Anonymous wrote:This guy clearly envied the victim’s life. Perhaps he wanted to work with Glyer. My guess is that victim was polite but got weirded out and distanced himself from shooter. That’s likely when the obsessing and anger kicked in. I don’t think victim did anything wrong, just got into the crosshairs of a mentally ill person with a gun. The question is whether the shooter was diagnosed and if any laws could have prevented this. I don’t think so. If there’s no formal diagnosis, any proposed law wouldn’t have stopped this. This is why preventing mentally I’ll from purchasing firearms is difficult. Most are likely undiagnosed even if the average person can see it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It would be great if the police would fill us in as to whether we have anything to worry about. A random home invasion homicide in a place where there has literally not been a homicide for almost 15 years seems cause for concern to me.
It was clearly targeted. You don't need to worry.
Again, with the parroting "it was targeted" over and over. Give it a rest. You have no idea whether it was targeted, yet you keep saying it definitively as if you Know The Truth. You just want it to be targeted, either so you can feel like "It's still safe here, that can't happen to me" or because you want to crank up drama around a supposed hit job. Pathetic.
Let's wait for the real investigators to do their real jobs. Not for armchair conspiracy theorists to spout baseless theories.
Well guess we were right. He was targeted. By an acquaintance no less.
He looks rough for only age 33. WTF.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Whew. Glad it's a white guy
?
Go on…
Anonymous wrote:Whew. Glad it's a white guy
Anonymous wrote:I think it was about money, he had a few posts raging against materialism, hypocrisy, etc. I think he fixated negatively on Donor See or on the deceased.
The wife has issued a statement.
https://twitter.com/RamirezReports/status/1542185653370224641
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This guy clearly envied the victim’s life. Perhaps he wanted to work with Glyer. My guess is that victim was polite but got weirded out and distanced himself from shooter. That’s likely when the obsessing and anger kicked in. I don’t think victim did anything wrong, just got into the crosshairs of a mentally ill person with a gun. The question is whether the shooter was diagnosed and if any laws could have prevented this. I don’t think so. If there’s no formal diagnosis, any proposed law wouldn’t have stopped this. This is why preventing mentally I’ll from purchasing firearms is difficult. Most are likely undiagnosed even if the average person can see it.
Oh here we go with the mentally ill narrative.
The guy couldn't just be an evil degenerate?
PP here. He’s crazy and evil. You can be both. Mentally I’ll does not mean he’s innocent or should have our sympathy. He was crazy and evil as well.
On a separate note:
I can’t believe the misogyny of some on this board to still insist the wife is somehow involved even after the crazy, evil man is arrested.
There have been countless, countless threads in here about cases where the husband is immediately suspected, and perceived under a veil of suspicion. It’s the natural hypothesis in murder cases - looking at the spouse. This has nothing to do with misogyny, FFS.
Except that everything is misogynistic nowadays...
I thought everything was narcissistic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This guy clearly envied the victim’s life. Perhaps he wanted to work with Glyer. My guess is that victim was polite but got weirded out and distanced himself from shooter. That’s likely when the obsessing and anger kicked in. I don’t think victim did anything wrong, just got into the crosshairs of a mentally ill person with a gun. The question is whether the shooter was diagnosed and if any laws could have prevented this. I don’t think so. If there’s no formal diagnosis, any proposed law wouldn’t have stopped this. This is why preventing mentally I’ll from purchasing firearms is difficult. Most are likely undiagnosed even if the average person can see it.
Oh here we go with the mentally ill narrative.
The guy couldn't just be an evil degenerate?
PP here. He’s crazy and evil. You can be both. Mentally I’ll does not mean he’s innocent or should have our sympathy. He was crazy and evil as well.
On a separate note:
I can’t believe the misogyny of some on this board to still insist the wife is somehow involved even after the crazy, evil man is arrested.
There have been countless, countless threads in here about cases where the husband is immediately suspected, and perceived under a veil of suspicion. It’s the natural hypothesis in murder cases - looking at the spouse. This has nothing to do with misogyny, FFS.
Except that everything is misogynistic nowadays...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This guy clearly envied the victim’s life. Perhaps he wanted to work with Glyer. My guess is that victim was polite but got weirded out and distanced himself from shooter. That’s likely when the obsessing and anger kicked in. I don’t think victim did anything wrong, just got into the crosshairs of a mentally ill person with a gun. The question is whether the shooter was diagnosed and if any laws could have prevented this. I don’t think so. If there’s no formal diagnosis, any proposed law wouldn’t have stopped this. This is why preventing mentally I’ll from purchasing firearms is difficult. Most are likely undiagnosed even if the average person can see it.
Oh here we go with the mentally ill narrative.
The guy couldn't just be an evil degenerate?
PP here. He’s crazy and evil. You can be both. Mentally I’ll does not mean he’s innocent or should have our sympathy. He was crazy and evil as well.
On a separate note:
I can’t believe the misogyny of some on this board to still insist the wife is somehow involved even after the crazy, evil man is arrested.
There have been countless, countless threads in here about cases where the husband is immediately suspected, and perceived under a veil of suspicion. It’s the natural hypothesis in murder cases - looking at the spouse. This has nothing to do with misogyny, FFS.