Cops found cryptic writing and emblems in Phillip Adams home and think he could have been following a new RELIGION before the ex-NFL player killed six during gun rampage
After searching his home, detectives said Adams had been acting differently and was possibly following a new religion or ideology
Investigators uncovered notebooks with cryptic writing in the ex-athlete s room
Other items found include guns, ammunition, a computer and medicine bottles
Adams turned the gun on himself after shooting six in Rock Hill, South Carolina
Victims include prominent physician Dr. Robert Lesslie, 70, and his wife, Barbara Lesslie, 69, as well as grandchildren Adah Lesslie, 9, and Noah Lesslie, 5
Authorities say Adams fatally shot a renowned doctor and five others at a house in the Rock Hill area on 7 April. Adams was later found dead by a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
The 32-year-old allegedly opened fire on Dr Robert Lesslie, 70, his wife, Barbara Lesslie, 69, and their grandchildren Adah Lesslie, nine, and Noah Lesslie, five.
James Lewis, 38, was found dead outside the home, police said he was working for a company focusing on air conditioning, roof, and heating repair.
A sixth victim was hospitalised with “serious gunshot wounds” following the incident but died of his injuries at a local hospital following the incident, reports said.
Chris Nowinski has dedicated his career to CTE research and education.
Chris Nowinski is the CEO of the Concussion Legacy Foundation, an organization dedicated to concussion and Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy or CTE research and education. He also does outreach for Boston University to help recruit brain bank participants, which means calling families who recently lost loved ones to ask if they’d be willing to donate their brains for research. I do not like to make those calls, Nowinski said. I make those calls because we have to make those calls if we want to understand what s happening inside the brains of people who have taken thousands of head impacts and are changing.
ACLU Sues Private Citizen to Suppress Public Records Request in Washington State
WoLF is fighting the injunction, which aims to prevent the public from obtaining information about the number of male prisoners currently housed in women s prisons
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OLYMPIA, Wash., April 14, 2021 /PRNewswire/ The ACLU has filed a lawsuit against a private citizen for requesting public records from the Washington State Department of Corrections on the number of inmates in state custody who identify as transgender and the number of male inmates who are housed in women s facilities.
The citizen, a woman who has asked not to be named for her safety, submitted the public records request on March 18, 2021. She is now being represented by WoLF in responding to the lawsuit.