-Caveat Lector-

Another incident of mind control terrorism? The suspect in this case
(Jason W. Pritchard) has been described as 'mentally ill' and a
'schizophrenic' -- as usual !!

"This man, something was wrong with him...He was threatening everybody.
He came towards us a couple of times....He was rambling and saying
religious stuff, stuff that made no sense."


==========


Four children stabbed in Anchorage elementary school, suspect in custody

Anchorage Daily News and Associated Press

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (May 7, 2001 3:47 p.m. EDT http://www.nandotimes.com)
- Four children were stabbed by a man at Mountain View Elementary School
in Anchorage this morning. The alleged assailant was later subdued by
police. Initial reports were that the children were stabbed in the neck.
The victims were rushed to two local hospitals. One was reported in
critical condition and undergoing surgery at Providence Alaska Medical
Center and another was in serious condition there, a hospital
spokeswoman said.

Two other children were being treated at Alaska Regional Hospital,
although their conditions were not immediately available. The suspect
also was being treated at Alaska Regional after being shot with rubber
bullets by police, according to police spokesman Ron McGee. The
stabbings apparently occurred in the school playground before classes,
police said.

Police shot the suspect with three rubber bullets as he fled inside the
school, police said. Inside, teachers surrounded him until police took
him into custody. The stabbing occurred around 8:15 a.m. shortly before
classes were to begin.

Classes were dismissed for the day, and students were bused to nearby
Tyson Elementary, where parents can pick them up. Evette Carmack rushed
to the school from her job at Alaska Regional Medical Center, still
dressed in green scrubs. She has two children at the school, fifth
grader Christopher and second-grader Jasmine. She said she came as soon
as she'd heard about the shooting.
"I came from Chicago to get away from all this," Carmack said. "To get a
better life for my kids."


----------

Deranged Man Stabs 4 Kids at Elementary School in Alaska

Monday, May 07, 2001

ANCHORAGE, Alaska — A man who rambled and said "stuff that made no
sense" stabbed four children at an elementary school Monday before he
was subdued by police, authorities and witnesses said. The children were
stabbed in the neck, but their injuries did not appear to be
life-threatening, Anchorage Police Department spokesman Ron McGee said.
The victims were rushed to two hospitals.

The stabbing happened shortly before classes were to begin at Mountain
View Elementary School. McGee said about 20 pupils witnessed the attack.
Police shot the suspect, described as a man in his 30s, with three
rubber bullets and took him into custody inside the school. He was also
taken the hospital for treatment of the bullet wounds.

Randy Smith, chairman of the local community patrol, was among the first
to arrive on the scene. He found the suspect in a classroom with a
teacher and an injured boy. "He was threatening everybody. He came
towards us a couple of times. We kept him from getting out of the
classroom," Smith said. "He was rambling and saying religious stuff,
stuff that made no sense."

----------


http://www.adn.com/nation/story/0,2360,264641,00.html


Accused attacker has history of offenses, mental disorders,
self-mutilation.


By Molly Brown
Anchorage Daily News

(Published May 8, 2001)

The man accused of stabbing four elementary school students has been
talking for years about killing children while they're young, before
they grow up and become sinful, according to testimony by two
psychologists during a 1999 court hearing. Jason W. Pritchard, 33, has a
long history of run-ins with police in Anchorage and elsewhere in
Southcentral Alaska and of harassing children on school grounds. Court
files detail a history of serious psychological problems, including
treatment at the Alaska Psychiatric Institute, but authorities in the
past reported trouble finding out much about him.

Two years ago, prosecutors reported that Pritchard was originally from
Oregon, though they couldn't find any relatives there or here, and
Pritchard has given a long list of home addresses in Alaska in recent
years, including one at a counseling center and group home. Police on
Monday said he appeared to be living in a car.

Pritchard was diagnosed with schizophrenia -- a mental disorder
characterized by a separation of thought from emotions -- and a brain
disorder brought on by a suicide attempt in 1998, according to Dr. David
Sperbeck, a forensics psychologist who testified at the February 1999
hearing. That attempt to hang himself while at the Wildwood Correctional
Center put him on life support for a while.

Sperbeck said Pritchard was sullen, depressed and basically nonverbal.
He suffers from religious delusions that stem from the schizophrenia,
Sperbeck testified, and at some point Pritchard mutilated himself by
removing his genitalia. "He has been focused on his desire to get into
heaven," Sperbeck testified. "He's got a multitude of spiritual
delusions, and it has caused him to be suicidal and homicidal."

Sperbeck's testimony came at Pritchard's sentencing for a December 1998
criminal trespass in which Pritchard, a self-proclaimed excommunicated
Jehovah's Witness, walked into Kingdom Hall in Anchorage during a
service and urged churchgoers to commit suicide with him so they all
could go to heaven, according to the charges.

After that incident, Sperbeck said, Pritchard repeatedly discussed his
desire to kill children. Sperbeck urged the court to require 24-hour
supervision and said while therapeutic medication made Pritchard
competent to stand trial, it didn't curb his delusions. At the same
hearing, another psychologist, Dr. Lawrence Maile, said Pritchard had
exhibited his dangerous tendencies over a long period. Sometimes he
planned his actions and other times he just acted out, Maile said.

Pritchard did not believe he was mentally ill. Pritchard's illness
didn't affect his intelligence, and he was good at keeping his homicidal
tendencies hidden from doctors, according to city prosecutor Carmen
ClarkWeeks, who was trying to keep Pritchard in jail. He preferred to be
sent to Alaska Psychiatric Institute, ClarkWeeks said, because he had
been there before and had walked away.

He also had refused to take his medication at API and wouldn't eat while
in jail, according to testimony. In the past, he was uncooperative and
refused to get dressed while in jail, missing several court appearances
because he was naked, according to court files.

At the hearing in February 1999, Judge Stephanie Rhoades sentenced
Pritchard to 130 days for trespass, a relatively minor misdemeanor,
enough time for the Department of Corrections to seek an involuntary
commitment to API if corrections officials chose to. The Anchorage court
record is silent on what happened next, until Pritchard showed up Monday
at Mountain View Elementary School with a filet knife.

Pritchard has lurked around school grounds before. In 1998, he was
convicted of second-degree stalking, a misdemeanor, after a series of
incidents at schools in Homer. He was first reported entering the junior
high school and talking to students about sex. A parent, Stephanie
Migdal, said Monday she complained to school officials after her
daughter told her Pritchard had touched the hands of several girls.

ClarkWeeks said Pritchard was reading the Bible to the children in Homer
and talking to them about appropriate sexual behavior. He wasn't
interested in sexual activity with the children, she said. Homer police
warned Pritchard to stay away from schools, but Pritchard had already
become fixated on a 14-year-old boy, ClarkWeeks said. He followed the
boy home "like a lost puppy," she said.
In the Homer case, Pritchard was sentenced to 120 days in jail and five
years' probation and was forbidden from having unsupervised contact with
minors, according to the Homer court file.

In 1998, Pritchard was convicted of assault, criminal mischief and
trespass for an incident at a rooming house, according to court files.
Pritchard was hanging out with his brother and a female and at some
point threatened his companions and beat his head, shoulders and face
against the wall, according to court testimony. He broke the glass
protecting a fire extinguisher and threatened the hotel proprietor while
he tried to cut himself, ClarkWeeks said.

Pritchard's record also includes a failure to appear in court in 1998,
three 1997 trespass convictions, 1996 reckless driving, drunken driving
in 1995 and 1996, and driving without a license in 1994, ClarkWeeks
said. ClarkWeeks told a judge in 1999 that she tried to locate
Pritchard's family by phoning all the Pritchards listed in the Kenai
Peninsula phone book but couldn't find any relatives. Pritchard is from
Eugene, Oregon, she said, but she couldn't find friends or family
members there. Pritchard listed Eastside Carpet as his employer, she
said, but it was a business he owned.

On Monday, officials said it appeared Pritchard had recently been living
out of his car, which police impounded and searched at the corner of
Irwin Street and McPhee Avenue, two blocks from the school. Police
didn't say what was found in the car. Over the past year, Pritchard
listed addresses in Anchorage and Anchor Point. One Anchorage location,
512 E. 15th Terrace, is the Aurora Lodge group home. A resident
contacted there Monday said Pritchard was no longer living there.

The other address, 2735 E. Tudor Rd., is an office of Southcentral
Counseling Center, a nonprofit community mental health service. Ken
Taylor, executive director, said he could not confirm whether Pritchard
had been treated at Southcentral, citing patient confidentiality.

[Reporter Molly Brown can be reached at [EMAIL PROTECTED] or 257-4343.
Reporters Lucas Wall and Tom Kizzia contributed to this story. They can
be reached at [EMAIL PROTECTED] and [EMAIL PROTECTED] ]


------------


http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/nm/20010507/ts/crime_stabbing_dc_5.html


Monday May 7 7:49 PM ET
(Updates with New Information)

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (Reuters) - A 33-year-old homeless man stabbed four
boys in the neck at an elementary school on Monday while rambling
incoherently before he was shot by officers firing rubber bullets and
arrested, police said.  All of the boys, who ranged in age from 8 to 10,
were taken to a local hospital for treatment, where one was listed in
critical condition and the other three were in serious condition. Two of
the boys were brothers.

Police charged Jason Pritchard, 33, who had reportedly been living in
his car, with four counts of first degree assault and four counts of
attempted murder. He was being held on $2 million bail.  A police
spokesman said Pritchard had a ``fairly extensive'' criminal record, and
stormed into Mountain View Elementary School, rambling incoherently, and
stabbed the boys in the neck.
Some of the children were outside in a school yard receiving breakfast
when the attacks took place, the spokesman said.

``We know the situation was dynamic and part of it occurred outside,''
the Anchorage police deputy said. Keith Lacek, an 11-year-old student at
Mountain View, said Pritchard had been hanging around the school in
recent days. But school superintendent Carol Comeau said she ``had not
heard that.'' A spokeswoman for the Anchorage School District said
classes at the school were canceled for the rest of the day and Tuesday.
Additional security measures were to be discussed at a school board
meeting on Monday night.


=========


http://www.adn.com/nation/story/0,2360,264643,00.html


Slasher wounds kids
Knife-wielding assailant brings morning of terror to Mountain View

By Doug O'harra, Lisa Demer And Elizabeth Manning
Anchorage Daily News

(Published May 8, 2001)
A man who told one victim "Get ready to meet your maker" attacked
children with a fillet knife early Monday morning at Mountain View
Elementary School, slashing and seriously injuring four young boys
before he was cornered by teachers and disarmed by police. The attack
sent some children screaming into the school and others fighting to
protect their classmates. It ended minutes later with dozens of children
locked in rooms guarded by teachers.

A teacher confronted the assailant in a classroom and used a desk and
then a plastic bin to keep the man off a wounded, sobbing boy who lay
bleeding on the floor, according to a witness. The boy "was crying and
talking, saying 'Please don't kill me, please don't kill me,' " said
Randy Smith, head of the Mountain View Community Patrol, who responded
to the scene and helped other teachers prevent the man from escaping the
room. "He was ranting and raving and threatening all of us with the
knife."

Within minutes, police armed with several types of weapons entered the
classroom and shot the man in the arm, leg and hand with a beanbag
projectile containing steel shot. The final blow broke the man's hand,
forcing him to drop the knife, according to Anchorage police.

Jason W. Pritchard, 33, was charged with four counts of first-degree
attempted murder and four counts of first-degree assault.
Pritchard, who has an extensive criminal record and a history of
psychiatric problems, was taken to Cook Inlet Pre-Trial Facility and
held in lieu of $2 million bail. The four victims, all 8 and 9 years
old, each underwent surgery Monday for wounds to the neck, throat and
head. All are expected to survive, said police spokeswoman Anita Shell.

Cody Brown, 8, and brothers Billy Moy, 8, and Eric Moy, 9, were listed
in serious condition in the pediatrics intensive care unit at Providence
Alaska Medical Center. The fourth victim, Stephan Hansell, 8, was in
fair condition at Alaska Regional Hospital on Monday evening.

"He was really concerned about his classmates when he woke up," said an
uncle of Hansell's, Rob Lee. "He's pretty tough." The attack triggered a
massive response and investigation by Anchorage police, with more than
30 detectives combing the school grounds and the school hallway for
evidence and interviewing at least 50 children and teachers who
witnessed the attack, according to Deputy Chief Mark Mew.

School superintendent Carol Comeau said the district will review all
safety procedures at Mountain View and other schools. Classes were
canceled at Mountain View today to allow staffers and children to meet
with counselors. Police were still sorting out the sequence of events
Monday and don't know what motivated the attack, said spokesman Ron
McGee.

When first in custody, the man lay facedown on the seat of the patrol
car, according to Sgt. Bill Kaas. Then he would not answer questions or
give his name, forcing police to identify him with fingerprint records
and officers who recognized him from a previous incident, said Police
Chief Walter Monegan.

"We heard that he may have known one of the students, but we can't
confirm that," McGee added. "He has been uncooperative. He is not saying
anything." Children and staffers from the school were bused to nearby
William Tyson Elementary, where they were reunited with parents and
questioned by police.

Interviews with students who witnessed the attack describe a horrifying
bolt of swift and inexplicable aggression. The man approached the school
about 8:15 a.m. while some students were lining up to go inside for
breakfast and others were on the playground, witnesses said. Police
later estimated that about 50 students were outside the school at the
time.

Third-grader Parrish Rowell, 9, said he was walking to school with some
friends when he noticed a man on foot behind them. Moments later, Rowell
saw the man trying to grab 8-year-old Potasi Uta. Rowell ran into the
school. Uta said he jumped away and then curled up into a ball on the
ground next to a wall. Without speaking, the man bent over and tried to
cut him, Uta said.

The boy leaped up, struck the man in the stomach with his elbow and ran
into the parking lot and then into the school. He said a teacher told
him to hide in his classroom. Billy and Eric Moy were waiting to be let
into the school for breakfast with their sister, Ashley Smith, 11. She
saw the man grab one brother and cut him. "He just came up to him," she
said. "He had a knife and started cutting him, his throat." Then she saw
the other brother holding his throat, which was bleeding.

Sixth-grader Kevin Bruno, 12, was playing basketball before school when
some other kids told him a little boy was getting stabbed. He ran over
to where the man was hurting a boy, whose name he didn't know. "I saw
him on top of the kid, stabbing him. I told him to get off. He wouldn't,
so I hit him," said Bruno, visibly shaken.

Bruno threw himself into the man with his shoulder, "like a football
hit," and knocked him away. He told the boy to get to the school nurse.
The man jumped up and chased Bruno and some other children. Bruno told
them to run into the school. But one of the children, later identified
as Cody Brown, didn't get away, Bruno said. "He got this other kid and
tried to slit his throat," Bruno said.
Bruno ran around the building and knocked on windows to alert teachers.
Through a window, he could see the man grappling with a male teacher.

In one of the most chilling incidents, Stephan Hansell, a second-grader,
was asked for his name by the man, whom he didn't recognize, according
to his uncle Lee. "OK, Stephan, get ready to meet your maker," the man
told the boy, according to Lee. Hansell was then cut from his temple to
near his throat, according to his father, Dwayne Hansell.

As the children ran into the school, teachers directed them into
classrooms and offices with the idea of locking the doors, following a
drill practiced last week. Mountain View principal Doris Ross called 911
at 8:28 a.m., according to police logs. A great deal of blood was left
in the main hall, according to witnesses.

Fourth-grader Pazong Yang, 10, said she was taken into a classroom by a
teacher, who ordered the children to get under tables and said she would
lock the door. But before the teacher could seal off the room, the
suspect rushed in, Yang said. The man pushed the teacher down, and then
a male teacher rushed in and knocked the attacker down. The children
then ran out of the room, Yang said.

Randy Smith and George Smith, members of the Mountain View community
patrol, were taking a car to a mechanic when they heard the call on the
scanner. "We were there in about 30 seconds," Randy Smith said. The two
men entered the school and saw commotion down the hall in front of a
classroom on the east end. The attacker had pushed desks into the door,
which had broken glass. Randy Smith said he and several teachers pulled
the desks out of the way and confronted the attacker in the room.

As Pritchard was cornered in the classroom, he kept muttering to himself
about God, George Smith said. "He said, 'Everything is going to be OK. .
. . We're all going to heaven to see God,' " George Smith said. A male
teacher kept the attacker off a wounded, crying boy lying on the floor,
Randy Smith said. The identities of the boy and the district employee
could not be confirmed Monday.
"The first two officers showed up, and they confronted him with their
guns drawn and got his undivided attention," Randy Smith said. "It was
just long enough for the teacher to grab the kid and drag him out into
the hall."

Randy Smith praised the actions of the teachers in the school. "They
saved that boy's life," he said. "Everybody did the right thing, and
fortunately APD did the right thing." In the aftermath, police scoured
the grounds and searched the roof. Officers with dogs checked the woods
for other victims. Several neighborhood kids stood across the street
looking at the school, parts of which were cordoned off with yellow
crime scene tape.

Francisco Ozuna said he hid in the classroom next to where the attacker
was finally stopped. "I felt sad," he said. "I thought he was going to
kill everybody." By midday, Classroom 13, where Pritchard was taken into
custody, was still littered with papers and markers and overturned
desks. Through a window, one could see the day's schedule on the board:
play practice at 9 a.m., math at 10 a.m. A brightly colored kid's
backpack lay on the floor. A large pool of blood had soaked the carpet.
Nearby was a bloody print of a child's right hand.

[Doug O'Harra can be reached at do'[EMAIL PROTECTED] or 257-4334, Lisa Demer
at [EMAIL PROTECTED] or 257-4390 and Elizabeth Manning at [EMAIL PROTECTED]
or 257-4323. Reporters Tim Pryor, Rosemary Shinohara and Lucas Wall
contributed to this story. ]









MARtin F. ABErnathy

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