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May 16, 2000 | The central focus of the package is a
minute-by-minute timeline describing the
events of April 20, 1999, in great
detail. It dramatically collapses the
amount of time the massacre took to
unfold, claiming gunmen Eric Harris and
Dylan Klebold only spent seven and a
half minutes in the library, killing 10
and wounding 12. "They carried more than
enough ammunition to kill all 56 people
in the library," it says, adding that
the 34 victims were killed or injured in
the first 16 minutes of the attack.
After the killing rampage, there were 33
minutes in which nobody was shot until
the gunmen killed themselves. The report provides the most
comprehensive profiles yet of the
killers, offering newly disclosed
passages from a variety of sources,
including
school essays, journals kept by both
killers and interviews with the killers'
parents. While some information was
known about Harris because of his
Web site, and passages from his journal published
by Salon, one of the biggest surprises
in the report is writings from
Klebold. Klebold's newly revealed
journal depicts him as depressed,
outcast, paranoid and suicidal. "I swear
-- like I'm an outcast, and everyone is
conspiring
against me," he wrote in 1997. He
mentions suicide repeatedly and in
November 1997 describes getting a gun
and going on a killing spree. His tone changed only briefly in
1997, during a period where he describes
his "first love." "It appeared that this
was an unrequited love," the report
says. "Throughout his journal, Klebold
named several girls he 'loves' but he
did not indicate that he ever actually
spoke to any of them. He even went so
far as to write letters to one girl but
it appears he never sent them
because they remained in his journal." Harris' journal doesn't begin until the
spring of 1998. The report
describes it as expressing Harris'
hatred of mankind and love of his own
anger, though it omits the journal's
opening line, which sets its tone: "I
hate the
fucking world." "There were also many common themes
throughout their writings. Harris and
Klebold both wrote of not fitting in,
not being accepted and their lack of
self-esteem. They reflected on natural
selection, self-awareness and their
feelings of superiority. They plotted
against all those persons who they
found offensive -- jocks, girls that
said no, other outcasts or anybody they
thought did not accept them. Most of
those teens were unaware that they had
ever offended Harris or Klebold." Klebold's journal provides evidence
confirming what investigators have been
saying for months: that Harris and
Klebold were both involved in the
planning of the attack. Shortly after
the shooting, media reports focused on
Harris as the mastermind, casting
Klebold as a somewhat reluctant
follower. The report also states that a
"hit list," generally attributed to
Harris, was created by both killers, and
puts the final
figure of people whom they listed as
disliking for various reasons at 67. It
does not reveal the names, though in
September, lead investigator Kate Battan told
Salon News that the list included some
unusual names, including Tiger Woods. Investigators had repeatedly said that
no one on the lists was killed or
injured, but the parents of Rachel Scott
strongly protested in December
that comments on the videotapes clearly
identified their daughter. The
report concedes that one person on the
list was "injured," but that the person was a
male. "There is no evidence that he was
specifically
targeted," the report says. | ||
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