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Clerk worried about Murray's firepower purchases
Submitted by administrator on Thu, 12/13/2007 - 12:52.
Matthew Murray spent more than a year amassing the deadly firepower he used in Sunday's Colorado shootings, once ordering so much ammunition that a worried store clerk called police.
An employee at a UPS Store in Greenwood Village, Colo., called police Sept. 13, after Murray had "multiple" boxes of ammunition delivered to a postal box there. Murray seemed nervous when he came to pick it up, the clerk told police.
But police officers said there was nothing illegal about it, and Murray was never contacted, according to a search warrant affidavit for Murray's computer.
Police said earlier this week that Murray was carrying a backpack capable of holding a thousand rounds of ammunition. It's unclear how much he actually had.
Murray, who killed four people and wounded five others in attacks on two Christian centers before killing himself, bought all five of his weapons over the past year from licensed firearms dealers.
Colorado Springs police on Wednesday confirmed information provided by the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.
Murray had three of the weapons on him when he died at New Life Church in Colorado Springs. In addition, investigators found an AK-47 assault rifle in the trunk of his car and a Beretta .22-caliber handgun at his house..
Murray purchased all five weapons himself, according to Colorado Springs police.
Dave Anver, who operated Dave's Guns for 22 years before closing the doors in October, said he did not recognize the photograph of Murray that has appeared in the media. Anver surrendered all of his business records to the BATF when he closed Dave's Guns and had no way of seeing whether he or one of his former employees actually sold the gun.
But he said Murray, who bought a 9 mm semiautomatic pistol from his store, would have gone through the Colorado Bureau of Investigation's instant background check required in all gun purchases from licensed firearms dealers.
That system checks for criminal records, restraining orders and evidence of mental health issues before a gun sale is approved.
"If we did, the CBI approved it," Anver said of the sale.
Anver, who said he closed his business because he could no longer compete with national chains like Sportsman's Warehouse, said Colorado's system for background checks is more stringent than some in other states.
"It's really in the hands of the Colorado Bureau of Investigation whether you get a gun," Anver said. "I can tell you they err on the side of caution."
Sunday's bloodshed began when Murray banged on the door at the YWAM dormitory in Arvada and was let in by a staff member. He talked to several staff members for about 30 minutes, then was told he could not stay the night.
He opened fire with a handgun before fleeing on foot.
Tiffany Johnson, the 26-year-old hospitality supervisor; and Philip Crouse, 24, died later of their injuries. Murray was next spotted around 1 p.m. in the parking lot of New Life Church in Colorado Springs. Armed with an assault rifle and two handguns, Murray fired at least 27 shots, entering the church before he was shot by Assam.
Killed were sisters Stephanie Works, 18, and Rachel Works, 16.
In the time between the two attacks, Murray left 11 posts on an Internet message board, the first at least two hours after the Arvada shooting, the last a few hours before the shooting in Colorado Springs.
Murray's parents, after meeting with families of the victims, released a statement saying their thoughts and prayers were with those hurt by the killings.
"We are groping for answers as we try in vain to understand the events of last Sunday," Ronald and Loretta Murray said.
(Contact Kevin Vaughan and Sara Burnett of the Rocky Mountain News at www.rockymountainnews.com.)


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