Gunman May Have Warned of 2nd Attack
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11-DEC-2007: As many as twenty bullet holes riddle the entryway of
the New Life church in Colorado Springs, Monday, Dec. 10, 2007, where
a day earlier a gunman entered the building. Two are dead in addition
to the gunman and another three are injured in the second shooting to
hit a Colorado religious organization in a day. The gunman in the
Colorado Springs shooting was killed by a church security guard. (AP
Photo/Kevin Moloney, POOL) [Photo copyright 2007 by AP]
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Associated Press/AP Online
DENVER - In between his two deadly shooting sprees, church
gunman Matthew Murray apparently posted furious threats on the
Internet to kill Christians. But whether the warnings reached police
before he struck again was unclear Tuesday.
The warnings - and other anguished, despair-filled messages
over the past few months - were posted by someone using the screen
name "nghtmrchld26." The postings paint a picture of a
home-schooled Colorado youth once affiliated with the Youth With a
Mission program - as 24-year-old Murray had been.
"I'm coming for EVERYONE soon and I WILL be armed to
the @%$ teeth and I WILL shoot to kill," one threat posted
Sunday by nghtmrchld26 said.
"God, I can't wait till I can kill you people. Feel no
remorse, no sense of shame, I don't care if I live or die in the
shoot-out. All I want to do is kill and injure as many of you ... as
I can especially Christians who are to blame for most of the
problems in the world."
At least one visitor to the site contacted the FBI promptly,
before the second attack, the site's administrator said. The FBI
would not immediately confirm that.
In all, nghtmrchld26 made at least 11 posts between the two
shootings on a site run by the Association of Former Pentecostals, a
nonprofit group that says it was created to help people who have
left Pentecostal and charismatic churches.
"It's time for me to head out and teach these
(expletive) a lesson," another message said. "See you all
on the other side, we're leaving this nightmare behind to a better
place."
The last of the threatening messages was posted at 9:55 a.m.
or 10:55 a.m. - the time zone was not clear, said Joe Istre, the
association's site administrator and president.
Either way, that was several hours after Murray killed two
people at Youth With a Mission, a training center for missionaries
in the Denver suburb of Arvada, and at least two hours before he
killed two more people at the New Life Church in Colorado Springs
around 1 p.m.
An autopsy determined that Murray killed himself with a
bullet to the head after he was brought down by gunfire from a
volunteer security guard at the church, authorities said.
Denver FBI spokeswoman Rene Vonder Haar said the agency
began an investigation immediately after receiving a phone call at
10:30 a.m. on Sunday. She refused to discuss the nature of the call
but said the information was passed on to police in Arvada and
Colorado Springs.
Colorado Springs police Sgt. Scott Schwall said police there
did not learn the Murray family home's address in Englewood until
after the church shootings, and that a search did not begin until
well after dark. The department did receive some information from
the FBI well after the New Life shooting took place, he said,
declining to say what the information was.
Arvada police spokeswoman Susan Medina confirmed that the
FBI passed on information regarding the mission center shootings
about 10:30 a.m. She would not discuss the information in detail but
said "we began work on that tip immediately."
Medina said Arvada detectives did not go to Murray's home
and speak to his family until 3 p.m., well after the second attack.
Medina said police cannot say with certainty who
nghtmrchld26 is.
Murray was dismissed from Youth With a Mission in 2002 for
what the training center has described only as health reasons. Youth
With a Mission maintains an office at New Life Church's World Prayer
Center.
Murray's parents donated $250 to the prayer center several
years ago, New Life Senior Pastor Brady Boyd told The Associated
Press. The church also discovered a visitors card indicating that
Matthew Murray attended services several years ago, Boyd said.
But Boyd said no Murray family members were members of the
church, and he downplayed the connections.
"We're a large church, very visible, and (Matthew
Murray) was not a member, was never connected, never affiliated with
the church, and neither were his parents," Boyd said. "It
has no bearing on the events or the shooting."
The online rants make passing references both to New Life
and founding pastor Ted Haggard, who was dismissed last year after a
former male prostitute alleged a relationship with him.
The online threats appear to include whole passages lifted
from a manifesto written by Eric Harris, one of the teens who
carried out the 1999 massacre at Columbine High School - 13 miles
from Murray's hometown.
In the weeks before the shooting, nghtmrchld26 posted a
number of messages about his own pain, despair and fury toward
Christianity. One post, called "My YWAM Horror Story,"
complained about being removed from the Arvada youth mission
program.
"Why was I told that I couldn't be a missionary because
I wasn't `social enough'? I was told that I was `an
introvert,'" nghtmrchld26 wrote. "Everyone else got to go
on their outreaches except for a few who lied about smoking
(cigarettes). The authoritarianism and hypocrisy is
outrageous."
In an Oct. 6 post, nghtmrchld26 wrote about his anger at the
church.
"We'll make our own religion and be our own God's
instead listening to some abusive pedophile church like what I was
raised in telling us who's `saved' and who's not," the person
wrote.
"During this dark period I've realized this is not the
way just to be a martyr. I can't walk alone any longer and I'll
fight for the ones who can't fight. If I lose at then least I tried.
If I have to give my life you can have it."
The user appeared to reject offers of psychological help.
"I've already been working with counselors," he
wrote. He added: "It's so funny how many people want to help
you and love you and counsel you and `work with you through your
pain' when there's money involved."
More details on how several victims died emerged Tuesday.
The coroner's office said Stephanie Works, 18, and her sister
Rachael, 16, were each killed by a single gunshot to the torso. They
were shot outside New Life Church.
Tiffany Johnson, 26, was shot at the Arvada mission. She
survived the ride to the hospital and tried to describe the gunman
to an official in the ambulance, her father, Tom Johnson, told the
AP. But she had been shot eight times, Johnson said.
He was told his daughter died on the operating table.
Associated Press writers Colleen Slevin, Judith Kohler,
Jacques Billeaud and Dan Elliott in Denver, Allen Breed in Raleigh,
N.C., Amy Forliti in Minneapolis and AP Religion Writer Eric Gorski
in Denver contributed to this report.
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11-DEC-2007: As many as twenty bullet holes riddle the entryway of
the New Life church in Colorado Springs, Monday, Dec. 10, 2007, where
a day earlier a gunman entered the building. Two are dead in addition
to the gunman and another three are injured in the second shooting to
hit a Colorado religious organization in a day. The gunman in the
Colorado Springs shooting was killed by a church security guard. (AP
Photo/Kevin Moloney, POOL) [Photo copyright 2007 by AP]
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