'I wanna be dead': Teen obsessed with Columbine posted dark thoughts online
(Editor’s note: paragraph 4 contains language that readers may find offensive.)
By Joseph Ax
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The Florida teenager whose purported fascination with the 1999 Columbine school massacre sparked a massive hunt for her this week appears to have kept an online journal peppered with violent imagery and awash in despair, anger and suicidal thoughts.
An online journal written by someone who identified herself as “Sol Pais” - the teenager who authorities said was found dead on Wednesday - included entries that alluded to “plans” that would lead to the author’s death, though they did not describe specific threats against others.
Law enforcement has not confirmed Pais is the author of the journal.
“Being alive is fucking overrated,” one entry reads, above a drawing of a handgun going off with the word “ready?” underneath. “I wanna be dead so fucking bad already,” another page from last September says.
Pais, 18, was found dead of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound on Wednesday, authorities said, days after she traveled to Denver from her home in Florida and bought a shotgun ahead of Saturday’s 20th anniversary of the Columbine High School shooting in Littleton, Colorado. [nL1N21Z0U3]
Authorities had described Pais as “extremely dangerous” and “infatuated” with the mass shooting, in which two students killed 12 classmates and a teacher. She made undisclosed threats, officials said, prompting numerous Denver-area schools to close on Wednesday as a precaution.
In an entry dated July 2018, the woman described a dream about her future plans.
“I was only a week away from the day, and I had my fucking shotgun already, and I just remember the constant lies - to my family, friends, police, to teachers,” she said in recounting the dream.
A drawing of what appears to be the barrel of a shotgun and a shotgun shell appears below the entry.
“One year is a long time for pain like this,” she wrote in another 2018 entry. “I wish I could get a gun by the end of the summer.”
A user on the National Gun Forum used the same screen name as the blog’s author in a series of posts starting in late March seeking advice on how an 18-year-old Florida resident could buy a shotgun in Colorado.
“I am planning a trip to Colorado in the next month or so and wanna buy a shotgun while I’m there and I was wondering what restrictions apply for me?” the first post read.
Pais lived in Surfside, Florida, where her parents reported her missing on Monday. That day, she flew to Denver, according to authorities, and purchased a shotgun and ammunition legally at a store in Littleton, not far from Columbine.
A man who identified himself as Pais’ father told the Miami Herald on Tuesday that he had lost contact with Pais.
“I think maybe she’s got a mental problem,” he said, the newspaper reported. “I think she’s gonna be okay.”
Classmates at Miami Beach Senior High School, where Pais was a student, described her as smart and unassuming, if somewhat socially awkward, the newspaper reported.
Reporting by Joseph Ax; Editing by Bill Berkrot
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