Murderpedia has thousands of hours of work behind it. To keep creating
new content, we kindly appreciate any donation you can give to help
the Murderpedia project stay alive. We have many
plans and enthusiasm
to keep expanding and making Murderpedia a better site, but we really
need your help for this. Thank you very much in advance.
Elliot
Oliver Robertson RODGER
Classification: Mass murderer
Characteristics: Motive unclear; revenge for sexual and social
rejection
Number of victims: 6
Date of murders:
May 23, 2014
Date of birth: July 24, 1991
Victims profile: George Chen (19) / Cheng Yuan "James"
Hong (20) / Weihan "David" Wang (20) / Katherine
Breann Cooper (22) / Christopher Ross Michaels-Martinez
(20) / Veronika Elizabeth Weiss (19)
Method of murder:
Stabbing with knife - Shooting
Location: Isla Vista, California, USA
Status:
Committed suicide by shooting himself the same day
A killing spree was perpetrated on May 23, 2014, in
Isla Vista, California, near the campus of University of California,
Santa Barbara, by 22-year-old Elliot Rodger. Rodger killed six people
and injured thirteen others before committing suicide.
The spree began when Rodger stabbed to death three
men in his apartment. Leaving the scene in his car, he drove to a
sorority house, where he shot four people outside, killing two female
students. He drove to a nearby delicatessen and shot to death a male
student who was inside. He then sped through Isla Vista, shooting at
pedestrians and wounding several of them, and striking four others
with his car. Rodger exchanged gunfire with police twice during the
killing spree, receiving a non-fatal gunshot to the hip. The rampage
ended when his car crashed into a parked vehicle and came to a stop.
Police found him dead in the car, with a self-inflicted gunshot wound
to the head.
Before driving to the sorority house, Rodger
uploaded a video to YouTube, titled "Elliot Rodger's Retribution", in
which he outlined details of his upcoming attack and the motivations
behind his killing spree, which he described as a desire to punish
women for rejecting him and also a desire to punish sexually active
men for living a better life than him. YouTube removed the video after
the killings, saying it violated their guidelines with its threats of
violence.
After he uploaded the video, Rodger e-mailed a
lengthy autobiographical manuscript to about a dozen acquaintances and
family members. The document, which he titled "My Twisted World", was
made available on the Internet and became widely known as his
"manifesto". In it, he describes his childhood, family conflicts,
frustration over not being able to find a girlfriend, his hatred of
women, his contempt for racial minorities and interracial couples, and
his plans for the killing spree.
Events
Preparation
In September 2012, Rodger visited a shooting range
to train himself in firing handguns. In November 2012, he purchased
his first handgun, a Glock 34 pistol, in Goleta, after doing research
on handguns and judging the Glock 34 to be "an efficient and highly
accurate weapon", as documented in his manifesto.
In the spring of 2013, Rodger bought two additional
handguns, both SIG Sauer P226 pistols, writing that they were "of a
much higher quality than the Glock" and "a lot more efficient". He
purchased the weapons in different cities, Oxnard and Burbank.
According to his manifesto, Rodger had saved $5,000
to purchase the weapons and supplies that he needed. Gun law experts
have said that there was nothing in his known history that could have
prevented him from making legal gun purchases.
Killing spree
The killing spree began at Rodger's apartment on
Seville Road, where three men were found dead. They had been "stabbed
to death", according to most sources. Police removed a knife, a
hammer, and two machetes from the apartment, but they have not said
which weapon or weapons were used in the murders. Authorities are
investigating the possibility that all three men were killed while
they were sleeping.
Rodger was seen sitting in his car in the parking
lot of his apartment building at about 8:30 p.m. working on his
laptop. He uploaded the "Retribution" video at 9:17 p.m., and sent his
manifesto e-mail at 9:18 p.m.
Rodger drove to the Alpha Phi sorority house at
Embarcadero del Norte and Segovia Road. He knocked on the sorority
house door for a few minutes. After no one answered, he began shooting
people who were nearby; two women were killed and a third was wounded.
He then fired at a nearby couple; the man was wounded, while the woman
received a superficial graze injury.
Returning to his car, Rodger drove two blocks to
the Isla Vista Deli Mart on Pardall Road, where he briefly got out of
his car and fatally shot a student who was inside the Deli Mart. His
car was seen leaving the scene by four responding foot-patrol
officers, but they did not identify him as the shooter.
He drove south on Embarcadero del Norte, on the
wrong side of the street, where he fired at two pedestrians on the
sidewalk, missing both. Embarcadero del Norte curves near a 7-Eleven
convenience store, forming "The Loop", where he continued firing,
hitting a woman in the leg.
Rodger drove south on El Embarcadero and shot at
and missed a woman, turned east on Del Playa Drive, then made a U-turn
and drove west, where he exchanged fire with a sheriff's deputy who
was responding to a 9:27 p.m. 9-1-1 call, and struck a bicyclist.
Students at the Isla Vista Church, on Del Playa near Camino del Sur,
were completing a service of worship at the time and heard gunfire.
Turning north on Camino del Sur, Rodger shot and
wounded three people at Sabado Tarde. Turning east on Sabado Tarde, he
struck two skateboarders and shot another person at the intersection
with Camino Pescadero. On Sabado Tarde near Little Acorn Park, he
again exchanged gunfire, this time with three sheriff's deputies, and
was wounded in the left hip. He turned south a second time on El
Embarcadero, then west again on Del Playa. He struck another
bicyclist, then crashed on the north sidewalk just east of the
intersection of Del Playa and Camino Pescadero.
Rodger was found dead with a gunshot wound to his
head; police said he had apparently committed suicide. A total of
seven people died, including Rodger, and thirteen others were wounded.
Aftermath
Police investigated twelve separate crime scenes in
ten locations. A search of Rodger's car recovered three 9mm
semi-automatic pistols and more than 400 rounds of unspent ammunition,
all loaded into 41 ten-round magazines. The guns were purchased
legally in three different cities. Santa Barbara County Sheriff Bill
Brown said that there was video and written evidence suggesting the
crime was premeditated and that preparations took over a year.
Officers from the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's
Office and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives
began searches of the separate homes of Rodger's mother and father.
The media later reported the frantic attempt by
Rodger's parents to intervene on the evening of the killings. After
receiving a copy of the manifesto, Rodger's therapist phoned his
mother. She checked his YouTube channel, where she found the
"Retribution" video that he had uploaded minutes earlier. She called
Rodger's father and they both left to drive up to Isla Vista. During
the drive, she called police in Isla Vista and they arranged to meet
when they arrived. Hearing a radio news report of a shooting in Isla
Vista, his mother called the therapist who told her it was unrelated,
saying that Rodger promised to act the following day and it would be
unlike him to deviate from such details. When they reached the police
station in Isla Vista, Rodger's parents learned that the news report
was, in fact, about their son, and that he had killed six people.
A month after the rampage, the parents of the
stabbing victims expressed anger and frustration about multiple
aspects of the case, including the failure of police to take
preventive action before the killing spree, the limited amount of
information that the authorities had released about their sons'
murders, more public interest in Rodger than in the victims, and
perceived emphasis on the rights of the mentally ill over those of
potential victims.
Victims
All six murder victims were students at the
University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB). All were declared dead
at the scenes of their attacks.
The men killed at Rodger's apartment were
identified as George Chen, 19; Cheng Yuan "James" Hong, 20; and Weihan
"David" Wang, 20. Hong and Chen were confirmed to be Rodger's
co-tenants according to an apartment lease, while police were
investigating whether Wang was also a resident or visiting the
apartment on the night of the killings.
The three who died of gunshot wounds were
identified as Katherine Cooper, 22; Christopher Michaels-Martinez, 20;
and Veronika Weiss, 19. Cooper and Weiss, both members of the Delta
Delta Delta sorority, were killed outside the Alpha Phi sorority
house, while Michaels-Martinez died at the Isla Vista Deli Mart.
Thirteen other people were injured, eight of them
from gunshot wounds and four others by blunt trauma sustained when
they were struck by Rodger's vehicle. The thirteenth injury was
undetermined. Eleven of the injured were taken to hospitals; seven
were taken to Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital, where two were admitted
in serious condition, one in fair condition, and two others in good
condition, while the seventh patient was released on the same day. The
remaining four injured were taken to Goleta Valley Cottage Hospital,
where they were all treated and released.
By June 14, graduation day at UCSB, all surviving
victims had been released from the hospital, and five attended
graduation ceremonies. UCSB also awarded posthumous degrees to the six
slain students.
Casualties
Deaths in apartment stabbings
George Chen (19)
Cheng Yuan "James" Hong (20)
Weihan "David" Wang (20)
Deaths in shooting spree
Katherine Breann Cooper (22)—shot near sorority
house
Christopher Ross Michaels-Martinez (20)—shot inside
deli
Veronika Elizabeth Weiss (19)—shot near sorority
house
Wounded and injured in shooting spree
Megan Carloto (22) shot on bicycle
Keith Cheung (21) struck on bicycle by Rodger's car
Bianca de Kock (20) shot near sorority house
Patrick Eggert (19) struck on bicycle by Rodger's
car
Elliot Gee struck on skateboard by Rodger's car
Chris Johnson shot in front of pizza restaurant
Nick Pasichuke (19) struck on skateboard by
Rodger's car
Six unidentified others
Perpetrator
Elliot Oliver Robertson Rodger (July 24, 1991 – May
23, 2014) was confirmed by police to be the sole perpetrator of the
killings.
Early life and education
Rodger was born in London, England, and moved to
the United States when he was five years old. He was raised in Los
Angeles. His mother is Li-Chin Rodger, a Malaysian research assistant
for a film company, and his father is British filmmaker Peter Rodger,
whose credits include working as a second unit assistant director for
The Hunger Games. His stepmother is Moroccan actress Soumaya Akaaboune;
his paternal grandfather was photojournalist George Rodger. He had a
younger sister and a younger half-brother.
Rodger attended Crespi Carmelite High School, an
all-male Catholic school in Encino, Los Angeles, and then Taft High
School in Woodland Hills, Los Angeles. He graduated from Independence
Continuation High School in Lake Balboa, Los Angeles, in 2010. He
attended Santa Barbara City College (SBCC), writing in his manifesto
that he dropped out of all his classes in February 2012. The school
said he was no longer taking classes.
Mental health and social problems
According to his family's attorney and a family
friend, Rodger had seen multiple therapists since he was eight years
old and while he was a student at SBCC during his 1999-2000 school
year. The lawyer claimed that Rodger was "receiving psychiatric
treatment", but Rodger was never formally diagnosed with a mental
illness.
By the ninth grade, Rodger was "increasingly
bullied" and he wrote that he "cried by [himself] at school every
day". During his time at Crespi Carmelite High, he was bullied by
other students, who once taped his head to his desk when he fell
asleep.
Rodger had a YouTube account and a blog titled
"Elliot Rodger's Official Blog", both of which contained posts
expressing loneliness and rejection. He wrote that he had been
prescribed risperidone but refused to take it, stating, "After
researching this medication, I found that it was the absolute wrong
thing for me to take."
After turning 18, Rodger began rejecting the mental
health care that his family provided, and he became increasingly
isolated. He claimed that he was unable to make friends, although
acquaintances said that he rebuffed their attempts to be friendly.
According to Rodger, in 2012, "the one friend [he]
had in the whole world who truly understood [him]" "blatantly said he
didn't want to be friends anymore" without offering him a reason for
ending the friendship.
Screenwriter Dale Launer, who was a friend of the
Rodger family, stated that he had counseled Rodger on approaching and
befriending women, but that Rodger did not follow the advice. He said
in an interview, "I first met [Rodger] when he was aged eight or nine
and I could see then that there was something wrong with him. I'm not
a psychologist, but looking back now he strikes me as someone who was
broken from the moment of conception."
Earlier incidents
Relating an incident that occurred on July 20,
2013, Rodger "wrote that he tried to shove 'girls' at a party over a
ledge, but he couldn't do it, and then men rushed to him and pushed
him over". He said that he "felt a snap in [his] ankle, followed by a
stinging pain" and "tried to get away from there as fast as [he]
could". Realizing that he left his Gucci sunglasses at the party,
Rodger returned to retrieve them but the "same people he had tangled
with before began mocking him and calling him names, then dragged him
into the driveway to beat him up".
One of Rodger's neighbors said that "he saw Rodger
come home, crying" and said that Rodger claimed that he was going to
kill the men who attacked him, and "kill myself". Rodger told
investigating officers that he had been assaulted, but they determined
that he might have been the aggressor. He wrote in his manifesto that
the incident was the final trigger for his planning of the killing
spree.
In July 2011, Rodger stalked and threw coffee on a
couple outside of the Starbucks at the Camino Real Marketplace in
Goleta, and in a later incident, threw coffee on two girls sitting at
a bus stop in Isla Vista for not paying attention to him. In July
2012, Rodger purchased a Super Soaker, filled it with orange juice,
and used it to spray a group playing kickball at Girsh Park, as
documented in his manifesto.
Rodger originally sought to carry out his attack on
Halloween of 2013, but reconsidered because "[t]here would be too many
cops walking around during an event like Halloween, and cops are the
only ones who could hinder my plans".
On January 15, 2014, Rodger accused his roommate
Cheng Yuan Hong of stealing his candles. Hong was arrested and charged
with petty theft; he pled guilty to the charge. Hong was one of
Rodger's stabbing victims.
On April 30, 2014, about three weeks before his
killing spree, Rodger's parents contacted police after becoming
alarmed by his behavior and YouTube videos. He wrote in his manifesto
that he had already planned the killings and purchased his guns by
that time, and that officers who interviewed him at his apartment
would have found the weapons if they had conducted a search of his
bedroom. Santa Barbara County Sheriff Bill Brown later said that the
deputies "determined he did not meet the criteria for an involuntary
hold" and that Rodger told them "it was a misunderstanding".
Manifesto and online posts
Rodger's 107,000-word manifesto was titled "My
Twisted World: The Story of Elliot Rodger". He e-mailed it to about a
dozen people including his therapist, his parents and some of his
other family members, former schoolteachers, and childhood friends.
In his last YouTube video, titled "Elliot Rodger's
Retribution", he complained of being rejected by women and described
details of his upcoming attack, also laying out his motivations and
plans. Police said they were investigating the video. In the wake of
the killings, the video was deleted from Rodger's account, but copies
were repeatedly re-posted by other users. In the video, he says:
Well, this is my last video, it all has to come to
this. Tomorrow is the day of retribution, the day in which I will have
my revenge against humanity, against all of you. For the last eight
years of my life, ever since I hit puberty, I've been forced to endure
an existence of loneliness, rejection and unfulfilled desires all
because girls have never been attracted to me. Girls gave their
affection, and sex and love to other men but never to me.
I'm 22 years old and I'm still a virgin. I've never
even kissed a girl. I've been through college for two and a half
years, more than that actually, and I'm still a virgin. It has been
very torturous. College is the time when everyone experiences those
things such as sex and fun and pleasure. Within those years, I've had
to rot in loneliness. It's not fair. You girls have never been
attracted to me. I don't know why you girls aren't attracted to me,
but I will punish you all for it. It's an injustice, a crime,
because... I don't know what you don't see in me. I'm the perfect guy
and yet you throw yourselves at these obnoxious men instead of me, the
supreme gentleman.
He wrote in "My Twisted World" that being of mixed
race made him "different from the normal fully white kids". On one
online forum, he said that he opposed interracial dating and made
several racist posts regarding African American, Hispanic, South
Asian, and East Asian peoples, stating that seeing men of these ethnic
groups socializing with white women "makes you want to quit life". In
one online post, Rodger wrote:
Full Asian men are disgustingly ugly and white
girls would never go for you. You're just butthurt that you were born
as an asian piece of shit, so you lash out by linking these fake
pictures. You even admit that you wish you were half white. You'll
never be half-white and you'll never fulfill your dream of marrying a
white woman. I suggest you jump off a bridge.
Further, in his manifesto, he wrote:
How could an inferior, ugly black boy be able to
get a white girl and not me? I am beautiful, and I am half white
myself. I am descended from British aristocracy. He is descended from
slaves.
In the manifesto, he outlined some of his plans:
On the day before the Day of Retribution, I will
start the First Phase of my vengeance: Silently killing as many people
as I can around Isla Vista by luring them into my apartment through
some form of trickery.
The manifesto specifically mentions a "War on
Women" as the second phase of his plan for "starving him of sex", in
which he describes:
The Second Phase will take place on the Day of
Retribution itself, just before the climactic massacre. ... My War on
Women. ... I will attack the very girls who represent everything I
hate in the female gender: The hottest sorority of UCSB.
In Rodger's self-proclaimed ideal world, he
imagined that he would "quarantine all [women] in concentration camps.
At these camps, the vast majority of the female population will be
deliberately starved to death. That would be an efficient and fitting
way to kill them all off... I would have an enormous tower built just
for myself... and gleefully watch them all die."
In the manifesto, he also said that he planned to
kill his half-brother and stepmother, but wasn't mentally prepared to
kill his father.
Controversy over video airing
Several news networks, including ABC News, CBS
News, NBC News, and MSNBC, limited use of the "Retribution" video out
of fears of copycat crimes. The Fox News Channel refused to air the
video altogether, instead showing five still photographs at the
request of the network's vice president Michael Clemente. An ABC News
spokesman, speaking for network president James Goldston, said, "James
said that unless there is a specific editorial reason to use it, we
would err on the side of not using it. We are going to be very
judicious about the use of that video, mindful that its continued use
turns it into wallpaper."
Reactions and discussion
Immediate reactions
California Governor Jerry Brown offered condolences
to the families of victims and said that he was "saddened to learn of
this senseless tragedy". University of California President Janet
Napolitano said in a statement while at Laney College, "This is almost
the kind of event that's impossible to prevent and almost impossible
to predict."
Delta Delta Delta reacted to the news of the deaths
of members Katherine Cooper and Veronika Weiss, saying, "Tri Delta is
devastated to learn of the tragic event at the University of
California, Santa Barbara and so very saddened to learn of the death
of two of our members. Our hearts go out to their families and our
sisters at Gamma Theta. Tri Delta's staff, volunteers and local
alumnae are working with the chapter to provide support as they grieve
this loss."
UCSB released a statement, saying, "Our campus
community is shocked and saddened by the events that occurred last
night in the nearby community of Isla Vista. Our thoughts and prayers
are with the victims and their families who are grieving and mourning
as a result of this tragedy."
Rodger's family issued a statement expressing their
sympathies for the victims, saying, "We offer our deepest compassion
and sympathy to the families involved in this terrible tragedy. We are
experiencing the most inconceivable pain and our hearts go out to
everyone involved." The statement was read by the family lawyer.
Rodger's parents later released a written statement
in which they addressed their anguish over his actions, saying, "We
are crying in pain for the victims and their families. It breaks our
heart on a level we didn't think possible. The feeling of knowing that
it was our son's actions that caused the tragedy can only be described
as Hell on earth."
Memorial services
Students and community members gathered at
Anisq'Oyo' Park in Isla Vista on the evening of May 24 for a
candlelight memorial to remember the victims. In addition, the pastor
of Isla Vista Church, one of the locations targeted by gunfire during
the attacks, made church members "available throughout the weekend for
students who would like to receive prayer or need to talk".
On May 26, UCSB canceled classes for the following
day and scheduled a memorial service for that afternoon. It also set
up counseling services and emergency housing for displaced students.
On the following day, more than 20,000 people attended the memorial
service at Harder Stadium. For the memorial, UCSB chancellor Henry T.
Yang and executive vice-chancellor Joel Michaelsen said in a written
statement, "This is a period of mourning for all of us. The moving
candlelight vigil that our students organized on Saturday evening
began the process of healing. On Tuesday we will remember and honor
the victims of this horrible event and come together as an academic
community to reflect, talk with each other and think about the
future."
Gun control and mental health
The attacks have renewed calls for gun control and
improvements in the U.S. health care system, with Connecticut Senator
Richard Blumenthal saying, "A year and half ago it seemed like we were
on the verge of, potentially, legislation that would stop the madness
and end the insanity that has killed too many young people, thousands,
tens of thousands since Sandy Hook. I hope, I really, sincerely hope
that this tragedy, this unimaginable, unspeakable tragedy, will
provide impetus to bring back measures that would keep guns out of the
hands of dangerous people who are severely troubled or deranged like
this young man was." Blumenthal also commented regarding the mental
health debate, "And I am going to urge that we bring back those bills,
maybe reconfigure them to center on mental health, which is a point
where we can agree that we need more resources to make the country
healthier and to make sure that these kinds of horrific, insane, mad
occurrences are stopped. And the Congress will be complicit if we fail
to act." California Senator Dianne Feinstein blamed the National Rifle
Association's "stranglehold" on gun laws for the shooting spree and
said "shame on us" in Congress for failing to do something about it.
Pennsylvania Congressman Timothy F. Murphy, a clinical psychologist,
said his bipartisan mental health overhaul would be a solution and
urged Congress to pass it.
Richard Martinez, the father of victim Christopher
Michaels-Martinez, gave a speech in which he placed the blame of the
attacks on "craven, irresponsible" politicians and the National Rifle
Association. Martinez later urged the public to join him in "demanding
immediate action" from members of Congress regarding gun control. He
also expressed his sympathy towards Rodger's parents.
Doris A. Fuller, the executive director of the
Treatment Advocacy Center, said that California law permitted
emergency psychiatric evaluations of potentially dangerous individuals
through provisions, but such actions were never enabled during the
investigation. She said, "Once again, we are grieving over deaths and
devastation caused by a young man who was sending up red flags for
danger that failed to produce intervention in time to avert tragedy.
In this case, the red flags were so big the killer's parents had
called police...and yet the system failed."
Some California lawmakers called for an
investigation into the deputies' contact with Rodger on April 30. At
the time of their visit, he had already bought at least two handguns,
which had been entered into the California gun ownership database
under his name, as required by California's universal registration
law. The deputies were unaware of that fact however, because they did
not check the statewide gun ownership database. They also did not view
the YouTube videos that had caused Rodger's parents to contact them.
The sheriff's office defended the actions of the deputies, as did
other state law enforcement agencies. Some state lawmakers said they
planned to introduce legislation that they believe would help prevent
future such tragedies.
Misogyny
The killing spree, videos, and written manifesto of
Rodger sparked conversations about broader issues of violence against
women and misogyny in society. Prior to the killing spree, Rodger
indicated in online postings and YouTube videos that he would punish
women for denying him sex and he would also punish men who had access
to sex with women, while he did not. This motive and Rodger’s apparent
sense of entitlement to sex with women has been described as
misogynistic. On May 24, the Twitter hashtag #YesAllWomen was created
as an avenue for women to share their experiences with misogyny and
sexism and to share examples of how all women have experience with
sexism and to respond to those who did not believe Rodger's actions
were rooted in misogyny. The hashtag spread worldwide, reaching 1.5
million tweets and 1.2 billion impressions, and peaking at 61,500
tweets per hour on May 25.
Amanda Hess, writing for Slate, argued that even
though Rodger killed more men than women, his motivations were still
misogynistic because his reason for hating the men he attacked was
that he thought they stole the women who he felt entitled to. Writing
for Reason, Cathy Young countered that "that seems like a good example
of stretching the concept into meaninglessness—or turning it into
unfalsifiable quasi-religious dogma." Mary Elizabeth Williams, a staff
writer for Salon, took issue with the media labeling Rodger as the
"virgin killer", claiming that it reinforces gender roles with a "not
so subtle insinuation ... that one possible cause of male aggression
is a lack of female sexual acquiescence". A number of men writing for
mainstream media publications such as Salon, Forbes, and The Daily
Beast also wrote in support of the #YesAllWomen hashtag and the
importance of highlighting Rodger's possible misogynistic motivations.
Comments and coverage of misogyny as the root cause
have spawned criticisms of oversimplification and distortion of the
events which included the killings of men as well as women and mental
health issues. Chris Ferguson, a psychologist writing in Time, argued
that laying the blame on misogynistic culture glosses over how Elliot
Rodger was one particular mentally disturbed man. Some women, such as
Samantha Levine, a columnist at The Daily Beast, argued that women who
conflate everyday sexism (e.g., their experiences with dress codes and
men whistling at them) with Rodger's violent attacks, risk
trivializing these more serious incidents. Emily Shire criticized some
#YesAllWomen tweets as trivial in the context of a mass murder, citing
examples such as "I’ve never seen a hot husband with a fat wife on a
sitcom."
Congress
The United States House of Representatives voted on
June 10, 2014, to pass House Resolution 608, entitled, Condemning the
senseless rampage and mass shooting that took place in Isla Vista,
California, on Friday May 23, 2014.
The resolution expresses the sense or opinion of
Congress, but has no legally binding power. Rep. Lois Capps (D-CA)
said that Congress needed to take more action to stop gun violence,
saying, "we must not let the drumbeat fall silent. Congress has the
power to act and we must." Rep. Jackie Speier (D-CA) agreed with her,
saying that "Americans, outraged by our inability to get anything done
on the issue, are waiting for us to come to our senses and to act."
However, The Hill reported that "no legislative action on gun control
is anticipated at this point".
Wikipedia.org
Before Brief, Deadly Spree, Trouble Since Age 8
Elliot O. Rodger’s Killings in California Followed
Years of Withdrawal
By Adam Nagourney, Michael Cieply, Alan Feuer and
Ian Lovett - NYTimes.com
June 1, 2014
LOS ANGELES — It was the summer of 1999, and the
parents of Elliot O. Rodger were battling over the boy’s deep and
puzzling psychological problems as they struggled through a divorce.
Mr. Rodger’s mother, Li Chin, filed an affidavit
describing Elliot as a “high-functioning autistic child,” and said she
needed more child support to care for him. His father, Peter Rodger,
countered with a Beverly Hills doctor, Stephen M. Scappa, who
challenged that diagnosis, saying it failed to acknowledge the
possibility of “depression or anxiety.” Dr. Scappa said that Elliot,
almost 8 at the time, should be sent to a child psychiatrist for more
examination and treatment.
Last week, days after Mr. Rodger killed six people
on May 23 in a rampage in Isla Vista, Calif., before firing a bullet
into his head, his estranged parents released an anguished statement,
expressing their distress as they grappled with the final chapter of
their 22-year-old son’s long struggle with emotional problems. “It is
now our responsibility to do everything we can to help avoid this
happening to any other family — not only to avoid any more innocence
destroyed, but also to identify and deal with the mental issues that
drove our son to do what he did,” the statement said. The parents
declined to be interviewed.
For as long as anyone close to them can remember,
the parents had faced concerns about the boy’s mental health — a
shadow that hung over this Los Angeles family nearly every day of
Elliot’s life. Confronted with a lonely and introverted child, they
tried to set him up on play dates, ferried him from counselor to
therapist, urged him to take antipsychotic medication and moved him
from school to school. His mother gave her son the car he thought
would help improve his stature — a black BMW — when he went off to
college in Santa Barbara; he used it for his lonely explorations of
the California coast, as a setting for his chilling farewell video and
finally as a weapon as he sprayed bullets from the window and plowed
down bicyclists that Friday night.
It is almost impossible to tell if a person
struggling with any mental disorder might ever turn violent; the vast
majority never do, even those who make threats and preparations to do
so. “Most people who go through these steps never act out in a violent
way, never go beyond contemplation of it,” said J. Reid Meloy, a
forensic psychologist in San Diego and an editor of the International
Handbook of Threat Assessment. “You can’t predict who will and who
won’t.”
Peter Rodger told a friend the other day that his
son had been an enigma to the family — distant, remote, unknowable.
“He’s such a good liar that I didn’t even know he knew how to lie,”
the friend recalled the father saying. Yet throughout his teenage
years, friends of the boy and his family saw signs that something was
wrong.
Simon Astaire, an author and agent who has been a
family friend for over 10 years and has been acting as the family’s
spokesman, described attending a Christmas party at Peter Rodger’s
hillside home in Woodland Hills and wandering out into the cool night
to come across Elliot, then 12, staring into the black sky. He said
Elliot had lowered his head and started sharing his loneliness before
turning back wordlessly toward the heavens.
“He wasn’t just a little withdrawn,” Mr. Astaire
said. “He was as withdrawn as any person I ever met in my life.”
Cathleen Bloeser, whose son knew Elliot from
elementary school, described him as an “emotionally troubled” boy who
would come over to their house and just hide. “If I could have picked
anyone who would have done this, it would have been Elliot,” she said.
“My husband and I didn’t want our son to stay with Elliot.”
He fled two high schools after begging his parents,
in tears, to rescue him from what he described as a bullying
environment. When he was a sophomore, a school administrator said, he
suffered a panic attack — standing immobilized in the hallway — until
a teacher went outside to ask his mother, waiting in a car, to come
get him. He apparently never returned to the school.
The older he got, the more his parents worried
about his future.
“They were concerned: Could he be easily taken
advantage of? Could he be an easy target for some kind of a scam or
whatever?” said Deborah Smith, a Los Angeles high school principal who
encountered Mr. Rodger at two of the schools he attended. “Would he be
able to navigate the world on his own?”
He seemed to have grown only more withdrawn after
he left home for college. After Mr. Rodger returned to his apartment
one night after being beaten up at a party — he had, by his account,
tried to shove a girl off a ledge — Chris Pollard, a neighbor, sought
to calm him.
“He started saying: ‘I’m going to kill them. I’m
going to kill them. I’m going to kill myself,’ ” Mr. Pollard recalled.
Eleven months later, Mr. Rodger acted on that
pledge.
Torment in Schools
Ms. Smith, the principal at Independence
Continuation High School in Van Nuys, a small public school with
intensive individual attention from which Mr. Rodger eventually
graduated, awoke May 24 to the reports of the massacre and, later that
Saturday, a text message from a teacher: “Did you see the news?” it
asked. “That’s our Elliot.”
Mr. Rodger’s parents sent him to Independence as a
sophomore, but it was already his third high school. He had begun at
Crespi Carmelite High School, an all-boys Catholic school in Encino.
In a 140-page account of his life that Mr. Rodger sent out by email
right before the killings, he recalled bursting with excitement at the
prospect.
But that turned to dread the first day his father
drove him to school and he spotted the “huge high school students”
walking around. “I cried in the car for a few minutes, telling my
father that I was scared to get out,” he wrote.
Before long, he withdrew from class work into World
of Warcraft, the online interactive video game that had become his
obsession. He waited for the halls to clear before walking to class.
“They threw food at me during lunchtime and after school,” he wrote.
“What kind of horrible, depraved people would poke fun at a boy
younger than them who has just entered high school?”
His parents removed him at the end of the year, and
sent him to Taft Charter High School, a 2,700-student public school in
Woodland Hills. Almost immediately, he complained of being shoved
against lockers and belittled by other boys in front of girls. Ms.
Smith was working as a behavioral specialist for the school district
and was assigned to help Mr. Rodger. One afternoon, she said, he was
seized by an anxiety attack as he tried to leave school, stopping dead
in his tracks in a hallway.
“He panicked,” she said. “He just couldn’t move.”
Ms. Smith said she did not recall ever seeing him
at the school again. “We tried to get him to go back, but we were not
successful,” she said. “It was too big, too overwhelming for him.”
He moved to Independence, a school of about 100
students with just three or four hours of instruction a day and a
mission to help troubled children. The boy hardly spoke, spending even
more time immersed in his video game; at home, he fought with his
stepmother when she told him to get offline.
Ms. Smith, who became the principal of Independence
the year Mr. Rodger was a junior, said he had displayed classic
symptoms of Asperger’s syndrome: He was socially awkward, had trouble
making eye contact and was very withdrawn, if very smart. “Sometimes
at lunch, kids would encourage him to join their tables,” she said.
“Sometimes he would. But even when he did, he would just kind of be
present.”
His longest conversations seemed to be with one of
the special-education assistants, with whom he would discuss World of
Warcraft.
“He had this push and pull between his desire to
engage socially and his fear of rejection,” Ms. Smith said.
Yet he was liked at Independence. Ms. Smith said
that some of the students had felt protective of him, and that staff
members had referred to him as “our Elliot.”
They lost track of him after he graduated and
headed to Pierce College, one of a series of colleges he attended
before landing in Isla Vista. About a year later, Ms. Smith said, the
boy’s parents sent an email with an upbeat report on Elliot. It was
the last time anyone gave “our Elliot” much thought, until he emerged
10 days ago, defined by his 140-page manifesto and videos.
“That’s not the kid that I knew,” Ms. Smith said.
“He presented as very innocent, very soft-spoken. He never even raised
his voice.”
Vagaries of Hollywood
At first glance, Elliot Rodger appeared to be a
privileged son of Hollywood — the red-carpet movie premieres, the $500
Neiman Marcus sweaters, the Armani shirts and the Gucci sunglasses,
the BMW. He was one of two children from the marriage; he had a
younger sister. But divorce filings and interviews suggest a life
colored less by Hollywood glamour than by the boom-and-bust cycle that
came with his father’s career as a freelance photographer and
director.
Peter Rodger worked often on television commercials
and spent a few days directing extra shots for “The Hunger Games,” a
job that got Elliot a seat at the movie’s splashy premiere two years
ago. Elliot Rodger’s stepmother, Soumaya Akaaboune, is an actress who
last year had a small role in “Lovelace,” an independent film. Its
executive producers included John Thompson, who was among the show
business acquaintances mentioned in his manifesto.
His mother, Li Chin, was a unit nurse on the 1989
film “Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade,” for which George Lucas was
an executive producer; that connection gave her son an entree to other
red-carpet premieres. He boasted in his manifesto that his mother was
a friend of Steven Spielberg’s and even dated Mr. Lucas briefly.
(Representatives of Mr. Lucas and Mr. Spielberg had no comment when
queried about the connections last week.)
Peter Rodger’s career directing commercials was
jolted when the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks depressed the industry. In
a quest that was partly spiritual and partly a failed business
venture, friends said, he decided to make a documentary. He visited 23
countries in two and a half years, shooting a film in which he asked
people as famous as Ringo Starr and as obscure as Asian schoolchildren
a single question: “What is God?”
The film, “Oh My God,” sold only a handful of
tickets when released in November 2009 and cost Peter Rodger as much
as $200,000 of his own money, drawn from equity in a home, according
to his ex-wife’s court filings, in addition to years of lost income.
“If only my failure of a father had made better decisions with his
directing career instead wasting his money on that stupid
documentary,” his son wrote.
During this period, the boy’s family seemed to be
trying all the more frantically to help him. “His mom did everything
she could to help Elliot,” said Philip Bloeser, who attended Topanga
Elementary Charter School with him. Mr. Astaire, the family friend and
spokesman, said that whenever he visited, his first question was about
Elliot’s well-being. He said he had once explicitly asked Peter Rodger
whether the boy could prove a threat to the public, and had been
assured no. Still, Mr. Astaire said, he always worried that Elliot
would one day take his own life.
While his parents saw a loner who would not leave
his room, the manifesto and videos show a far more agitated young man.
Mr. Rodger wrote of feeling tortured as he pined for “young blondes”
and of heading out to a mall to buy designer clothes that he thought
would make him more appealing. At one point, he set about to become a
millionaire, planning a scheme to win the lottery and making several
trips to Arizona, where he spent hundreds of dollars trying to win the
Powerball jackpot.
He described seeing “two hot blonde girls” waiting
at a bus stop. He flashed a smile at them and was ignored. “In a
rage,” he wrote, “I made a U-turn, pulled up to their bus stop and
splashed my Starbucks latte all over them. I felt a feeling of
spiteful satisfaction as I saw it stain their jeans.”
Mr. Rodger also wrote of watching “a flock of
beautiful blonde girls” playing kickball one day with “fraternity
jocks” in a public park. The sight so enraged him that he drove to a
local Kmart and purchased a water gun, filling it with orange juice.
He described what happened next, after he returned to the park: “I
screamed at them with rage as I sprayed them with my super soaker.”
The obsessively detailed self-published account of
his life inevitably raises questions of how much was real and how much
was hopelessly distorted by the filter of illness. Still, its writing
is clear and precise. “It has none of the raving quality that you see
in the writing of people with psychosis,” such as Jared L. Loughner,
who opened fire on Representative Gabrielle Giffords in Arizona in
2011, said Dr. Michael Stone, a New York forensic psychiatrist who
looked at the manuscript but has no connection to the family.
Retreating Into the Internet
In his last years in Isla Vista, Mr. Rodger had
stopped going to classes and his life appeared to be conducted
entirely online. There had always been World of Warcraft, but now
there were posts on sites that drew sexually frustrated young men —
including PUAhate, an online forum where participants ranted against
“pickup artists” who had more success with women.
On PUAhate, a site that was taken down after the
murders, Mr. Rodger expressed his disgust at women, questioning how
they could resist his charms. He would urge other “incels” — or
involuntary celibates — to fight back. “One day incels will realize
their true strength and numbers, and will overthrow this oppressive
feminist system,” he wrote. “Start envisioning a world where WOMEN
FEAR YOU.”
The videos he posted on YouTube and Facebook were
theatrical, even hammy, with him narrating scenic drives under palm
trees, winking at the camera as he bobbed his head to bouncy songs
like “Walking on Sunshine” — all to demonstrate to women how absurd it
was that they did not find him alluring. “They should be on me,” he
wrote.
Others in Mr. Rodger’s new community sometimes
expressed solidarity with him, but soon turned on him: He was attacked
as desperate, insecure, pretentious, entitled, bitter and whiny. And
at times, as happened in high school, they mocked him for his small
stature. (He was, by his account, 5 feet 9 inches tall and 135
pounds.) One taunted him as “an average looking manlet,” provoking a
response from Mr. Rodger.
“I am a drop-dead gorgeous, fabulous, stylish,
exotic gem among thousands of rocks,” he wrote.
As Mr. Rodger’s “Day of Retribution,” as he called
it, approached, there were signs of what he was plotting. One poster
on Bodybuilding.com, another website where he shared his views, noted
that Mr. Rodger had taken down a video titled “Why Do Girls Hate Me So
Much?” This person said the video had made him look like a serial
killer. “I’m not trying to be mean, but the creepy vibe that you give
off in those videos is likely the major reason that you can’t get
girls,” he wrote.
Mr. Rodger’s response now seems particularly
chilling.
“My parents discovered the videos, so I temporarily
took them down,” he wrote. “They will be back up in a few days, along
with more videos I’ve filmed.”
On the night of the killings, members of Mr.
Rodger’s online world instantly drew the connection between the
violence in Isla Vista and the man they had been jousting with online.
“Could someone tip off the police just in case?”
one wrote, even as six people had already died at Mr. Rodger’s hand.
“Why?” another asked.
“Don’t,” someone else posted. “Whatever happens. We
didn’t do anything so just let it happen if it does.”
Virgin killer's two roommates he killed in rampage were set to move
out next term because he was so strange
Elliot Rodger's six victims - all UCSB students -
have now been named
He is first alleged to have stabbed his two
roommates - Weihan Wang, 20, and Cheng Yuan Hong, 20
Friends of Wang say he described Rodger as
'strange' and that he and Yuan Hong had planned to move out at the end
of the semister
A third student also found dead at Rodger's
apartment was George Chen, 19
They include sorority sisters Veronika Weiss, 19,
and Katie Cooper, 22
A third victim, Christopher Michael-Martinez, 20,
was a sophomore student and an only child
Rodger also died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound
to the head
By Will Payne In Isla Vista, California and Snejana
Farberov and David Mccormack - DailyMail.com
May 26, 2014
A friend of Elliot Rodger’s two roommates who were
slaughtered on Friday night, has revealed that the students had
planned to stop sharing with the killer because they found him
‘strange.’
Weihan Wang, 20, of Fremont, and Cheng Yuan Hong,
20, of San Jose, were both stabbed to death by Rodger on Friday at the
apartment they had shared with him.
The body of another UCSB student, George Chen, 19,
of San Jose, was also found at the apartment He didn’t live in the
apartment.
All three victims were UCSB students. They were
found deceased with multiple stab wounds in Rodger's apartment located
in the 6500 block of Seville Road in Isla Vista.
Wang, graduated from Fremont Christian School and
was a sophomore at UCSB, majoring in engineering.
According to friends of his who spoke to ABC7, he
and Hong had said they felt uncomfortable living with Rodger and had
described him as ‘strange.’
They were planning to move elsewhere at the end of
the semester.
Hong had recently been accused of stealing candles
from Rodger.
The Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Office mentioned
the case at a Saturday press conference, saying Rodger contacted the
sheriff's office, reporting his roommates had stolen candles. Hong had
been charged with petty theft, after pleading guilty.
'They were really good kids,' a neighbor at
Rodger's apartment complex told ABC7. 'They were so quiet. They were
extremely smart.'
All six victims have now been identified in the
Isla Vista killing spree that left seven people dead, including gunman
Elliot Rodger, 22.
His other three victims were students Chris
Michael-Martinez, 20, Katherine Cooper, 22, and Veronika Weiss, 19,
all of whom died after being shot.
Cooper and Weiss were both members of the same
sorority. They were shot and killed while standing near the Alpha Phi
sorority house.
Weiss, a first-year student, had been a water polo
player at Westlake High School who earned league honors during her
senior year, according to the Thousand Oaks Acorn newspaper.
Her father, Bob Weiss, told KPCC that his daughter
was the kind of person who often reached out to awkward young men who
felt like outsiders at school.
'It's ironic. She hung out with a lot of the
scholarly students at school. Some of the boys, they gravitated to her
- not as boyfriend/girlfriend so much. If they were a nerdy kid who
felt out of place, Veronika would welcome them,' said Weiss.
'She was everybody's daughter. She was a wonderful
citizen of this world.'
Cooper, a resident of Chino Hills, California, was
about to graduate with a degree in art history.
'She was a self-proclaimed princess and I love her
for that,' said her friend Courtney Benjamin. 'And I know she has a
crown on her head today.'
Andrew Notohamiprodjo was Cooper's ballroom dance
teacher three years ago and later supervised her as a teaching
assistant in ballroom dance. Cooper was looking forward to graduating
but planned to stay in town another year, he said.
'She was a lot of fun, super forward,' he said.
Cooper graduated from Ruben S. Ayala High School in Chino Hills in
2010.
Michaels-Martinez, 20, was an English major from
Los Osos, California, who had planned to go to London next year and to
law school after graduation.
His distraught father, Richard Martinez, made an
impassioned outburst on Saturday, blaming America's gun laws for his
son's untimely death.
'Our son Christopher and six others are dead,' he
told reporters gathered outside a sheriff's station for a news
conference. 'You don't think it'll happen to your child until it
does.'
Martinez choked back tears as he spoke, then grew
angrier as he talked about gun laws and lobbyists.
'The talk about gun rights. What about Chris' right
to live?' Martinez said. 'When will enough people say: 'Stop this
madness! We don't have to live like this! Too many people have died!
'Why did Chris die? Chris died because of craven,
irresponsible politicians and the NRA,' Martinez said.
He then punctuated his words as he said, 'We should
say to ourselves: "Not! One! More!"' before dissolving into tears and
falling to his knees as he stepped from the podium.
Friends said Michaels-Martinez, who served as
residential adviser at a dorm last year, was the kind of guy who would
welcome strangers into his home.
According to her Facebook page, victim Katie
Cooper, 22, majored art history and archeology at UCSB.
'She was a shining star,' Cooper’s devastated aunt,
Stacy Simmer, described the slain young woman.
Simmer said San Bernardino sheriff’s deputies came
to her sister’s house at 10am Saturday and told her that Katie had
been killed in a drive-by shooting.
‘I was on my way to church and my brother-in-law,
Dan, called me and said, "Stacy, are you driving? I need you to pull
over because I have something terrible to tell you,”’ Ms Simmer
recalled. ‘”There was a guy in a car and he was driving around
shooting people, and Katie was one of them and she was killed.”’
The distraught aunt went on, saying: ‘Katie was the
apple of all of our eyes… She had a 4.8 GPA and did a lot of charity
fundraising for St Jude’s Children's hospital.
‘She was studying archeology and she was in in a
wonderful sorority.
‘Her parents, Katie and Dan, left for Santa Barbara
as soon as they heard. Her two brothers, Nick, 26, a chemist in
Colorado, and Jon, still in college, are on their way there now. They
were as close as any siblings can be.’
Stacy Simmer said she was told by her sister that
when her niece’s body is released to the family sometime next week,
she will be laid to rest in their local Catholic church.
Richard Martinez, Christopher's father, said of his
son: 'He was an English major and he wanted to go to law school. He
grades were excellent.
'Both my wife and I are attorneys and I wasn't
thrilled about him doing that, but we didn't want to argue with him.
He was an only child.'
Rodger's father, Peter, has released a statement
via his lawyer. It said: 'The Rodger family offers their deepest
compassion and sympathy to the families involved in this terrible
tragedy.
'We are experiencing the most inconceivable pain,
and our hearts go out to everybody involved.'
It came as friends and relatives of the gunman
shared their shock and heartache at what unfolded in the early hours
of Saturday.
‘Oh my God, my God. This is terrible,’ said
Christian Rivas, a close friend and neighbor of Elliot Rodger’s 18
year-old sister, Georgia, when asked about Friday’s tragedy.
‘I was hanging out with Georgia till two o’clock
this morning at the local park and she was happy and laughing - she
had no idea what was going on with her brother. She must be devastated
- I feel so bad for her…and the victims.”
‘She was always worried about Elliot. She would say
that she didn’t understand him because he was always such a loner - he
didn’t want to have anything to do with anyone else and he had no
friends.
‘Georgia said that when they did talk, they would
often fight because he didn’t seem to be interested in anything or
anyone. She couldn’t relate late to him and he was so anti-social.”
Christian, 19, lives around the corner from the
neat, three-bedroom home on quiet Windom Steet in West Hills - about
25 miles north west of Los Angeles - where Elliot’s mother, ‘Chin’
Rodger, 53 lives with Georgia.
‘Elliot wasn’t really living here all the time any
more but he stayed here a lot,’ added Christian, who attended nearby
El Camino High School, the same school both Elliot and Georgia went
to.
‘When I would go to their house to see Georgia, if
Elliot was in he would never come out into the living room and talk.
He always stayed locked in his bedroom by himself.
‘He always kept very much to himself. When he did
go out he would sometimes just drive round the neighborhood aimlessly
in his car - I think it was a black BMW.
‘Georgia had a boyfriend once who just couldn’t
figure Elliot out and called him a “real weirdo.” The boyfriend would
say “hi” to him but Elliot wouldn’t say a word. He’d just go to his
bedroom and slam the door.
‘The only person he spent time with was his mother.
I think he was quite close to her. His mom is very sweet and nice and
I think she gets on well with Elliot and Georgia’s dad, even though
they’re divorced.
‘I feel so sorry for Georgia and her mom and dad.
They’re a really nice family and this is going to devastate them.
Elliot was a strange guy and Georgia did worry about him a lot. But
something as horrific and violent as this - she could never have
imagined anything so awful happening.'
Authorities are examining a video posted on social
media by the shooter in which he rants about women who supposedly
rejected his advances.
The video is called Elliot Rodger's Retribution.
Rodger, a Santa Barbara City College Student and
Isla Vista resident, according to his social media accounts unleashed
a tirade about his 'loneliness, rejection, and unfulfilled desires,'
and blames women for preferring 'obnoxious brutes' to him, 'the
supreme gentlemen.'
'I'm 22 years old and I'm still a virgin. I've
never even kissed a girl,' he says in the video.
'College is the time when everyone experiences
those things such as sex and fun and pleasure. But in those years I've
had to rot in loneliness. It's not fair. You girls have never been
attracted to me. I don't know why you girls aren't attracted to me.
But I will punish you all for it,' he says in the video, which runs to
almost seven minutes.
He repeatedly promises to 'punish' women and lays
out his plan for 'retribution.'
'I'm going to enter the hottest sorority house of
UCSB and I will slaughter every single spoilt, stuck-up, blonde s**t
that I see inside there. All those girls that I've desired so much,
they would've all rejected me and looked down on me as an inferior man
if I ever made a sexual advance towards them,' he says.
'I'll take great pleasure in slaughtering all of
you. You will finally see that I am, in truth, the superior one. The
true alpha male,' he laughs like a maniacal movie villain. 'Yes...
After I have annihilated every single girl in the sorority house I
will take to the streets of Isla Vista and slay every single person I
see there. All those popular kids who live such lives of hedonistic
pleasure...'
His YouTube account contains numerous other videos
in which Rodger talks of his loneliness and anger at the women he says
snub him.
He called police several weeks ago after being
alarmed by YouTube videos 'regarding suicide and the killing of
people,' a lawyer said Saturday.
Police interviewed Elliot Rodger and found him to
be a 'perfectly polite, kind and wonderful human,' family attorney
Alan Shifman said.
A three-week old video called 'Another sunny day in
Santa Barbara' include the description 'I temporarily took all of my
Vlog's down due to the alarm it caused with some people in my family.
I will post more updates in the future.'
Rodger's Twitter account has only two tweets,
posted on April 19 and 20.
'Why are girls sexually attracted to obnoxious,
brutish men instead of sophisticated gentlemen such as myself? #girls
#perverted #sex #unfair,' reads the first.
'Why do girls hate me so much?' he posted on April
20, along with a now-deleted YouTube video.
Rodger was on a website forum called PUAHate.com,
which describes itself as the 'Anti-Pickup-Artist Movement' and aims
to reveal 'the scams, deception, and misleading marketing techniques
used by dating gurus and the seduction community to deceive men and
profit from them.'
Its members are all men who have spent a lot of
time and money on books and seminars and other materials that claim to
help men 'pick-up' women - but failed.
The bitter, often misogynistic threads are full of
tales of woe from men who don't know how to get women to date them and
blame the women themselves for the problem.
He posted in 2013, 'If you could release a virus
that would kill every single man on Earth, except for yourself because
you would have the antidote, would you do it? You will be the only man
left, with all the females. You would be able to have your pick of any
beautiful woman you want, as well as having dealt vengeance on the men
who took them from you. Imagine how satisfying that would be.'
Rodger's actions have been lauded on the site by
other members who have called him a 'hero.'
Brown said the shootings occurred at several sites
in the town, resulting in ten crime scenes.
Santa Barbara County sheriff's spokeswoman Kelly
Hoover told KEYT-TV the gunfire broke out around 9:30 p.m. Friday in
the Isla Vista neighborhood.
A student told the station he saw shots fired from
a BMW, fatally striking one woman and critically injuring another
woman.
'I heard shots, scream, pain,' Michael Vitak said.
'All emotions. I hope she is going to be fine.'
The station said a black BMW slammed into as many
as two cars.
The shooting prompted officials to issue alerts
urging people to stay indoors.
Isla Vista is known for parties, including an
annual spring bash that turned into a violent blowout last month as
young people clashed with police and tossed rocks and bottles. A
university police officer and four deputies were injured and 130
people were arrested.
Revealed: How son of Hunger Games assistant director stabbed three
roommates to death before shooting dead three more students at random
after posting chilling murder manifesto online
Elliot Rodger, 22, stabbed to death three men
inside his home in California
Gunman wrote 140-page manifesto outlining how he
wanted to kill people
Rodger had Asperger's syndrome and was in the care
of several therapists
He had three semi-automatic handguns and 400 rounds
of ammunition
Posted video in which he claimed women have
rejected his advances
Lamenting that he was a 22-year-old virgin, Rodger
promised 'retribution'
Planned to enter 'hottest sorority on UCSB' and
'slaughter' the girls inside
By Snejana Farberovand Will Payne In Isla Vista,
California and Martin Dryanand Neil Blincow
24 May 2014
The deadly crime spree in California began with
three stabbing deaths inside the killer's apartment and concluded with
the son of a Hollywood bigwig shooting himself in the head, it was
revealed today.
Elliot Rodger, 22, started out by stabbing to death
three men around 9.30pm on Friday night. The rampage covered a wide
area in the vicinity of the UCSB campus with 10 separate crime scenes.
Rodger, who was driving a black BMW, acted alone
when six people were killed and 13 were hurt.
Dr Stephen Kaminski, trauma services director for
Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital, said of 11 of the wounded that four
had been treated and released, and seven transferred to Cottage
Hospital.
Of those seven, two were in good condition, three
fair and two serious, he told reporters.
Santa Barbara County Sheriff Bill Brown said that
after the stabbings, the Santa Barbara City College student armed
himself with three semi-automatic handguns and drove to nearby Alpha
Phi sorority.
Rodger, the son of The Hunger Games assistant
director Peter Rodger, repeatedly knocked on the door, but no one
would let him in.
The armed gunman then fired shots at three women
standing outside, killing two of them, Katie Cooper, 22, and Veronika
Weiss, 19.
Kyle Sullivan, 19, a student at Santa Barbara City
College, was there when Rodger opened fire on Cooper, Weiss and a
third victim outside the sorority house.
One of the women appeared dead, Mr Sullivan
recalled to CNN, another was 'just barely able to move her eyes,'
while a third was on the phone with her mother.
The wounded woman, who was shot in the kidney, was
saying into the phone how she was probably not going to make it, and
how much she loved her mother, the eyewitness said.
According to the sheriff, Rodger then returned to
his black BMW and drove to IV Deli Mart in Golita. He entered the
store and shot dead 20-year-old Christopher Martinez, an unsuspecting
bystander.
Surveillance footage from the store shows how
innocent shoppers ducked for cover as the gunman opened fire.
Rodger continued his crime spree, firing at two
people on the sidewalk from his car, brandishing a handgun at a woman
and shooting at a lone sheriff’s deputy on foot.
The killer then struck a cyclist with his car
before opening fire at passersby, three of whom were wounded.
The bloody saga came to a conclusion when Rodger
was confronted by four deputies and shot at them. The law enforcement
agents returned fire, striking the driver in the left hip.
The injured Rodger tried to get away and slammed
into another biker, who was thrown in the air and landed on the hood
of the BMW, shattering the windshield in the process.
Officials believe that is when Rodger turned the
gun on himself, firing a single shot at his head, which caused him to
lose control of his car.
When deputies removed Rodger's lifeless body from
the crashed vehicle and searched the interior, they discovered three
9mm semi-automatic handguns - a pair of Sig Sauers and a Glock - along
with nearly 400 rounds of ammunition.
Sheriff Brown said all three weapons were legally
purchased from licensed arms dealers and were registered to Rodger.
According to the sheriff's office, the agency had
contacted Rodger on three separate occasions between July 2013 and
April 2014.
On July 21, 2013, deputies reached out to the
college student while he was being treated in a hospital for injuries
he had allegedly sustained in an assault.
On January 15, 2014, Rodger called police accusing
one of his roommates of stealing $22 (£13) worth of candles from him.
The disturbed young man made a citizen's arrest,
which resulted in his roommate being jailed and cited for petty theft.
Then on April 30, deputies came to Rodger's
apartment in response to a welfare check request made by a relative,
presumed to be his mother.
Rodger downplayed his parent's concerns for his
mental state, saying he was having difficulties with his social life
and was planning to drop out of college.
The responding deputies gave him some advice and
information on where to seek help, and then left.
In his 140-page manifesto 'My Twisted World'
outlining his homicidal plans, Rodger described in detail the day
police knocked on his door. He published the unsettling document
before beginning his bloody rampage.
'I had the striking and devastating fear that
someone had somehow discovered what I was planning to do, and reported
me for it,' he wrote.
Rodger expressed concern that officers would search
his home and find his multiple firearms and writings laying out his
murderous plans, and stop him from exacting revenge on his 'enemies'
by locking him up.
The officers, however, did not arrest him after
finding the suspect to be ‘courteous and shy.’
Santa Barbara police spokesman Kelly Hoover
revealed last night that the department's contact with Rodgers in
April is now being reviewed as part of the investigation.
While in his writings and videos Rodger appeared to
be a mentally unhinged and lonely young man angry at the world because
he could not get a girlfriend, his Facebook account paints an entirely
different picture of him.
Rodger filled his photo albums with images of his
high-end cars, expensive meals and other trappings of luxury.
The son of a wealthy Hollywood director travelled
the world in business class, attended a private Katy Perry concert and
took in the sights on a recent trip to London.
His chilling manifesto, however, uncovers the depth
of his anguish and rage, especially at women, and his desire to kill
people.
‘On the day before the Day of Retribution, I will
start the First Phase of my vengeance: Silently killing as many people
as I can around Isla Vista by luring them into my apartment through
some form of trickery,’ Rodger wrote.
Authorities are also examining a video posted on
social media by the shooter in which he rants about women who
supposedly rejected his advances. The video is called Elliot Rodger's
Retribution.
Rodger, a Santa Barbara City College Student and
Isla Vista resident, according to his social media accounts, unleashed
a tirade about his 'loneliness, rejection, and unfulfilled desires,'
and blames women for preferring 'obnoxious brutes' to him, 'the
supreme gentlemen.'
'I'm 22 years old and I'm still a virgin. I've
never even kissed a girl,' he says in the video.
'College is the time when everyone experiences
those things such as sex and fun and pleasure. But in those years I've
had to rot in loneliness. It's not fair.
'You girls have never been attracted to me. I don't
know why you girls aren't attracted to me. But I will punish you all
for it,' he says in the video, which runs to almost seven minutes.
He repeatedly promises to 'punish' women and lays
out his plan for 'retribution.'
'I'm going to enter the hottest sorority house of
UCSB and I will slaughter every single spoilt, stuck-up, blonde s***
that I see inside there.
'All those girls that I've desired so much, they
would've all rejected me and looked down on me as an inferior man if I
ever made a sexual advance towards them,' he says.
'I'll take great pleasure in slaughtering all of
you. You will finally see that I am, in truth, the superior one. The
true alpha male,' he laughs like a maniacal movie villain.
'Yes... After I have annihilated every single girl
in the sorority house I will take to the streets of Isla Vista and
slay every single person I see there. All those popular kids who live
such lives of hedonistic pleasure...'
His YouTube account contains numerous other videos
in which Rodger talks of his loneliness and anger at the women he says
snub him.
A three-week old video called 'Another sunny day in
Santa Barbara' include the description 'I temporarily took all of my
Vlog's down due to the alarm it caused with some people in my family.
I will post more updates in the future.'
Rodger's Twitter account has only two tweets,
posted on April 19 and 20.
'Why are girls sexually attracted to obnoxious,
brutish men instead of sophisticated gentlemen such as myself? #girls
#perverted #sex #unfair,' reads the first.
'Why do girls hate me so much?' he posted on April
20, along with a now-deleted YouTube video.
Rodger was on a website forum called PUAHate.com,
which describes itself as the 'Anti-Pickup-Artist Movement' and aims
to reveal 'the scams, deception, and misleading marketing techniques
used by dating gurus and the seduction community to deceive men and
profit from them.'
Its members are all men who have spent a lot of
time and money on books and seminars and other materials that claim to
help men 'pick-up' women - but failed.
The bitter, often misogynistic threads are full of
tales of woe from men who don't know how to get women to date them and
blame the women themselves for the problem.
He posted in 2013, 'If you could release a virus
that would kill every single man on Earth, except for yourself because
you would have the antidote, would you do it?
'You will be the only man left, with all the
females. You would be able to have your pick of any beautiful woman
you want, as well as having dealt vengeance on the men who took them
from you. Imagine how satisfying that would be.'
Rodger's actions have been lauded on the site by
other members who have called him a 'hero'.
His two sole female victims Weiss, 19, and Cooper,
were both sisters at the Delta Delta Delta Greek organisation.
Katie's aunt Stacy Simmer said: 'Katie was the
apple of all of our eyes, a shining star- she has so many friends.
'She had a 4.8 GPA and did a lot of charity
fundraising for St Jude's Children's hospital. She was studying
archeology and she was in in a wonderful sorority.
Her parents Katie and Dan left San Bernardino for
Santa Barbara as soon as they heard. Her two brothers, Nick, 26, a
chemist in Colorado and Jon, still in college, will join them.
The father of UCSB English major Mr Martinez also
confirmed his son was killed in the massacre.
During an emotional press conference yesterday,
Richard Martinez said his family was 'lost and broken.'
The grief-stricken parent railed against the
National Rifle Association and called on politicians to pass more
robust gun control laws.
'They talk about gun rights. What about Chris'
right to live?' Mr Martinez Snr said. 'When will enough people say:
'Stop this madness! We don't have to live like this! Too many people
have died!'
Alan Schifman, a lawyer for Peter Rodger, confirmed
that Elliot Rodger was the gunman.
Mr Schifman told ABC News that Elliot was diagnosed
with Asperger's syndrome as a child and had been subjected to bullying
from his classmates for most of his life because he was a loner. The
lawyer also said the gunman was being treated by several therapists.
In a statement, his father described the family's
'inconceivable pain' and said his heart 'goes out to everybody
involved'.
Friends of the family were aghast at the news.
‘Oh my God, my God. This is terrible,’ said
Christian Rivas, a close friend and neighbour of Rodger’s 18 year-old
sister, Georgia, when asked about Friday’s tragedy.
‘I was hanging out with Georgia till two o’clock
this morning at the local park and she was happy and laughing - she
had no idea what was going on with her brother. She must be devastated
- I feel so bad for her…and the victims.
‘She was always worried about Elliot. She would say
that she didn’t understand him because he was always such a loner - he
didn’t want to have anything to do with anyone else and he had no
friends.
‘Georgia said that when they did talk, they would
often fight because he didn’t seem to be interested in anything or
anyone. She couldn’t relate late to him and he was so anti-social.'
Mr Rivas, 19, lives around the corner from the
neat, three-bedroom home on quiet Windom Steet in West Hills - about
25 miles north west of Los Angeles - where Elliot’s mother, ‘Chin’
Rodger, 53 lives with Georgia.
‘Elliot wasn’t really living here all the time any
ore but he stayed here a lot,’ added Mr Rivas, who attended nearby El
Camino High School, the same school both Elliot and Georgia went to.
‘When I would go to their house to see Georgia, if
Elliot was in he would never come out into the living room and talk.
He always stayed locked in his bedroom by himself.
‘He always kept very much to himself. When he did
go out he would sometimes just drive round the neighborhood aimlessly
in his car - I think it was a black BMW.
‘Georgia had a boyfriend once who just couldn’t
figure Elliot out and called him a “real weirdo.” The boyfriend would
say “hi” to him but Elliot wouldn’t say a word. He’d just go to his
bedroom and slam the door.
‘The only person he spent time with was his mother.
I think he was quite close to her. His mom is very sweet and nice and
I think she gets on well with Elliot and Georgia’s dad, even though
they’re divorced.
‘I feel so sorry for Georgia and her mom and dad.
They’re a really nice family and this is going to devastate them.
Elliot was a strange guy and Georgia did worry about him a lot. But
something as horrific and violent as this - she could never have
imagined anything so awful happening.'
As the shooting unfolded, residents took to social
media to share the news and warn others.
'I could have easily been dead right now. RIP to
the girls who got shot and killed and other people who got run over by
this idiot,' tweeted one.
Sienna Schwartz said the shooter approached her and
said, 'Hey what up?' and then began shooting at her as she walked
away.
The distressed girl said she initially thought the
gun the shooter flashed at her was an airsoft gun but realized it was
real when three or four bullets buzzed past her ears.
A student told the station he saw shots fired from
a BMW, fatally striking one woman and critically injuring another
woman.
'I heard shots, scream, pain,' Michael Vitak said.
'All emotions. I hope she is going to be fine.'
Around 3,000 students turned out for an emotional
candlelit vigil tonight to honor the six dead students on Saturday
night.
After silently assembling in a plaza on campus,
they marched solemnly back towards the scene of the massacre in
downtown Isla Vista.
At the end of the march, there was a student-led
vigil and several moments of silence for people to reflect on the
tragic events of the day.
Isla Vista is known for parties, including an
annual spring bash that turned into a violent blowout last month as
young people clashed with police and tossed rocks and bottles.
A university police officer and four deputies were
injured and 130 people were arrested.
FULL TRANSCRIPT OF 'ELLIOT RODGER'S RETRIBUTION'
YOUTUBE VIDEO
Hi, Elliot Rodger here. Well, this is my last
video. It all has to come to this. Tomorrow is the day of retribution,
the day I will have my revenge against humanity, against all of you.
For the last eight years of my life, since I hit
puberty, I've been forced to endure an existence of loneliness,
rejection and unfulfilled desires, all because girls have never been
attracted to me. Girls gave their affection and sex and love to other
men, never to me.
I'm 22 years old and still a virgin, never even
kissed a girl. And through college, 2 1/2 years, more than that
actually, I'm still a virgin. It has been very torturous.
College is the time when everyone experiences those
things such as sex and fun and pleasure. In those years I've had to
rot in loneliness, it's not fair.
You forced me to suffer all my life, now I will
make you all suffer. I waited a long time for this. - Elliot Rodger.
You girls have never been attracted to me. I don't
know why you girls aren't attracted to me but I will punish you all
for it. It's an injustice, a crime because I don't know what you don't
see in me, I'm the perfect guy and yet you throw yourselves at all
these obnoxious men instead of me, the supreme gentleman. I will
punish all of you for it.
On the day of retribution, I am going to enter the
hottest sorority house at UCSB and I will slaughter every single
spoiled, stuck-up, blond slut I see inside there. All those girls I've
desired so much. They have all rejected me and looked down on me as an
inferior man if I ever made a sexual advance toward them, while they
throw themselves at these obnoxious brutes.
I take great pleasure in slaughtering all of you.,
You will finally see that I am, in truth, the superior one, the true
alpha male. [laughs] Yes, after I have annihilated every single girl
in the sorority house, I'll take to the streets of Isla Vista and slay
every single person I see there. All those popular kids who live such
lives of hedonistic pleasure while I've had to rot in loneliness all
these years. They all look down upon me every time I tried to join
them, they've all treated me like a mouse.
Well, now I will be a god compared to you, you will
all be animals, you are animals and I will slaughter you like animals.
I'll be a god exacting my retribution on all those who deserve it and
you do deserve it just for the crime of living a better life than me.
The popular kids, you never accepted me and now you
will all pay for it. Girls, all I ever wanted was to love you, be
loved by you. I wanted a girlfriend. I wanted sex, love, affection,
adoration.
You think I'm unworthy of you. That's I crime I can
never get over. If I can't have you girls, I will destroy you.
[laughs] You denied me a happy life and in turn I will deny all of you
life, it's only fair. I hate all of you.
Humanity is a disgusting, wretched, depraved
species. If I had it in my power I would stop at nothing to reduce
every single one of you to mountains of skulls and rivers of blood and
rightfully so. You deserve to be annihilated and I will give that to
you. You never showed me any mercy so I will show you none.
You forced me to suffer all my life, now I will
make you all suffer. I waited a long time for this. I'll give you
exactly what you deserve, all of you. All you girls who rejected me,
looked down upon me, you know, treated me like scum while you gave
yourselves to other men. And all of you men for living a better life
than me, all of you sexually active men. I hate you. I hate all of
you. I can't wait to give you exactly what you deserve, annihilation.