns and knives and that “he could be a school shooter in the making.”

Cruz is now charged with 17 counts of premeditated murder. His public lawyer said he would plead guilty to avoid a death sentence.

The FBI has admitted it failed to follow up on the information. The agency and the Justice Department are investigating why the lead wasn’t followed up.

Mourners hold candles during a community vigil at Newtown High School on February 23, 2018 for the victims of last week's shooting. (Photo by AFP)

The revelation of the FBI's failure to refer the tip to agents in the field who could have investigated has brought the agency under pressure. Lawmakers immediately sought more information from FBI Director Chris Wray on what went wrong.

Acting Deputy Director David Bowdich said on Thursday that they are still trying to determine exactly how the tip got botched.

The shooting tragedy has yet triggered the controversial debate over gun laws. In a controversial move to keep schools safe from such mass shootings, President Donald Trump suggested giving teachers guns on Wednesday.

It would be a “great deterrent” to killers, he said at a meeting at the White House.

The White House later indicated that the federal government could come up with the money to fund as many as a million teachers being trained and armed with guns across the United States.

Trump, however, has been slammed by families of victims of gun violence, survivors of mass shootings, gun control advocates, teachers and some politicians who called the idea "terrible."


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