Profound Damage Found in Maine Gunman’s Brain, Possibly From Blasts

U.S.|Profound Damage Found in Maine Gunman’s Brain, Possibly From Blasts https://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/06/us/maine-shooting-brain-injury.html You have a preview view of this article while we are checking your access. When we have confirmed access, the full article content will load. A laboratory found a pattern of cell damage that has been seen in veterans exposed to weapons blasts, and […]

Profound Damage Found in Maine Gunman’s Brain, Possibly From Blasts

Profound Damage Found in Maine Gunman’s Brain, Possibly From Blasts thumbnail

U.S.|Profound Damage Found in Maine Gunman’s Brain, Possibly From Blasts

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/06/us/maine-shooting-brain-injury.html

You have a preview view of this article while we are checking your access. When we have confirmed access, the full article content will load.

A laboratory found a pattern of cell damage that has been seen in veterans exposed to weapons blasts, and said it probably played a role in the gunman’s spiral into violence.

Emergency vehicles on a road near the scene of the shooting.
The scene outside Schemengees Bar & Grille in Lewiston, Maine, after a shooting in October.Credit…Hilary Swift for The New York Times

Dave Philipps

A specialized laboratory examining the brain of the gunman who committed Maine’s deadliest mass shooting found profound brain damage of the kind that has been seen in veterans exposed to repeated blasts from weapons use.

The lab’s findings were included in an autopsy report that was compiled by the Maine chief medical examiner’s office and released by the gunman’s family.

The gunman, Robert Card, was a grenade instructor in the Army Reserve. In 2023, after eight years of being exposed to thousands of skull-shaking blasts on the training range, he began hearing voices and was stalked by paranoid delusions, his family said. He grew increasingly erratic and violent in the months before the October rampage in Lewiston, in which he killed 18 people and then himself.

His brain was sent to a Veterans Affairs laboratory in Boston that is known for its pioneering work documenting chronic traumatic encephalopathy, or C.T.E., in athletes.

According to the lab’s report, prepared on Feb. 26 and updated on Wednesday, the white matter that forms the wiring deep in the brain had “moderately severe” damage, and in some areas was missing entirely. The delicate tissue sheaths that insulate each biological circuit lay in “disorganized clumps,” and throughout Mr. Card’s brain there was scarring and inflammation suggesting repeated trauma.

This was not C.T.E., the report said. It was a characteristic pattern of damage that has been found before in military veterans who were repeatedly exposed to weapons blasts during their service.


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