So McDermott - drugs the usual suspect, Paxil, Prozac - and another
drug.....then today 7 more people gunned down to do with a "crack
house", and 3 wounded.   14 people in two days and drugs seems to be the
culprit.

Seems drugs - legal and illegal - behind these murders.......of
interest, why was he attempting, and I say attempting supposedly, to
destroy his computer files......remember Littleton and two kids who
would have done more damage with the propane tanks than with their Uzi
or whatever there guns were - seems these kids and McDermott might have
all had a mentor - egging them on.

Saba


� ��

�
Source: Suspect was taking drugs for depressionAccused killer Michael M.
McDermott at his arraignment Wednesday. -- Matthew West
Dave Wedge, Tom Farmer and Jose Martinez
Dec. 29 - ��The hulking computer technician accused of gunning down
seven of his co-workers at a Wakefield high-tech firm this week suffered
from a host of mental illnesses - including schizophrenia - for which he
was taking a trio of antidepressants, a source told the Herald
yesterday.
��
�����?HE'S GOT SOME serious psychological issues and a long
(psychiatric) history,? the source said of 42-year-old Michael ?Mucko?
McDermott.
�����McDermott, a divorced Navy veteran from Marshfield who
lived most recently in Haverhill, suffered from severe depression,
paranoia and schizophrenia, and had been in psychiatric treatment for
some time, according to the source who spoke on condition of anonymity.
�����To cope with his mental disorders, McDermott was
prescribed several Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors, or SSRIs,
designed to increase brain serotonin. Low levels of brain serotonin can
lead to depression and anxiety disorders.
�����A source familiar with the investigation said McDermott's
supervisors at Edgewater Technology Inc. did not appear to know he was
using the medication.
�����McDermott is being held without bail on seven counts of
first-degree murder in Tuesday's massacre at Edgewater. Prosecutors have
said McDermott wielded a shotgun and semiautomatic rifle with
premeditated precision and extreme atrocity, hunting down workers in the
company's accounting and human resources offices but letting others flee
unharmed.
 MSNBC: Memorial held for Wakefield victims

�����He was arrested by police who found him sitting in the
lobby near the bodies of two of his victims. At least two Edgewater
employees witnessed the rampage, including one woman who hid behind a
chair and her coat beneath a desk in the accounting office, where two of
her co-workers were killed.
�����Middlesex County District Attorney Martha Coakley has
said McDermott may have been seeking vengeance over the impending
docking of his paychecks by Edgewater to satisfy an IRS demand for back
taxes. Sources say the IRS orders would have left McDermott with just
$275 every two weeks.
�����But investigators also are looking for clues about what
drove the man to kill by delving into the contents of computers seized
from McDermott's office and home, where police also found bomb-making
literature and materials. One source said McDermott had attempted to
wipe out the hard drive of his office computer the day of the shootings.
�����Yesterday, neither Coakley nor McDermott's defense
attorney, Kevin Reddington, would discuss the case or McDermott's mental
state and psychological history. However, at Wednesday's arraignment,
Reddington raised the specter of an insanity defense by saying his
client had been seeing psychiatrists and asking the judge to OK his
continued medication.
�����Insanity defenses rarely succeed. The so-called Prozac
defense has been unsuccessfully attempted in dozens of murder cases
nationwide, including in the case of Kip Kinkel, the teenager who killed
his family and two schoolmates in Springfield, Ore.
�����According to the source, who is familiar with the still
mounting case, McDermott had been taking Paxil, Prozac and Desyrel - all
of which are SSRIs designed to treat depression, social phobias or
anxiety.
�����The source also said orders have been sent by doctors to
the Middlesex County Sheriff's office so McDermott can receive his
medications in the Cambridge jail. He will be examined by psychiatrists
some time in the next week, the source said.
�����The revelations about McDermott's psychiatric history
emerged as his co-workers returned to St. Joseph's Church - where so
many of them had sought refuge and solace in the hours after the
shootings - for a memorial service in honor of their seven slain
colleagues.
�����?We're all hurting and grieving, but I can't tell you how
much we're pulling together as a team,? Edgewater Technology Chief
Executive Officer Shirley Singleton said after meeting with her
employees for the first time since the shootings.
�����The company has started a memorial fund for the families
of the slain workers with a $70,000 donation. Singleton also said grief
counseling, which began yesterday at the firm, would continue as long as
employees need help.
�����She declined to discuss the shootings that claimed the
lives of Jennifer Bragg Capobianco, 29; Janice Hagerty, 46; Louis
Javelle, 58; Rose Manfredi, 48; Paul Marceau, 36; Cheryl Troy, 50, and
Craig Wood, 29.
�����State and federal authorities are seeking the origin of
McDermott's weapons, including the AK-47-style rifle and 12-gauge
shotgun that he is alleged to have used to kill the four women and three
men, a .32-caliber pistol found in his pants pocket and a large-caliber
hunting rifle found in a locker by his desk.
�����Haverhill police began looking for McDermott late
Christmas Eve after someone reported hearing gunfire in the woods near
Crystal Lake, where a man fitting his description was spotted by a car
with the license plate ?MUCKO.? Officers traced the car back to
McDermott's apartment but could not locate him despite several more
visits Christmas Day.
�����One day later, investigators believe McDermott lugged the
weapons unnoticed into the Harvard Mills complex, one law enforcement
source said. Two soft-sided gun cases were found under his desk.
�����?He walked them right in and placed them under his desk,?
the source said. ?They had a skeleton crew working that day and no one
apparently saw him or recognized what the cases were for.?
�����The source said McDermott loaded the shotgun with
buckshot at his work station before embarking on his killing spree. The
source, a longtime investigator, said the carnage he witnessed in the
shooting's aftermath left him shaken.
 BostonHerald.com Coverage

�����?I was sick to my stomach over it,? he said. ?It was
unlike any other murder scene because it was in a work setting. It was
almost surreal. One of the (dead) women had her head resting on her arm
like she knew she was going to get it.?
�����Meanwhile, gun control advocates held a rally outside the
State House to urge lawmakers to ban the sale of assault weapons like
McDermott's. Although Massachusetts already has the country's toughest
gun law, it does not ban the sale of assault weapons manufactured before
September 1994.
�����?They have no legitimate use in a civilized society other
than for law enforcement,? said Stop Handgun Violence co-founder John E.
Rosenthal.
�����Kevin Sowyrda, spokesman for the Gun Owners Action
League, declined to comment specifically on an assault weapon ban but
said, ?The last thing we need in this period of mourning are political
rallies.?
�����Donations may be made to the Edgewater Wakefield Memorial
Foundation, Box 2133, Wakefield, Mass. 01880-6133. Donations may also be
made at Fleet bank branches.
�����
Source: National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health
Printable version
�����Karen E. Crummy contributed to this report. �
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