/ 22 November 2005

Mall shooting suspect: ‘Just follow the screams’

A man accused of a shooting spree at a crowded Washington state shopping mall told authorities to ”just follow the screams” when he called them shortly before opening fire with a pair of assault rifles, according to court documents.

Plans for making bombs and poison gas were later found after a search of the man’s car and bedroom, prosecutors said. Dominick Sergio Maldonado (20) was ordered held on $2-million bail after pleading innocent on Monday to multiple charges.

According to the court documents released on Monday, Maldonado told detectives he had been humiliated during a troubled childhood and that recent problems made him want to be ”heard.”

A text message to his ex-girlfriend minutes before the rampage said he was about to show the world his anger, the woman said.

Six people were injured, one critically, in Sunday’s attack.

Maldonado surrendered about four hours after he ducked into a music store and took four hostages, all of whom were released unharmed, authorities said.

In the documents, prosecutors said Maldonado, of Tacoma, denied intending to shoot anyone, but was trying to draw media attention.

Police said they got a call just before the melee erupted, with the caller saying he was armed with two assault rifles and about to start shooting. When the dispatcher asked the man where he was, he replied, ”Just follow the screams,” the papers said.

The documents said police searched Maldonado’s car and bedroom, finding a formula for making the deadly poison ricin, as well as bomb-making diagrams and materials, and body shooting targets.

Tiffany Robison (20) Maldonado’s ex-girlfriend, said in an interview broadcast on Monday on ABC television’s ”Good Morning America” that he sent her a text message shortly before noon reading: ”Today is the day that the world will know my anger.”

”I think honestly that he just wanted attention. It’s the sick attention that he wanted,” Robison told ABC. They had broken up months earlier ”because of an issue with a drug,” she said.

Her mother, Mary Simon (47) of Tacoma, said she was at home when her daughter got the troubling cellphone text message.

”When she got the message, she freaked out and took it very seriously,” Simon told The Associated Press by telephone from her home on Monday. ”And then when she heard about the shooting, she knew in an instant that it was him.”

Later, Robison got a call from Maldonado at the mall during the shooting spree and hostage stand-off.

”He just said, ‘Well, I just shot up the mall, and I’m busy now. I’m still in the Sam Goody,”’ Simon said.

Of the couple’s breakup, Simon said her daughter told her Maldonado had ”made a lot of changes and said a lot of things that spooked her, and so she broke it off. He was reaching out for help and nobody was listening, was what she said.”

Maldonado was charged with eight counts of first-degree assault, four counts of kidnapping, and two counts of unlawful possession of a firearm.

One person remained hospitalised in a critical condition on Monday, a hospital spokesperson said. No details on the others injured were immediately released. – Sapa-AP