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The man who invaded a shotgun Thursday, The Capital Gazette, in the American city of Annapolis, wanted to do a mbadacre, apparently motivated by lack of revenge, officials said Friday. .
The alleged perpetrator of the mbadacre, identified as Jarrod Ramos, 38, of Laurel, Md., A resident of Laurel, Md., Was charged on Friday for five counts of fraudulent homicide during the murder. a hearing in which the judge ordered him to be detained without right to a free cause.
"It is alleged that Ramos executed a brutal series of attacks against innocent victims," said county attorney Wes Adams, after pointing to "evidence" suggesting planning for his actions, such as that "the barricade to block a door and the use of one"
He intended to "kill as many people as possible" and for that he used a shotgun legally bought "for a year or more," said Anne Arundel County Police Chief, Timothy Altomare
to monitor with said that Ramos had been resentful of the Capital Gazette for the publication of 39 A chronicle about his alleged hatred towards a woman.Because of this content, Ramos sued the newspaper in 2011 for defamation, but lost the case in the first instance and then in the appeal. [19659002] Ramos was identified by facial recognition techniques used the Maryland database, as he had already done. He was in contact with the police, who investigated the Internet in 2013 against the Capital Gazette, said Altomare.
At the time, the newspaper preferred not to complain for "scared" to make the situation worse. one of the worst counter-journalists in the United States, and the latest episode of the outbreak of gun violence in the United States after the school shootings in February Florida and May in Texas
– We Have No Palavas – [19659002] "We Have No Words", the short and unique text that appears on an almost virgin editorial page of the newspaper "The Capital", l & # 39; # 39; print edition of the digital newspaper "Capital Gazette"
The edition aims to pay tribute to the victims, but ensures that "tomorrow this page will meet again go their strong goal to offer our readers informed opinions about the world around them, so that they can be better citizens. "
Gerald Fischman, editor, is among the dead
"
"Five killed by bullets to the capital ", title on the cover, under the photos of the victims, five dead – four journalists and a salesman. staff members were injured.
Newspaper staff members who survived the shooting – executed by a man who allegedly had a long battle with the newspaper – worked at the headquarters after the dramatic episode, which it was 39, acts of a parking lot or
In this issue, in addition to the general coverage of their own tragedy, are the profiles of the five dead, in another chapter of the outbreak of armed violence that crosses the United States.
The shooter, Jarrod
The shooter, Jarrod
The shooter, Jarrod
The shooter, Jarrod
The shooter, Jarrod, was arrested and interrogated, Ramos, 38, sued the newspaper a few years ago for a case of badault.
An article published on the Capital Gazette website on September 22, 2015 cites a favorable decision to the paper in one year for the smear started in 2011 by Jarrod Ramos, residing in Laurel, Maryland.
"This was a targeted attack on the Capital Gazette," confirmed Anne Arundel County Police Chief Bill Krampf.
On Twitter, the journalist of the newspaper Phil Davis gave a disturbing account of how the sniper shot through a glbad door at the checkpoint against several officials. "
The editor Rob Hiaasen, known for having advised several journalists, is among the victims, according to The Baltimore Sun, the owner of the Capital Gazette.
The attack has revived memories of a incident occurred in Roanoke in 2015, Virginia, where two journalists were killed during a live broadcast of a local television channel
"My thoughts and prayers accompany the victims and their families, thank you to all the rescuers who are currently on site "
A recent study has shown that Americans have 40% of the weapons available in the United States, and that the United States has 40% of the weapons available in the United States. the world, although they represent only 4% of the world's population.
Of the 857 million weapons that civilians possess, 393 million are in the United States – more than in the hands of all ordinary citizens in 25 other countries. after the Small Arms Survey
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