Ariz. suspect's parents: 'We don't know why this happened'.

TUCSON, Ariz. — In his own way, Jared Loughner did try to fit
in.
Before everything fell apart, the 22-year-old went through the
motions as many young men do nowadays: Living at home with
his parents, working low-wage jobs at big brand stores and
volunteering time doing things he liked.
None of it worked.
His relationship with his parents was strained. He clashed with
co-workers and police. And he couldn't follow the rules at an
animal shelter where he spent some time.
Now, he could be facing death. He is accused of trying to
assassinate Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, killing six people and injuring
13 others in a weekend shooting rampage in Tucson.
Story: Arizona shooting victims
And for all of it, his parents, silent and holed up in their home,
apologized Tuesday.
"There are no words that can possibly express how we feel,"
they wrote in a statement handed to reporters waiting outside
their house. "We wish that there were, so we could make you
feel better. We don't understand why this happened.
"We care very deeply about the victims and their families. We are
so very sorry for their loss."
The apparent target of the shooting spree, Giffords, 40, was able
to breathe on her own Tuesday at an intensive care unit here,
another hopeful sign of her progress, doctors said.
Devastation
Meanwhile, the southern Arizona city shattered by the rampage
prepared for an evening memorial service and a visit from
President Barack Obama on Wednesday.
The details of Loughner's life emerged in interviews with people
who knew his family and co-workers. Some said his relationship
with his parents was strained.
Friends of Jared Loughner told The New York Times that his
behavior had become increasingly erratic over the past year. He
feared that two of his closest friends were planning to kill him,
one of those friends told the Times on Tuesday.
“He did not have many friends,” Zane Gutierrez, 21, told the
newspaper. “We stopped talking to him in March of 2010. He
started getting weird.”
He said Loughner would call at 2 a.m. and ask, “Are you hanging
out in front of the house, stalking me?”
“He thought we were plotting to kill him or steal his car or
something,” Gutierrez said. “It got worse over time.”
The parents of another close friend recalled how Loughner's
parents showed up at their doorstep in 2008 looking for their
son, who had left home about a week before and broken off
contact.
While the friend, Zach Osler, didn't want to talk with The
Associated Press, his parents Roxanne and George Osler IV did.
With the Loughners at their house, Zach Osler told them the
name of the local hotel where their only child was staying, Zach's
father said. Jared moved back in, he said.
After that, Osler's dad sometimes would see Mrs. Loughner at
the local supermarket, though they didn't chat much. He recalled
that every time he saw her she had at least one 30-pack of beer
in her cart.
'Craved attention'
Loughner, now 22, would come over several times a week from
2007 to 2008, the Oslers said.
Story: Arizona suspect could face death penalty
The boys listened to the heavy metal band Slipknot and
progressive rockers The Mars Volta, studied the form of
meditative movement called tai chi, and watched and discussed
movies.
Loughner's favorites included little-known conspiracy theory
documentaries such as "Zeitgeist" and "Loose Change" as well as
bigger studio productions with cult followings and themes of
brainwashing, science fiction and altered states of consciousness,
including "Donnie Darko" and "A Scanner Darkly."
Even in small talk, he struck the Oslers as unusual.
"He always said, 'Hi, Mrs. Osler. How are you today?' When he
left he made a point of coming over and saying, 'Thank you for
having me over,'" said Roxanne Osler, noting that was not typical
for Zach's friends. "Jared struck me as a young man who craved
attention and acceptance."
Once he shared with the Oslers a short story he had written
about a reporter meeting an angel during the apocalypse.
George Osler IV read it, thought it was well written, but couldn't
identify the point.
"He seemed like he was kind of offended that I didn't get the
message," George Osler said.
'He didn't get it'
Meanwhile, the unfailingly polite kid they knew was getting into
trouble.
Loughner was arrested in October 2008 on a vandalism charge
near Tucson after admitting that he vandalized a road sign with a
magic marker, scrawling the letters "C" and "X" in a reference to
what he said was Christianity.
The police report said Loughner admitted to other acts of
vandalism in the area.
The case was ultimately dismissed after he paid a $500 fine and
completed a diversion program.
Even when Loughner tried to do good, it didn't work out.
A year ago, he volunteered walking adoptable dogs at the county
animal shelter, said Kim Janes, manager of the Pima Animal Care
Center. He liked dogs; neighbors remember him as the kid they
would see walking his own.
At the shelter, staff became concerned: He was allowing dogs to
play in an area that was being disinfected after one had
contracted a potentially deadly disease, the parvovirus.
"He didn't think the disease was that threatening and when we
tried to explain how dangerous some of the diseases are, he
didn't get it," Janes said.
He wouldn't agree to keep dogs from the restricted area, and was
asked to come back when he would. He never returned.
Loughner also jumped from paid job to job because he couldn't
get along with co-workers, according to the close high school
friend who requested anonymity. Employers included a Quiznos
sandwich shop and Banana Republic, the friend said.
On his application at the animal shelter, he listed customer service
work at Eddie Bauer.
Loughner grew up on an unremarkable Tucson block of low-
slung homes with palm trees and cactus gardens out front.
Fittingly, it's called Soledad Avenue — Spanish for solitude.
Solitude found Loughner, even when he tried to escape it. He had
buddies but always fell out of touch, typically severing the
friendship with a text message. Zach Osler was one such friend.
Loughner's father moved into the house as a bachelor, and
eventually got married, longtime next-door neighbor George
Gayan said. Property records show Randy Loughner has lived
there since 1977.
Gayan said he and Randy Loughner had "differences of opinion
but nothing where it was radical or violent." He declined to
provide specifics. "As time went on, they indicated they wanted
privacy," Gayan said.
Unlike other homes on the block, the Loughners' is obscured by
plants. It was assessed in 2010 at $137,842.
'Coming to get you'
Randy Loughner apparently has not worked for years — at least
outside his home. He did fix up cars. Gayan said he had three
"show cars" and two of Jared Lougher's friends said he bought a
junker '69 orange Chevrolet Nova and made it pristine.
Amy Loughner got a job with the county parks and recreation
department just before Jared was born, and since at least 2002
has been the supervisor for Roy P. Drachman Agua Caliente Park
on the outskirts of the city. She earns $25.70 an hour, according
to Gwyn Hatcher, Pima County's human resources director.
"She's worked hard, done a good job of keeping it looking good,"
said Charles Ford, a former Tucson City Council member who is
a board member of Friends of Agua Caliente Park.
Linda McKinley, 62, has lived down the street from the Loughner
family for decades and said the parents could not be nicer — but
that she had misgivings about Jared as he got older.
"As a parent, my heart aches for them," she said.
She added that when she was outside watering her plants she
would see Jared riding down the street on his bike, often talking
to himself or yelling out randomly to no one.
Once he yelled to some children on the street: "I'm coming to get
you!" McKinley said.


Source: Http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/41014125/ns/us_news-crime_and_courts/

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