Despite Multiple Warnings, Capital Gazette Shooter Was Still Able to Buy a Gun
Jarrod Ramos, the 38-year-old alleged shooter who killed five staff members of the Annapolis, MD newspaper the Capital Gazette on Thursday, is a glaring example of someone who should not have been able to legally purchase a gun.
A profile of Ramos published Friday by The Baltimore Sun, which owns the Capital Gazette, noted that he legally bought the shotgun used in the massacre about a year ago. He was able to purchase the gun despite a pledge to kill one of the newspaper’s writers and three restraining orders placed against him by another woman whom he had continuously harassed. According to the Sun, a lawyer who represented the woman had warned a judge of Ramos’ “violent fetishes.”
“It was very obvious to me very early that this was a person who was malignant,” the lawyer, Brennan McCarthy, told the Sun. “He felt that he was at war. He was at war with The Capital. He was at war with my client. He was at war with me. He was at war with my family. I was very, very scared for my family for years because of this individual.”
The Sun cites court documents describing “years of hostile behavior” directed at the woman who obtained the restraining orders and at the staff of the Capital Gazette. Police already have said that they have evidence showing Ramos planned the attack on the newspaper, which killed staffers Rob Hiaasen, Wendi Winters, Gerald Fischman, John McNamara, and Rebecca Smith, and injured Rachael Pacella and Janel Cooley.