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Picture Begins to Emerge of Gunman Who Killed 10 at Austrian School

Picture Begins to Emerge of Gunman Who Killed 10 at Austrian School

New York Times2 days ago

The Austrian authorities on Thursday were attempting to piece together a full portrait of the apparently troubled young man who they say killed 10 people in the course of a shooting rampage at his former school this week, with scattered clues emerging in the course of their investigations.
Those details amplified concerns about how the man had been allowed to buy the guns he used to kill nine high school students and a teacher in the rampage, which has struck Austria to its core. The law requires prospective handgun owners to take a psychological test, which the gunman had passed.
A picture of the 21-year-old attacker, whose identity has not been revealed because of privacy laws in Austria, has been slowly emerging in the past two days from details provided by the authorities and from reports in local media.
Numerous news reports suggested that the assailant had been a loner with few friends, that he had been born in Austria and that he had been living with his Austrian-born mother in Kalsdorf, a small bedroom community just south of the Graz airport. The police have confirmed that they searched his mother's house there on Tuesday.
The police said that the gunman had failed twice to graduate from the high school he attacked on Tuesday. When officers stormed his apartment on Tuesday afternoon, they found a nonfunctioning pipe bomb and plans for another attack, the police said, without providing further details about any other targets.
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Reopening a 688-year-old murder case reveals a tangled web of adultery and extortion in medieval England
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Reopening a 688-year-old murder case reveals a tangled web of adultery and extortion in medieval England

The sun was setting on a busy London street on a May evening in 1337 when a group of men approached a priest named John Forde. They surrounded him in front of a church near Old St. Paul's Cathedral, stabbed him in the neck and stomach, and then fled. Witnesses identified his killers, but just one assailant went to prison. And the woman who might have ordered the brazen and shocking hit — Ela Fitzpayne, a wealthy and powerful aristocrat — was never brought to justice, according to historical records describing the case. Nearly 700 years later, new details have come to light about the events leading up to the brutal crime and the noblewoman who was likely behind it. Her criminal dealings included theft and extortion as well as the murder of Forde — who was also her former lover. Forde (his name also appeared in records as 'John de Forde') could have been part of a crime gang led by Fitzpayne, according to a recently discovered document. 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Years later, she exacted her revenge by having Forde assassinated, according to lead study author Dr. Manuel Eisner, a professor at the UK's University of Cambridge and director of its Institute of Criminology. This 688-year-old murder 'provides us with further evidence about the entanglement of the clergy in secular affairs — and the very active role of women in managing their affairs and their relationships,' Dr. Hannah Skoda, an associate professor of medieval history in St. John's College at the UK's Oxford University, told CNN in an email. 'In this case, events dragged on for a very long time, with grudges being held, vengeance sought and emotions running high,' said Skoda, who was not involved in the research. The new clues about Forde's murder provide a window into the dynamics of medieval revenge killings, and how staging them in prestigious public spaces may have been a display of power, according to Eisner. 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The archbishop's accusation assigned severe punishments and public penance to Fitzpayne, such as donating large sums of money to the poor, abstaining from wearing gold or precious gems, and walking in her bare feet down the length of Salisbury Cathedral toward the altar, carrying a wax candle that weighed about four pounds. She was ordered to perform this so-called walk of shame every fall for seven years. Though she seemingly defied the archbishop and never performed the penance, the humiliation 'may have triggered her thirst for revenge,' the study authors wrote. The second clue that Eisner unearthed was a decade older than the letter: a 1322 investigation of Forde and Fitzpayne by a royal commission, following a complaint filed by a French Benedictine priory near the Fitzpayne castle. The report was translated and published in 1897 but had not yet been connected to Forde's murder at that point. 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One Oxford record describes 'scholars on a rampage with bows, swords, bucklers, slings and stones.' Another mentions an altercation that began as an argument in a tavern, then escalated to a mass street brawl involving blades and battle-axes. But even though medieval England was a violent period, 'this absolutely does NOT mean that people did not care about violence,' Skoda said. 'In a legal context, in a political context, and in communities more widely, people were really concerned and distressed about high levels of violence.' The Medieval Murder Maps project 'provides fascinating insights into the ways in which people carried out violence, but also into the ways in which people worried about it,' Skoda said. 'They reported, investigated and prosecuted, and really relied on law.' Fitzpayne's tangled web of adultery, extortion and assassination also reveals that despite social constraints, some women in late medieval London still had agency — especially where murder was concerned. 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