THE BEHREND BEACON Gunman shoots 4, killing 2, in Seattle by Daniel Vasquez and Brandon Bailey Knight-Ridder Newspapers November 04, 1999 SEATTLE A man in camouflage gear walks into a shipyard office and shoots four people, killing two, the day after a disgruntled employee blows away seven co-workers at a Xerox repair facility in Honolulu. Seattle police were still hunting for the shipyard gunman Wednesday night. His motive was unknown. And despite a spate of similar incidents around the country this year, experts say they are still the rare exception to an overall decline in violent crime na tionwide. But even as the homicide rate is dropping, some analysts believe there has been an uptick in the category of seemingly random mass shootings. Experts also say there are common threads to these terrifying episodes and perhaps even lessons that can pre vent them from occurring again."lt's not that these guys are spontaneous. They don't suddenly explode," said criminologist Jack Levin, director of the Brudnick Center on Violence at Boston's Northeastern University. "The truth is these are usually cold blooded executions. The killer typi cally sees himself as a victim of in justice who wants to get even." By late Wednesday, authorities still hadn't identified the Seattle gunman, believed to be in his 20s or 30s, who walked into a weathered three-story building on the north shore of Lake Union around 10:30 a.m. Witnesses said the man wore a baseball cap, sunglasses and an over coat over camouflage clothing. He didn't say anything as he shot four men with a 9mm handgun and then walked away. Police were using dogs, helicopters, boats and armored vehicles to search the gritty industrial and residential neighborhoods near the Northlake Shipyard building just a few miles from downtown Seattle. Public schools in the area were locked down, as city officials advised resi dents to stay inside and be careful. Larry Parrett, 44, left work to check his house, five blocks from the ship yard. "I came home to check for bro ken windows or anything suspicious," he said. "My girlfriend wanted me to stop by because she was afraid to come home" while the shooter was still at large. Peter Giles, the shipyard's 26-year-old manager and nephew of the owners, was pro nounced dead at the scene. Russell James Brisendine, a 43-year-old ma rine engineer, died in surgery after being shot three times in the chest and abdomen. A third victim was in criti cal condition with a gunshot wound The Microsoft decision The Washington Post It's hard to imagine how the find ings of fact handed down Friday evening by U.S. District Judge Tho mas Penfield Jackson could have been worse news for Microsoft or better news for the government's an titrust enforcers. Judge Jackson de clared that Microsoft possessed mo nopoly power in the market for Intel based personal computer operating systems, and that the company had leveraged this power in ways that harmed competitors and, more im portant, consumers. While Friday's ruling did not at tempt to apply any legal standards to the facts, the conduct Judge Jackson contends now has been proven by the government to, by any reasonable standard, constitute violations of the Killer of gay student avoids death penalty TMS Campus November 04, 1999 The 22-year-old man convicted of killing gay college student Matthew Shepard has avoided the death pen alty, prosecutors announced Thurs day. The judge sentenced Aaron McKinney, a roofer and high school WORLD AND NATION to the chest, while a fourth was treated for a gunshot wound to the arm. "This happened to some pretty nice guys," said Mark Jackson, who rents space in the shipyard building for his industrial painting company. lie said the shootings came "totally out of the blue. 1 can't imagine two people in an office can create enough anger in any body to get shot." The shootings here came one day af ter a disgruntled Xerox technician calmly killed seven people at his work place in Honolulu the worst mass murder in Hawaii's modern history. Byran Uyesugi, 40. later surrendered to police. Xerox officials say Uyesugi wasn't having any problems at work. But family members said Uyesugi, a 15-year employee of the company, had been ordered to attend anger manage ment sessions after he threatened a su pervisor in 1993. Relatives also report edly said Uyesugi was concerned he might be getting laid off. Workplace violence of all kinds has risen in recent years, according to fed eral statistics, and Levin said that's es pecially so for iolence against super visors or managers. - The number of bosses or supervisors killed by dis gruntled workers or ex-workers has doubled over the past decade," Levin said. In the Seattle case, witnesses said they didn't recognize the shooter as an employee. He could turn out to he a jealous lover, an angry customer or even a sloppy hold-up man. But when robbery or some other crime isn't in volved, experts say the typical mass killer is often a middle-aged man who's antitrust laws Judge Jackson's ruling seems to us, in the main, a reasonable reading of the evidence -- if one that is some- times too strident and ungenerous to Microsoft. Indeed, when the record of the case is aptly summarized, it is hard to escape the conclusion that Microsoft's dominant position is threatening to the health of competi tion in the software industry. Judge Jackson's opinion outlines, first, the evidence that the company controls an operating system mo nopoly -- chiefly that it can set prices without reference to competitors and that other operating systems control insignificant market share. This mo nopoly, the judge held, is protected by the number of applications that have been developed for the Windows platform and the inability of any pu dropout, to two life sentences to be served consecutively. Under Wyo ming law, however, he could've got ten the death penalty. McKinney was convicted of mur der Wednesday in the beating of gay college student Matthew Shepard by jurors. The jury of seven men and five women rejected the more serious been accumulating frustrations and feelings of alienation for years. "We have this false belief that these guys suddenly snap or go berserk," said James Alan Fox, former dean of Northeastern University's College of Criminal Justice. "It takes more than a single epsode to get to the point that you're that angry, that depressed, that you're willing to take the lives of Other people and sometimes your own life." Like Mark Barton. the Atlanta day trader who killed nine people and him self last July, or Buford Furrow, the former Aryan Nations security guard who killed a postal worker and shot up a Jewish community center in Los Angeles last August. Experts say that such Men Often blame others for their problems. And sometimes they're in spired by news reports or even fic tional accounts of similar events else where. In one Of the Worst mass shootings of the decade, George I lennard killed 23 people at a Luby's cafeteria in Killeen, Texas, in 1991. Afterward, according to Levin, police went to his home and found he'd been watching a \ ideotaped account of an earlier mass shooting at a McDonald's in San Ysidro, south of San Diego. "There can he a copy cat effect," agreed Allred Blumstein, direct o r of the National Consortium on Violence Research at Carnegie Mellon Univer sity. "The great majority of people who are exposed to violence in the media just don't react to it in any serious mat ter:" he added. "But it only takes a few tative competitor to succeed in the market without a similar, pre-exist ing base of applications. fudge Jackson then proceeded to detail the manner in which that mo nopoly was employed by Microsoft to stifle perceived threats to the company's dominance. This conduct included efforts to persuade Netscape not to compete for the browser mar ket on Windows. And, the judge con cluded that when that effort failed, Microsoft sought to force other corn panics to support Microsoft's Internet Explorer browsing software -- rather than Netscape's -- as a condition of cooperation from Microsoft that its operating system monopoly make es sential for so many companies. Sig nificantly, Judge Jackson found that Microsoft's browser and operating system were distinct products, inte- charge of first degree murder, which involves premeditation. Felony mur der, or murder committed during a felony crime, carries a possible death penalty. Kidnapping and robbery are felonies. Shepard was lured last year from a bar, lashed to a fence, bludgeoned in the head with a pistol and left to die on the cold prairie in a case NOVEMBER 12, 1999 people to react to it. For people who are right at the edge, a variety of things are enough to push them over... Another factor that makes today's mass shootings seem worse than ever is the high casualty rate in flicted by the greater firepower some gunmen have brought to bear, Blumstein said. The typical shooter has had access to semi-automatic or automatic weapons that fire rapidly and come with magazines large enough to carry numerous rounds. But even while acknowledging a statistical increase in random mass shootings -- as opposed to those involving robbery or attacks on fam ily members lflumstein argues that these are more isolated episodes than part of a larger societal prob lem. Fox, the former Northeastern dean, agreed. If there's been a nu merical increase. he said, it's not a strong statistical trend. "You can't presume that just be cause we've had several in a clus ter, that we're going to hell in a handbasket," Fox added. "We have more today than we did 30 years ago, hut we're not in an epidemic." Still, other experts say there are enough similarities for society to confront the issues that may fuel such violence. Employers need to he more com passionate in their handling of work ers. particularly those who are troubled or facing termination, said Robert Baron, a professor of man agement and psychology at Rensselaer Polytechnic University ho has sluchecl N.\ Olki)laCC VlOlenCe extensiveh Studies have found many work ers feel threatened by the increas ing pace of change in their jobs, along %1 t h the decline in longterm job security, Baron said. On a broader level, Levin said those who tend toward violence often feel alienated from their communities and diStrustful of institutions that are supposed 10 resol e problems peace fully such as the courts and so cial ser \ ice agencies. "We have to find ways of repair ing the credihility of our mainstream institutions," Levin said. As an ex ample, he suggested that hoth busi ness and government agencies bring back human telephone operators -- instead of bewildering voicemail systems so customers can feel that someone actually cares about their complaints. When people who are already on the margin begin to feel that no one cares about their problems, Levin added, some will turn to more extreme measures to find relief. grated for the purposes of squelch ing competitive threats despite the fact that the integration harmed consumers He also concluded that Microsoft attacked other companies' innova tions when it regarded them as po tential competitors to Windows as platforms for software develop ment. Judge Jackson's opinion should send a strong message to the com pany that it would do well to settle this litigation. The district judge who sits through a long trial is en titled to substantial deference on factual findings. In light of the strength of Judge Jackson's factual findings, that fact alone should jolt the company's resistance to dis cussing the sort of accommodations that would end the case. whose brutality led to demands for hate-crime laws across the coun try. The other man arrested, Russell Henderson, 22, pleaded guilty in April to kidnapping and murder and is serving two life sentences. Flight recorders and humans work hand in hand in crash probe by Don Phillips The Washington Post NEWPORT, R.I. -- Most people call them "black boxes, - but aircraft flight data recorders and cockpit voice recorders should he called magic boxes The two boxes from Egypt Air Flight 990, pinpointed Friday on the bottom of the Atlantic by the USS Grapple, may allow investigators from the National Transportation Safety Board to quickly learn the cause of a crash that so far remains a mystery. And the faster they know why 217 people died, the faster they can prevent a similar crash. If Flight 990's voice and data re corders contain usable information, investigators will know far more than just what the pilots said and did. They will know the pilots' emotional state, whether the plane responded as the pilots intended, and even whether or not the plane was hit by an explosion, and exactly what ex plosive was involved. Safety hoard investigators are of ten called "tin kickers," and it is true that an experienced investigator can often walk through a field of shred ded metal and broken bodies and read it like a hook. 13ut as new-generation airliners begin to dominate aviation, crash in vestigation has gone digital, creat- ing new opportunities to delve into a plane's secrets. Many computer chips in the cockpit and the engines have "nonvolatile memory" that can he deciphered alter a crash. But the plane's cockpit voice re corder and Bight data recorder are the mother lode. For most Of the history of corn- mercial aviation, recorders were relatively unsophisticated. Voice re • corders were hardly more than tape recorders, and data recorders ranged from rolls of tinfoil to analog instru ments capable of recording only a small number of parameters such as airspeed and altitude. Following the crash of USAir Flight 427 at Pittsburgh on Sept. 8, 1994, safety hoard Chairman Jim Hall began a crusade to force airlines -- as the Federal Aviation Adminis tration has since ordered -- to up grade flight data recorders because the Boeing 737's recorder had only 11 parameters and was of limited value. The Egypt Air flight data re corder, by contrast, contains 74 mea surements of airplane movements, control surface movements, control positions, altitude, aircraft speed, outside wind speed, engine operation and warning system activation. 'The cockpit voice recorder contains the last 30 minutes of cockpit sounds. They are the most protected piece of any jetliner. Modern record ers are no larger than a thick disk that easily fits in the palm of the hand. They are encased in plastic and sur rounded by electronic equipment that also serves as a buffer for the internal disk and are packed into an orange-colored container that can withstand crash forces and fires. The orange box "is basically a dust cover,'' said one investigator. Crash investigation is replete with examples of crashes solved by flight and voice recorders, some times by only one sound, one phrase or one electronic clue. On May 26, 1991, a Lauda Air Boeing 767 suddenly dived into the jungles of Thailand, crashing with such force that even the well-pro tected flight data recorder was de stroyed. But the cockpit voice re corder survived. On the voice recorder, just at the end, one pilot of the Austrian airliner said "thrust reverser" in German. That gave the tin kickers the clue about where to concentrate their at tention in the shredded wreckage of the first Boeing 767 to crash. The thrust reverser, a form of engine brake, had deployed in flight, setting up air currents that destroyed the lift on one wing and sent the plane flip- ping into a dive. On Feb. 6, 1996, a Birgen Air Boeing 757, carrying German tour ists, took off from the Dominican Re public. Within minutes, the pilots seemed to lose touch with reality and, in confusion, dived into 7,600 feet of ea water. Recovery of the plane and bod ies was not possible at that depth, but a remotely operated submarine re trieved the recorders. The plane fell for a simple reason: a blockage in the plane's pitot tube, a small probe that helps determine the plane's airspeed. The plugged pitot tube fed con fusing readings to the plane's instru ments, leaving the crew disoriented over the dark ocean. The value of the information from a flight data recorder is obvious. But the value of the cockpit voice re corder goes far beyond a mere record ing of pilot voices. A voice recorder gathers informa tion from four microphones, one next to each pilot, one in the instru ment console and an "area mike" that gathers sound overall. The console mike is sensitive to vibration in the plane's airframe, and since vibration travels through the airframe faster than sound will arrive at the other mikes, it is possible to pinpoint some loud sound -- such as an explosion -- by measuring the mi nuscule time difference between sound and vibration. Explosives leave distinctive sound patterns, allowing the safety board laboratory staff to determine whether dynamite, plastic explosive or something else was used. The final sound on the cockpit voice recorder of Trans World Air lines Flight 800 in 1996 initially stumped investigators because it fit no known explosive. Further work determined it was more eharadteris tic of the explosion of a fuel-air mix ture. The cause of the Boeing 747's breakup was a fuel tank explosion. Another mystery was the sound of two "thumps" on the voice re corder of USAir Flight 427 just as it rolled and dived into a hillside near Pittsburgh. Investigators knew that the plane ran into turbulent air in the wake of a plane flying four miles ahead, but that didn't necessarily ex plain two thumps. But when the safety board's re corder expert, James Cash, rode a test flight to determine the effect of such wakes on a Boeing 737, he heard the distinctive two thumps as the plane hit the wake at a certain angle. Another field of cockpit voice re corder research is to determine the emotional state of the crew and its performance. Pilots often speak in a deliberate monotone, but they are still subject to stress and fear. In the USAir 427 crash, investi gators used speech characteristics to gauge the crew's stress level, a tech nique pioneered by Russian aviation authorities, to estimate the force be ing applied by the crew to controls. Sometimes voice and data re- corders together can solve a mystery. In the May 1996 Valujet onboard fire and crash into the Everglades, a loud bang from the cargo hold was caught on the voice recorder but was not readily identifiable. At exactly the same moment on the flight data recorder, the plane ap peared to rapidly gain several dozen feet in altitude and just as rapidly de scend while sharply speeding up and then sharply slowing down, some thing physically impossible. The answer? A tire in the cargo hold had overheated in the fire and exploded. It created a brief pressure surge inside the airplane, affecting the altimeter and airspeed indicators. Voice and data recorders are only one part of a crash investigation. The safety board's laboratory also per forms metallurgical and other tests, and nothing has replaced the tin kicker for interviewing witnesses, collecting samples, studying damage patterns, reviewing maintenance records or making the final judgment of why people died. 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