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Columbine report released | page 1, 2
In April 1998, Klebold made four entries
in Harris' yearbook. One referred
to "the holy April morning of NBK
[Natural Born Killers]." Another
includes
the lines "killing enemies, blowing up
stuff, killing cops!! My wrath for
January's incident will be godlike. Not
to mention our revenge in the
commons." The reports says investigators
believe the January incident
referred to their arrest for breaking
into a vehicle on Jan. 30, 1998.
The main bombs were set to go off in the
commons. The report says that those
bombs could have killed all 488 people
in the cafeteria. It also concludes that
the casualties were a fraction of the
number
intended chiefly because Harris and
Klebold were poor bomb makers. Harris made similar entries in Klebold's
1998 yearbook: "God I can't wait
till they die. I can taste the blood now
- NBK" [Natural Born Killer] ...
You know what I hate? ... MANKIND!!!!
... kill everything ... kill everything."
He also drew a gunman standing amid a
sea of dead bodies with a caption:
"The only reason your [sic] still alive
is because someone has decided to
let you live." Investigators also retrieved eight pages
Klebold apparently wrote and drew
just a day before the attack, discovered
in his notebook along with his
math homework. "About 26.5 hours from
now the judgment will begin," one
passage began. "Difficult but not
impossible, necessary, nervewracking and
fun.
What fun is life without a little death?
It's interesting, when i'm in
my human form, knowing i'm going to die.
Everything has a touch of
triviality to it." The report also seems to downplay the
significance of the Trench Coat Mafia,
another focal point of many of the
stories just after the shooting. It
states: "Although the investigation
identified Harris and Klebold as being
'members' of the TCM, it appears that
the Trench Coat Mafia was a loose,
social affiliation of former and current
Columbine High School students with no
formal organizational structure,
leadership or purpose such as that
typically found in traditional juvenile
street gangs. Contrary to reports
following the Columbine shootings, there
is no evidence of affiliated Trench Coat
Mafia groups nationwide." Previously, investigators had minimized
the pair's role in the group,
characterizing them as "fringe members."
In an exclusive interview with
Salon in September, Battan repeatedly
scoffed at the notion of any significant
association: "They were outcasts in
that!" she said. Some families were left unsatisfied and
angry after the report's release,
accusing the sheriff's office of
continuing to withhold crucial
information. Brian Rohrbough, whose son
Dan was killed in the attack,
characterized the report as full of lies
and contradictions in an interview on
the local CBS affiliate. "They want to
show it to be much more confusing than
it was," he said. "And they want to
build in a lot of excuses." "Certainly they're not going to tell the
truth," said Judy Brown at an
impromptu press conference when the
report was distributed. "People are
going to be so outraged when they hear
the truth." The Browns alerted
officials to Harris' death threats and
Web site months before the attack,
and play a key role in several of the
families' lawsuits. They have begun
the process for a recall of Sheriff
John Stone. Brown's son escaped unharmed from
the school the day of the assault. "If you're preparing for a lawsuit, one
of the most major lawsuits in the
United States, and you have all the
information, do you think you're going
to give everything out?" Brown's husband,
Randy, added. "I think you're going to
release the best version of this that's
going to do best for your lawsuit." The report reiterated several statements
repeated frequently by
investigators: It ruled out a third
gunman or conspirator, said Harris and
Klebold hoped to kill hundreds and
concluded that a failed bomb outside the
school was
intended to divert police longer. "The
failure of the cafeteria bombs to
detonate and the arrival of responding
officers apparently caused the gunmen
to reevaluate their planned attack,
since they had never listed the school
library as a destination point," it
said. It explained the third-gunman confusion
as coming both from Harris' removing
his trench coat quickly and the sighting
of a "shooter" on the roof who
turned out to be an air-conditioning
repairman. Sheriff's officials refused to comment
on the report, citing the pending
litigation brought by several families.
Copies of the report will be available
to the public, beginning Tuesday, for
$12 plus tax and shipping. They can be
ordered by phone at (720) 317-1131, fax
at (720) 449-7553 or e-mail at
Columbine@wcox.com.
- - - - - - - - - - - - Sound off Related Salon stories After Columbine Read Salon's full coverage of the ongoing debate over gun control, the
Internet, music, race and adolescent alienation.
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