New records show suspected FSU shooter had troubling fascination with hate groups
Records obtained by the Anti-Defamation League and shared with USA TODAY show the suspected Florida State University gunman held a fascination with Hitler, Nazis and other hate groups.
two former classmates said he shared far-right political views that they found troubling. The suspect was a registered Republican who regularly voted in elections, county records show. He repeatedly espoused white supremacist, alt-right views to the point where people were uncomfortable, and we had to ask him to leave,” Mr. Seybold said, adding that the discussions often became “Phoenix against just about everyone else,” with the suspect escalating arguments and seeming to thrive on the opposition. “He said Rosa Parks was in the wrong,” said Lucas Luzietti, 20, who was in a national government class with the suspect at Tallahassee State in the spring of 2023. “He strongly implied that Black people were ruining his neighborhood. He also said Joe Biden was an illegitimate president.” “Everyone in the class would look at each other, like, ‘Did he really just say that?’” Mr. Luzietti added. Both Mr. Seybold and Mr. Luzietti said in separate interviews that the suspect also talked about guns, saying that he liked them, had access to them and had used them.
しかもアメリカ側が間違えて課税しすぎたことを日本が指摘し、アメリカ側が返却すると言っていた取りすぎの関税も、まだアメリカ側ではまったく返却手続きが行われていない Officials in Washington have acknowledged the mistake and agreed to abide by the agreement on a 15% tariff, and to refund any excess import duties that were paid.