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Learn Chinese - Police: No motive in Va. Tech shootings

WORLD / America

Police: No motive in Va. Tech shootings

(AP)
Updated: 2007-04-25 16:41

BLACKSBURG, Va. - Computer files, cell phone records and e-mails have
yielded no evidence about what triggered Seung-Hui Cho's massacre at
Virginia Tech last week and whether he hand-picked his 32 victims.

Relatives grieve for Juan Ramon Ortiz, one of 32 people gunned down at
Virginia Tech University last week, during his funeral, at a cemetery in
Bayamon, Puerto Rico, Tuesday April 24, 2007. [AP]

In an interview Tuesday with The Associated Press, State Police
Superintendent Col. W. Steven Flaherty said authorities have found no
evidence that could begin to explain the massacre that ended when Cho
took his own life.

Authorities also have no link between the 23-year-old loner and his
victims.

"We certainly don't have any one motive that we are pursuing at this
particular time, or that we have been able to pull together and
formulate," Flaherty said. "It's frustrating because it's so personal,
because we see the families and see the communities suffering, and we see
they want answers."

Flaherty spoke to the AP after spending the day in meetings with
investigators to prepare for a Wednesday news conference about what
authorities have uncovered.

Flaherty, who is overseeing the investigative team looking at the
shootings, said police also have been unable to answer one of the case's
most vexing questions: Why the spree began at the West Ambler Johnston
dorm, and why 18-year-old freshman Emily Hilscher was the first victim.

Police have searched Hilscher's e-mails and phone records looking for a
link. While Flaherty would not discuss exactly what police found, he said
neither Cho's nor Hilscher's records have revealed a connection.

Flaherty said there was also no link to 22-year-old senior Ryan Clark,
who was also killed at the dorm. Nor do investigators know why Cho, an
English major, selected Norris Hall - a building that is home primarily
to engineering offices - to culminate his attack. Cho killed 30 people
there before taking his own life.

Frustrating their effort, Flaherty said, is the fact that Cho revealed
himself to so few people. Even family members have said they rarely heard
him speak.

"I guess the thing that is most startling to me, I say startling,
surprising, is a young man who's 23 years old, that's been here for a
while, that seemed to not know anybody," he said.

Gov. Timothy M. Kaine said Tuesday he may be able to close a loophole
that allowed Cho to buy guns. Federal law bars the sale of guns to people
who have been judged mentally defective. But it is up to states to report
their legal proceedings to the federal government for inclusion in the
database used to do background checks on prospective gun buyers.

In Cho's case, a special justice ordered outpatient psychiatric
counseling for him in 2005 after determining he was a danger to himself.
But because Cho was never committed to a mental hospital, that order was
never entered in the database.

Kaine, a Democrat, said in a radio interview that he may be able to
tighten that reporting requirement by issuing an executive order.

The governor met with Korean-American leaders to assure them that
Virginians do not hold people of Korean descent responsible for the
tragedy. Cho was a South Korean immigrant who came to the US at about age
8 and was raised in suburban Washington.

"I can assure you that no one in Virginia - no one in Virginia - views
the Korean community as culpable in this incident in the least degree,"
Kaine said.

He said state officials will watch for any reprisals against Korean
Americans but that none have been reported.

The Virginia Korean leaders asked Kaine to boost mental-health funding
for immigrants and their families.

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