Slideshow by photo servicesNikolas Jacob Cruz took an
Uber to get to Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, where he shot up
several classrooms with a high-powered rifle before escaping and
managing to evade officers for more than hour, Florida authorities said
Thursday.
Once he was on the loose, Cruz eluded officers long
enough to stop by a
Walmart and a McDonald's before he was captured and
confessed everything, according to law enforcement officials and court
documents.
The account was the first detailed picture of one of
the nation's most deadly school shootings, in which 17 people were
killed and 14 others wounded.
Cruz, 19, was being held without bond on 17 counts of first-degree premeditated murder in the attack at Douglas High in Parkland, which expelled him last year for disciplinary reasons, according to officials and court documents.
According
to a booking affidavit filed Thursday by the Broward County Sheriff's
Office, "Cruz stated that he was the gunman who entered the school
campus armed with a AR-15 and began shooting students that he saw in the
hallways and on the school grounds. Cruz stated that he brought
additional loaded magazines to the school campus and kept them hidden in
a back pack until he got on campus to begin his assault."
The
sheriff's office said he got to the school by ordering a ride from Uber.
Deputies tracked down the driver, who said she dropped Cruz off at 2:19
p.m. ET, toward the end of the school day, according to the booking
affidavit.
Sheriff Scott Israel told reporters at a news
conference Thursday afternoon that the driver didn't know what her
passenger was planning and was completely blameless.
Within
barely two minutes of being dropped off, Cruz had started firing into
four classrooms in Building 12, returning to two of them to shoot again,
Israel said.
Cruz then went upstairs to the second floor, where
he shot one of his victims, before proceeding to the third floor, which
is where he ditched his rifle and backpack, Israel said.
He then ran down the stairs and outside, where he blended in with
hundreds of terrified students — many of them his former classmates —
and eluded officers as he left campus, Israel said.
Amid the chaos
he'd left behind at the school, Cruz made his way to a Walmart store,
bought a drink at its Subway restaurant and walked away again, Israel
said.
While police and sheriff's deputies frantically looked for
him — at least one witness at the school had identified him to arriving
investigators, according to the booking affidavit — Cruz went to a
McDonald's restaurant, were he lingered for a while before leaving on
foot, Israel said.
It took 40 more minutes after that for Coconut
Creek police to spot and detain Cruz in the nearby community of Coral
Springs at about 3:40 p.m., according to the timeline Israel gave.
Contrary
to some media reports that Cruz may have been wearing a gas mask or
some sort of tactical or bulletproof vest, Israel said he didn't believe
that was true.
Neither
Israel nor the booking affidavit addressed a possible motive. Asked
whether Cruz was associated with the white nationalist movement, Israel
said, "It's not confirmed at this time."
Robert Lasky, special
agent in charge of the FBI's Miami office, confirmed reports that the
FBI's field office in Jackson, Mississippi, got a tip on Sept. 25 about a comment that had been posted to a YouTube account by someone with the username "nikolas cruz": "I'm going to be a professional school shooter."
The comment was first reported by BuzzFeed News.
Lasky
said that the comment — which YouTube later removed — offered no other
information and that the FBI was unable to positively identify the
commenter or to establish a link to South Florida at the time.
Israel
and Lasky also didn't go into detail about social media postings,
presumably made by Cruz, that the FBI said it was reviewing. Israel on
Wednesday described the postings only as "very disturbing."
Israel
asked for patience Thursday, saying local, state and federal
investigators had already interviewed more than 2,000 people.
"It's going to take a lot of time to sift through what was true, what was accurate and what's not," he said.
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