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Morning Briefing

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Tuesday, Oct 31 2023

Full Issue

Maine Gunman's Mental Health Issues More Serious Than First Disclosed

Law enforcement was explicitly warned about the declining mental health of Robert Card many months ahead of the Maine shooting, news outlets report.

Months ahead of his bloody rampage in Lewiston last week, suspected Maine gunman Robert Card had displayed glaring signals that his mental health was on a drastic decline 鈥 signals which his immediate family members knew about, were concerned by 鈥 and explicitly warned law enforcement that something needed to be done, according to documents obtained by ABC News via records requests. ... Despite some follow-up between local police and the Army Reserves regarding Card鈥檚 apparent paranoia, verbalized threats to shoot people and recurrent aggressive behavior in recent months, the documents do not indicate that Card was ever taken into protective custody or judged mentally incompetent by a medical professional which is required to trigger Maine鈥檚 yellow flag law. (Pezenik, Courts, Simpson, Margolin, Estrada and Barr, 10/31)

The warnings about Mr. Card were far more explicit than Maine officials had publicly acknowledged in the days since the shooting on Oct. 25. ... Mr. Card鈥檚 family told a sheriff鈥檚 deputy in May that Mr. Card had become angry and paranoid starting early this year. In particular, he had begun to claim 鈥 wrongly, the family said 鈥 that people were accusing him of being a pedophile. (Bogel-Burroughs and Marcius, 10/30)

Deputies were unable to locate Card and issued a missing persons report, the sheriff said, adding that deputies made contact with Card鈥檚 brother, who told him he would work to secure Robert Card鈥檚 firearms. (Vielkind and Palazzolo, 10/30)

Also 鈥

Last week's mass shooting in Lewiston is renewing scrutiny of a 3-year-old state law that aims to keep guns away from potentially dangerous people. But it's unclear whether police considered using Maine's so-called "yellow flag" law against the suspected gunman. And critics say Maine's law could be much stronger. (Miller, 10/30)

In early August, Robert Card went to a gun store in Auburn, Maine, to finalize a purchase he had made online. According to reporting from ABC News, Card was hoping to take possession of a firearm suppressor 鈥 known more commonly as a silencer 鈥 he had bought, a purchase that necessitated completing the paperwork mandated for such a purchase by federal law. One of the forms Card filled out included yes/no questions he had to complete. One asked if he was an unlawful drug user. The next asked if he had ever been 鈥渁djudicated as a mental defective OR 鈥 ever been committed to a mental institution?鈥 Card indicated that he had; over the summer he had spent two weeks in a facility after claiming to hear voices. (Bump, 10/30)

In Maine, which suffered the deadliest mass shooting in its history on October 25, guns are a fact of life. Nearly聽half聽of all households own one, mostly for hunting and recreation, sometimes for self-defense. The state鈥檚 gun access laws are permissive 鈥 there are no background checks on private sales, and residents don鈥檛 need a permit or training to carry a concealed gun in public. Its gun homicide rate is so low that it鈥檚 been hard to justify the need for tighter regulation. And with no history of public mass shootings to point to, this arrangement seemed to be working. (Mascia and Brownlee, 10/30)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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