Current:Home > MarketsPolice were alerted just last month about Maine shooter’s threats. ‘We couldn’t locate him.’ -SecureNest Finance
Police were alerted just last month about Maine shooter’s threats. ‘We couldn’t locate him.’
View
Date:2025-04-16 22:05:36
Police across Maine were alerted just last month to “veiled threats” by the U.S. Army reservist who would go on to carry out the worst mass shooting in the state’s history, one of a string of missed red flags that preceded the massacre.
Two local law enforcement chiefs told The Associated Press that a statewide awareness alert was sent in mid-September to be on the lookout for Robert Card after the firearms instructor made threats against his base and fellow soldiers. But after stepped-up patrols of the base and a visit to Card’s home – neither of which turned up any sign of him – they moved on.
“We added extra patrols, we did that for about two weeks. ... The guy never showed up,” said Jack Clements, the police chief in Saco, home to the U.S. Army Reserve base where Card trained.
Sagadahoc County Sheriff Joel Merry, whose jurisdiction includes Card’s home in Bowdoin, said the Army Reserve tipped his department in September to the reservist’s threats, and the sheriff sent the awareness alert to every law enforcement agency in the state after his deputy came back empty-handed from a welfare check to Card’s home.
“We couldn’t locate him,” Merry said, adding that he couldn’t recall if there was any follow-up because “I don’t have any reports in front of me.”
Military officials declined to comment further about Card, specifically whether the threats relayed to the sheriff in September were new or the same ones Card had made during an Army reserve training exercise near West Point, New York, in July. That’s when police say Card was committed to a mental health facility for two weeks after acting erratically and “hearing voices and threats to shoot up” a military base.
Authorities say the 40-year-old Card opened fire with a high-powered rifle on a bowling alley and then a bar in Lewiston Wednesday night, killing 18 people and wounding 13 more. After an intensive two-day manhunt that put the state on edge, Card was found dead Friday from a self-inflicted gunshot.
Despite the earlier threats, the FBI said Saturday Card had not been on its radar, telling AP it “did not have nor did it receive any tips or information concerning Robert Card.” The bureau added that its instant background check system “was not provided with or in possession of any information that would have prohibited Card from a lawful firearm purchase.”
Card’s case stands as a glaring example of missed red flags, with many unanswered questions about what the military, police, mental health professionals and relatives could have done to prevent the massacre.
While Maine does not have a red flag law, it does have a more limited “ yellow-flag ” law that would still allow police to petition a judge to take a person’s firearms away if a medical practitioner deems that person to be a threat.
For his part, Saco police Chief Clements defended his department’s response to the alert about Card, which he described as a “generic thing that came out saying, hey, you know, we’ve had some report that this guy’s made some veiled threats.”
Clements noted that his department gets many such alerts and that his officers gave this one its due attention, keeping an eye on the base for any sign of Card.
“Never came in contact with this guy, never received any phone calls from the reserve center saying, ‘Hey, we got somebody who was causing a problem,’” he said. “We never got anything.”
Another law enforcement agency that came in contact with Card was the New York State Police, which on July 16 was called in West Point by commanders of the Army Reserve’s 3rd Battalion, 304th Infantry Regiment with concerns about Card’s erratic behavior and “threats to other members of his military unit” during a training exercise, according to a State Police document obtained by AP. State Police troopers took Card, a sergeant 1st class, to the Keller Army Community Hospital at West Point for what would be two weeks of mental health evaluation.
What New York State Police did about Card’s threats is unclear. The agency declined to comment to the AP on the case and did not respond to a request for reports or possible body-camera footage of their interactions with Card.
“This is an active investigation, and the New York State Police does not comment on active investigations, nor investigations in which we are not the lead agency,” it said in a statement Friday before Card was found dead. A state police spokesman refused to comment Saturday.
Jonathan Crisp, an army lawyer for two decades before starting a criminal defense practice, said when soldiers are committed involuntarily to mental health facilities by others in the chain of command, it is a “reportable” event under Army regulations that triggers a requirement to alert others. A provost marshal enters the incident into a military database that puts the FBI on notice so it can enter the name into a background list of people prevented from buying weapons.
“If they took him and he didn’t want to go and he refused to be admitted, it’s a slam dunk,” Crisp said. “This should have been reported.”
But Maine Department of Public Safety Commissioner Michael Sauschuck said in news conference Saturday that while Card had a history of mental illness, there was no evidence that he had ever been involuntarily committed.
“Just because there appears to be a mental health nexus to this scenario, the vast majority of people with mental health diagnosis will never hurt anybody,” Sauschuck said.
Jody Madeira, an Indiana University law professor who has studied gun laws, said police in one state can alert counterparts in another state that someone is a danger, and the military can do the same with local police.
She said someone dropped the ball because Card’s threats and medical evaluation should have triggered a yellow flag seizure of his guns when he returned home.
“He slipped through the cracks,” Madeira said. “There were warning signs.”
___
Condon and Mustian reported from New York. AP reporter Patrick Whittle in Portland, Maine, and news researcher Rhonda Shafner in New York contributed.
___
Contact AP’s global investigative team at Investigative@ap.org.
veryGood! (3735)
Related
- The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
- California cities and farms will get 10% of requested state water supplies when 2024 begins
- Opponents gave input on ballot language for abortion-rights measure, Ohio elections chief says
- Israeli survivors of the Oct. 7 music festival attack seek to cope with trauma at a Cyprus retreat
- Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
- Aging dams in central and western Massachusetts to be removed in $25M project
- The mean girls of the '90s taught me the value of kindness. Now I'm teaching my daughters.
- Sandra Day O'Connor, first woman on the Supreme Court, dies at 93
- Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
- Excerpts of Supreme Court opinions by Sandra Day O’Connor
Ranking
- Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
- Director Ridley Scott on Napoleon: It's a character study with violence, with action, with everything you got
- Taylor Swift’s Rep Slams Joe Alwyn Marriage Rumors
- Nick Cannon Twins With His and Brittany Bell's 3 Kids in Golden Christmas Photos
- Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
- Endless shrimp and other indicators
- Massachusetts GOP lawmakers block money for temporary shelters for migrant homeless families
- Madagascar’s top court ratifies president’s reelection in vote boycotted by opposition
Recommendation
Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
Venezuela’s government and opposition agree on appeal process for candidates banned from running
New York’s College of Saint Rose will close in May 2024 amid financial woes
Oregon State, Washington State, Mountain West agree to 2024 football scheduling arrangement
New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
Hezbollah and Israeli troops exchange fire along the border as 2 people are killed in Lebanon
Pentagon forges new high-tech agreement with Australia, United Kingdom, aimed at countering China
AP PHOTOS: Rosalynn Carter’s farewell tracing her 96 years from Plains to the world and back