Current:Home > NewsDocuments reveal horror of Maine’s deadliest mass shooting -TrueNorth Capital Hub
Documents reveal horror of Maine’s deadliest mass shooting
View
Date:2025-04-17 18:37:13
PORTLAND, Maine (AP) — Thousands of pages Maine Department of Public Safety documents released Friday include detailed descriptions of the chaos and carnage surrounding the state’s deadliest mass shooting.
Officers arrived at the two shooting scenes in Lewiston last October not knowing if the gunman was still there, and with living and dead victims on the floors. One officer described desperate survivors screaming for help as he searched for the shooter.
“They grab at our legs and try to stop us and we can not help them,” wrote Lewiston Officer Keith Caoueutte. “We have to walk by and continue to search and hope they are alive when we come back around.”
Another police officer’s first instinct was that an act of domestic terrorism had been committed, underscored by the heavy police presence and flashing blue lights. “I truly felt like we were at war,” Auburn Lt. Steven Gosselin wrote.
Their descriptions of the scenes at a bowling alley and a bar and grill where 18 people were killed and 13 others wounded were included in more than 3,000 pages of documents released Friday by Maine Department of Public Safety in response to Freedom of Access Act requests by The Associated Press and other news organizations.
Associated Press reporters had reviewed more than a third of the pages before the website with the documents crashed late Friday afternoon. State officials said documents will be made available again on Monday.
Among the details included in the report were the words from a note left behind by the gunman, 40-year-old Army reservist Robert Card, who wrote that he just wanted to “be left the (expletive) alone,” the Portland Press Herald reported. The note also contained his phone password and passwords needed to access his various accounts.
The gunman’s family and fellow Army reservists reported that he was suffering from a mental breakdown in the months leading up to the shooting Oct. 25, 2023. In the aftermath, the legislature passed new gun laws for Maine that bolstered the state’s “yellow flag” law, criminalized the transfer of guns to prohibited people and expanded funding for mental health crisis care.
Card’s body was found two days after the shooting in the back of a tractor-trailer on his former employer’s property in nearby Lisbon. An autopsy concluded he died by suicide.
The documents that were released Friday provided officers’ firsthand accounts of what they saw along with additional details of the massive search for Card and the investigation.
At the peak, the law enforcement presence was immense with 16 SWAT team and officers from 14 different agencies, along with eight helicopters and additional airplanes, and an underwater recovery team, wrote State Police Lt. Tyler Stevenson.
“I have experienced several large-scale manhunts in my career, but this was, by far, the largest manhunt I have been a part of,” he wrote.
Officers used lasers to map the shooting scenes, searched Tracfone purchases at a Walmart in the event Card had a “burner” cellphone and even retrieved data from the infotainment system of Card’s Subaru.
Police recovered hundreds of items of potential evidence from a number of locations, including bullet cartridges and fragments, phones, hair, fibers, swabs of a gas pedal, a handwritten letter, tomahawk knife, arrows, a hearing aid, broken eyeglasses, a blue sneaker, a black chain necklace, bean bags, miscellaneous military records, $255 in cash, and a night vision monocle.
The documents underscored the chaos as police officers poured into the region. In addition to the two crime scenes, police responded to unfounded reports of a gunman in a field near the shooting scene, at another restaurant and at a massive Walmart distribution center.
“I asked who was in charge and got no answer,” wrote Androscoggin County Deputy Jason Chaloux, describing the scene outside the bar.
Others described the horrific scenes inside. Cell phones ringing on bloodied tabletops, tablecloths and a pool table cover turned into makeshift stretchers.
“A quick scan of the building revealed blood and flesh scattered throughout the business,” Lewiston Detective Zachary Provost wrote of the bowling alley. “I also could smell the heavy odor of gunpowder mixed with burning flesh.”
Caoeutte, the Lewiston officer who responded to the bar and grill, said some witnesses yelled that the gunman was still in the building when he arrived while others said he already left. He told one man lying on the floor to “hang in there,” but by the time he returned to him, the man had died.
___
Ramer reported from Concord, New Hampshire. Associated Press writer Steve LeBlanc contributed from Boston.
veryGood! (6)
Related
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- Lil Wayne says Super Bowl 59 halftime show snub 'broke' him after Kendrick Lamar got gig
- Still adjusting to WWE life, Jade Cargill is 'here to break glass ceilings'
- Minnesota Twins release minor league catcher Derek Bender for tipping pitches to opponents
- Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
- 'We have to remember': World War I memorials across the US tell stories of service, loss
- Georgia’s lieutenant governor won’t be charged in 2020 election interference case
- Former President Barack Obama surprises Team USA at Solheim Cup
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- Should Dolphins QB Tua Tagovailoa retire? Hall of Famer Tony Gonzalez advises, 'It might be time'
Ranking
- Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
- Are California prisons stiffing inmates on $200 release payments? Lawsuit says they are
- Georgia’s governor says a program to ease college admission is boosting enrollment
- 'I'm shooketh': Person finds Lego up nose nearly 26 years after putting it there as kid
- Friday the 13th luck? 13 past Mega Millions jackpot wins in December. See top 10 lottery prizes
- Inside The Real Love Lives of the Only Murders in the Building Stars
- Tiger Woods undergoes another back surgery, says it 'went smothly'
- Lil Wayne feels hurt after being passed over as Super Bowl halftime headliner. The snub ‘broke’ him
Recommendation
Elon Musk's skyrocketing net worth: He's the first person with over $400 billion
Dancing With the Stars' Artem Chigvintsev Responds to Nikki Garcia’s Divorce Filing
Graceland fraud suspect pleads not guilty to aggravated identity theft, mail fraud
Michigan county can keep $21,810 windfall after woman’s claim lands a day late
Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
California pair convicted in Chinese birth tourism scheme
A tech company hired a top NYC official’s brother. A private meeting and $1.4M in contracts followed
Graceland fraud suspect pleads not guilty to aggravated identity theft, mail fraud