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Florida shooter left chilling trail of anti-Semitic, racist, homophobic messages in Instagram group chat

Students held a candlelit vigil for the victims of the shooting - REUTERS
Students held a candlelit vigil for the victims of the shooting - REUTERS

Nikolas Cruz, who killed 17 people in one of America's worst school shootings, left a trail of chilling anti-Semitic, racist, homophobic, and homicidal messages on social media in the months before he struck.

One of the classrooms where he killed pupils was engaged in a Holocaust history lesson, according to a pupil who survived, although it was unclear if the gunman himself would have known that.

Cruz's horrific comments were posted to a private group containing half a dozen people on the Instagram messaging service, which is owned by Facebook.

The name of the group was "Murica great" accompanied by an American flag and eagle, and Cruz began posting to it in August last year. It was discovered by CNN.

Cruz used the group to spew hatred including messages detailing how he wanted to kill Mexicans, put black people in chains, that he believed Jews were taking over the world, and that gay people should be "shot in the back of head".

Cruz has pleaded guilty to killing 17 people
Cruz has pleaded guilty to killing 17 people

He wrote that white women in relationships with black men were traitors, and called himself  the "annihilator."

In one particularly chilling message he wrote: "I think I am going to kill people." 

On another occasion, addressing the private group, he wrote: "Guys I got paid $330, I am buying body armour" and suggested wearing it to school. When asked why, he replied: "School shooters." He posted pictures of himself wearing the body armour.

One of the group's other members suggested a cheap piece of equipment he could buy that would turn his semi-automatic rifle into a fully automatic weapon.

Cruz, who was born in New York, was adopted as a baby by Roger and Lynda Cruz, who took him to Florida. Roger Cruz died in 2004 and Lynda Cruz died from pneumonia on Nov 1, 2016.

On Instagram the gunman wrote: "My real mom was a Jew. I am glad I never met her."

At one point he claimed to have written to President Donald Trump and received a reply.

Cruz has admitted killing 17 people at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, an affluent middle class suburb of Miami, on Valentine's Day.

Read more | Florida school shooting
Read more | Florida school shooting

Defence lawyers have claimed he is autistic. They also said he is remorseful and have indicated he would plead guilty in the hope of being spared the death penalty.

Meanwhile, pressure was mounting on Christopher Wray, the director of the FBI, to resign after the bureau admitted it failed to investigate a telephone tip on Jan 5 alerting it to disturbing social media posts and suggesting Cruz had a "desire to kill". It was not known if the tip came from one of the members of the Instagram group.

Lewis Mizen, 17, a pupil at the school who is originally from Coventry in the UK, said: "The FBI has failed. It's going to be a mark on their name forever."

It also emerged that in 2016 Cruz cut his arms on Snapchat, the social media service, and said he wanted to buy a gun.

That led to a social services investigation which found: "Mr Cruz has fresh cuts on both his arms. Mr Cruz stated he plans to go out and buy a gun. It is unknown what he is buying the gun for."

However, the investigation concluded he was "low risk".

Timeline Florida school shooting
Timeline Florida school shooting

Funerals for the victims began over the weekend, while two large gun shows were due to be staged at fairgrounds nearby.

At a funeral for Meadow Pollack, 18, her father Andrew Pollack screamed in anguish.

He said: "You killed my kid! My kid is dead. It goes through my head all day and all night. I keep hearing it. This is just unimaginable that I will never see my princess again."

Late on Friday Mr Trump and first lady Melania Trump visited survivors, victims, and medical staff at a local hospital.

Mr Trump spoke with a female pupil who had been shot four times, including in the lung. He later posted photographs of the meeting on Twitter.

"It's very sad that something like this happened," Mr Trump said. Asked in a hospital corridor "Mr President, do gun laws need to be changed?" he declined to answer.