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Kids That KILL I sit here at the computer having just watched a PBS show about "The killer at Thurston High". Kip Kinkel is the boy who murdered his father and mother, and then went to school and killed two more and wounded several others. It gave an in-depth story from the time he was born to the day he did the killings. As I sat and watched, a pattern formed, and that pattern was of a boy who was a little slow and withdrawn from others. He fell in with the wrong crowd and was involved in many of the same things that kids are still doing. I am talking about the music scene and these devil worshiping bands that glorify killing and hatred. At the forefront was Marylyn Manson who he listened to frequently. He framed words of a song and hung it on his wall. " No Forgiveness.. No Salvation", were the words printed over and over. Then the reference to Nine inch Nails another group of satanists. Police reported that he had hundreds of these satanic rock bands CD's, which he and friends had stolen. With all the violence these days, one can be sure of why kids are so violent. With all of the music, role playing games, video games, and movies that have murder as a theme, it is no wonder to a child of God why it is happening. Metal music, role games and Occult movies are just more tools of Satan. Many defend these tools of Satan and say there is a problem with the Children. Yes there is a problem, parents let kids watch violence as soon as they can sit up and watch TV. This will continue and more will die, and the solution is not more gun and government control, it's a need for God control!! More parents need to read the bible and clean up their homes. The White House also needs a good cleaning!! In the police interview, Kip said the voices in his head would not stop!! What were the voices he was hearing? They were voices of demons that took control from the endless hours of listening to the likes of these satanic bands.
Red Lake Indian Reservation massacre Witnesses:
Teen Gunman Smiled As He Fired
By JOSHUA FREED
REDBY, Minn. (AP) - The suspect in the worst U.S. school shooting
since Columbine smiled and waved as he gunned down five students, a
teacher and a guard, asking one of his victims whether he believed
in God, witnesses said. The teen's grandfather and his grandfather's
wife also were found dead, and the boy killed himself.
Some of the victims were shot at close range, medical officials
said.
Reggie Graves, a student at Red Lake High School, said he was
watching a movie about Shakespeare in class Monday when he heard the
gunman blast his way past the metal detector at the school's
entrance, where an unarmed guard was killed.
Then, in a nearby classroom, he heard the gunman say something to
his friend Ryan. "He asked Ryan if he believed in God,"
Graves said. "And then he shot him."
The death toll at the Red Lake Indian Reservation in far northern
Minnesota made it the nation's worst school shooting since the
rampage at Columbine High School in Littleton, Colo., in April 1999
that ended with the deaths of 12 students, a teacher and the two
teen gunmen.
The victims included the gunman's grandfather; the grandfather's
wife; a school security guard; a teacher; and five other students.
At least 14 others were wounded, and two of them remained in
critical condition Tuesday at MeritCare in Fargo, N.D., officials
said.
At least three of the victims were shot in the head at close
range, said officials at North Country Regional Hospital in nearby
Bemidji. One of those victims died and the other two were
transferred to the Fargo hospital. Three victims remained at North
Country Regional in noncritical condition.
"I think there was an intent to kill," Tim Hall, the
hospital's emergency nursing director, said at a morning news
conference.
"There's not a soul that will go untouched by the tragic
loss that we've experienced here," Floyd Jourdain Jr., chairman
of the Red Lake Chippewa Tribe, told WCCO-TV of Minneapolis on
Tuesday.
Police said the gunman killed himself after exchanging fire with
officers. Red Lake Fire Director Roman Stately said the gunman had
two handguns and a shotgun. "We ask Minnesotans to help comfort the families and friends
of the victims who are suffering unimaginable pain by extending
prayers and expressions of support," Gov. Tim Pawlenty said.
The shooter was Jeff Weise, a 17-year-old student who had been
placed in the school's Homebound program for some violation of
policy, said school board member Kathryn Beaulieu. Students in that
program stay at home and are tutored by a traveling teacher.
Beaulieu said she didn't know what Weise's violation was, and
wouldn't be allowed to reveal it if she did.
There was no immediate indication of Weise's motive. But several
students said he held anti-social beliefs, and he may have posted
messages on a neo-Nazi Web site expressing admiration for Adolf
Hitler.
A writer who identified himself as Jeff Weise of the Red Lake
Reservation posted the messages under the nickname "Todesengel"
- German for "angel of death." An April 2004 posting by
him referred to being accused of "a threat on the school I
attend," though the writer later said he was cleared.
Relatives told the St. Paul Pioneer Press that Weise was a loner
who usually wore black and was teased by other kids. Relatives told
the newspaper his father committed suicide four years ago, and that
his mother was living in a Minneapolis nursing home because she
suffered brain injuries in a car accident. The governor said it appeared the school had "very rigorous
security."
"It looks like you had a very disturbed individual who was
able to overcome a lot of precautions to do a lot of damage,"
Pawlenty said.
Beaulieu said school was canceled Tuesday, but plans hadn't been
made for the rest of the week.
During the rampage, teachers herded students from one room to
another, trying to move away from the sound of the shooting, said
Graves, 14. He said some students crouched under desks.
Some pleaded with the gunman to stop. "You could hear a girl
saying, 'No, Jeff, quit, quit. Leave me alone. What are you
doing?'" Sondra Hegstrom told The Pioneer of Bemidji. Student Ashley Morrison said she heard shots, then saw the
gunman's face peering though a door window of a classroom where she
was hiding with several other students. After banging at the door,
the shooter walked away and she heard more shots, she said.
"I can't even count how many gunshots you heard, there was
over 20. ... There were people screaming, and they made us get
behind the desk," she said.
FBI spokesman Paul McCabe said the gunman exchanged gunfire with
Red Lake police in a hallway, then retreated to a classroom, where
he was believed to have shot himself.
The reservation, about 240 miles north of the Twin Cities, is
home to the Red Lake Chippewa Tribe, one of the poorest in the
state. According to the 2000 census, 5,162 people lived on the
reservation, and all but 91 were Indians.
It was the second fatal school shooting in Minnesota in 18
months. Two students were killed at Rocori High School in Cold
Spring in September 2003. Student John Jason McLaughlin, who was 15
at the time, awaits trial in the case. Red Lake High School has about 300 students, according to its Web
site.
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