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View Full Version : Suspected schemes, real violence: Penn. cop killer obsessed with conspiracy theories



Grendel
04-05-2009, 10:52 PM
Suspect in officers' shooting was into conspiracy theories
Sunday, April 05, 2009
By Dennis B. Roddy, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Richard Andrew Poplawski was a young man convinced the nation was secretly controlled by a cabal that would eradicate freedom of speech, take away his guns and use the military to enslave the citizenry.

His online profile suggests someone at once lonely and seething. He wrote of burning the backs of both of his hands, the first time with a cigarette, the second time for symmetry. He subscribed to conspiracy theories and, by January 2007, was posting photographs of his tattoos on white supremacist Web site Stormfront. Among his ambitions: "to accumulate enough 'I punched that [expletive] so hard' stories to match my old man."

"Crazy to me is going through the motions," he wrote on his MySpace profile three years ago. "Crazy to me is letting each day slip past you. Crazy is being insignificant. Crazy is being obscure, pointless."

No longer obscure, the 22-year-old is charged in the worst police shooting in the modern history of Pittsburgh. No one is calling his actions anything but pointless.

"He was really into politics and really into the First and Second amendment. One thing he feared was he feared the gun ban because he thought that was going to take away peoples' right to defend themselves. He never spoke of going out to murder or to kill," said Edward Perkovic, who described himself as Mr. Poplawski's lifelong best friend.

Mr. Poplawski's view of guns and personal freedom took a turn toward the fringes of American politics. With Mr. Perkovic, he appeared to share a belief that the government was controlled from unseen forces, that troops were being shipped home from the Mideast to police the citizenry here, and that Jews secretly ran the country.

"We recently discovered that 30 states had declared sovereignty," said Mr. Perkovic, who lives in Lawrenceville. "One of his concerns was why were these major events in America not being reported to the public."

Believing most media were covering up important events, Mr. Poplawski turned to a far-right conspiracy Web site run by Alex Jones, a self-described documentarian with roots going back to the extremist militia movement of the early 1990s.

Around the same time, he joined Florida-based Stormfront, which has long been a clearinghouse Web site for far-right groups. He posted photographs of his tattoo, an eagle spread across his chest.

"I was considering gettin' life runes on the outside of my calfs," he wrote. Life runes are a common symbol among white supremacists, notably followers of The National Alliance, a neo-Nazi group linked to an array of violent organizations.

"For some time now there has been a pretty good connection between being sucked into this conspiracy world and propagating violence," said Heidi Beirich, director of research at the Southern Poverty Law Center and an expert on political extremists. She called Mr. Poplawski's act, "a classic example of what happens when you start buying all this conspiracy stuff."

Mr. Perkovic said Mr. Poplawski's parents had split when he was young.

"His dad's totally out of the picture," said Mr. Perkovic.

According to his MySpace profile online, Mr. Poplawski lived in Stanton Heights, was an avid Penguins fan, considered Mario Lemieux his hero, and held his grandmother, Catherine Poplawski, whom he called "Cukie," in warm esteem.

Mr. Perkovic said his friend essentially dropped out of North Catholic High School. Officials there would only say he was asked to leave.

After the 9/11 terrorist attacks -- a day before Mr. Poplawski's birthday -- he decided to join the military, stopped going to classes and pursued a general educational development certificate.

"In boot camp he had missed his girlfriend so he had to make a decision ... he got himself dishonorably discharged so he could come back," Mr. Perkovic said.

According to Mr. Perkovic, Mr. Poplawski tossed a lunch tray at a drill instructor.

The relationship with his girlfriend, Melissa Gladish, went sour after Mr. Poplawski returned to Pittsburgh.

Court records show that on Sept. 14, 2005, Mr. Poplawski attacked Miss Gladish outside 1016 Fairfield St., the same address at which he would later be accused of killing the three police officers.

Miss Gladish said she had gone to Mr. Poplawski's house "and he began to argue with me and call me names. When I argued back he grabbed me by my hair and said, 'Do you think I'm going to let you talk to me like that? I don't let anyone talk to me like that."'

He threatened to kill her, the records show. In a form asking Miss Gladish to list all weapons Mr. Poplawski had used, she listed "gun that the defendant says is buried in the park near his house."

Less than a month later, police sought Mr. Poplawski for violating a protection-from-abuse order after he went to Miss Gladish's workplace, a King's Restaurant, and asked her to marry him. He then moved to the West Palm Beach, Fla., area. Mr. Perkovic said he worked there as a glazier for two years.

Two years later, back in Pittsburgh, Mr. Poplawski wrote on MySpace of the episode: "She's lucky I didn't kill that broad myself. Hahaha." A horrific story (http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/09095/960749-53.stm):


Pittsburgh police Officers Paul Sciullo III and Stephen Mayhle were about an hour short of ending their overnight shifts yesterday when 911 dispatched them to 1016 Fairfield St. in Stanton Heights at 7:05 a.m. The call, described as a domestic argument between a mother and son with no weapons involved, was also heard by Officer Eric Kelly, who had just finished his 11 p.m.-to-7 a.m. shift.

...Within minutes, all three officers were fatally shot by the subject of the domestic call, later identified as Richard "Pop" Poplawski, 22. A discharged Marine, he adhered to a number of right-wing conspiracy theories and expressed fears of a "Zionist nation" revoking his right to own guns.

Police said Mr. Poplawski knew his mother had called 911, knew officers would come to his house. He apparently lay in wait, armed with an AK-47 assault-style rifle, a .22-caliber rifle and a revolver and wearing a bulletproof vest.

Extremist rhetoric across the political spectrum seems to be gathering more and more adherents, from the anti-capitalists mentioned in an earlier CE thread to deeply disturbed individuals like this man in Pennsylvania. Personally, I fear that, as people latch on to ever more militant "us. vs. them" mindsets, stoked by blatant fearmongering--again, across the ideological spectrum--we will only see more violent outbursts such as these...

Luris Blear
04-05-2009, 11:08 PM
I've never known that Alex Jones speaks for the extreme right. My first exposure to him was back when his site said that the Democrats helped the Republicans plan 9/11. There is overlap -- particularly in the personal freedom versus imposed responsibility aspect. But yikes. This is mental illness.

It also speaks very directly for the pointlessness of hate. This guy was so enraged at a supposed shadow organization that he murdered three police, who work in the open on a daily basis.

To make things worse, his actions are the exact reason why other citizens want to take guns out of the hands of responsible owners.

His goal was civil liberties. That's understandable. His means of accomplishing them were so clouded by blind hatred that he made the world a worse place. Killing three police officers also works against those goals.

I've been saying it since Kerry started throwing tantrums in '04. You need to think with your head. Thinking with your anger only destroys your cause.

Luris Blear
04-06-2009, 11:58 PM
Fighting Stupid with Stupid

http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2009/4/5/716879/-The-Chilling-Rise-of-Right-Wing-Hate-in-America


How many people have to die before the right-wing media acknowledges their complicity in these kinds of attacks and voluntarily dials back their inflammatory rhetoric and incitements to violence?As soon as the Bible, the Communist Manifesto, the Qu'ran, and Fahrenheit 9/11 are edited to dial back their inflammatory rhetoric. And the Daily Kos itself.

Republican offices were shot at in '04. Molotov cocktails were planned for the GOP convention in '08. I don't and should not think of the soccer mom SUV with the "HOPE" sticker as the vehicle with a future domestic terrorist in it. Not even when others who share a political act out in terrible ways.

Whackjobs attach themselves to pet causes, but had problems long before they found their supposed calling. These creeps are not an example of the entire group.

And this guy -- I made a terrible mistake in even thinking he understood what civil liberties are. Civil liberties belong to human beings. This shooter apparently couldn't tell the difference between a human and a skin tone.

Grendel
04-07-2009, 12:36 AM
LB, as I've said, there's a lot of broad support for taking note of a rather poisonous tone spreading across the public discourse.

I'm not a Kos reader, no do I particularly like the site's adherents, but I think you have to admit that, between all the recent allegations of "stealth Muslim," or "Communist," or even a "non-citizen" that "will take your guns," being levied against Obama, there's been a particularly focused dialing up of efforts to enflame those of a certain mindset in the populace...

Luris Blear
04-07-2009, 01:03 AM
I agree completely Grendel. I also do not believe that Obama has any current plans to ban guns from civilian use. (To be honest, he's already back to cutting the military budget From a logical point of view, this gives whackjob revolutionary gun owners less to be scared of. But logic seldom has much in common with this kind of mindset.)

I don't agree with using emotions to rally against something. I prefer using our brains to rally for a better solution.

You know, I'm also re-reading the story. Some lunatic got in a domestic disturbance, saw the cops, and opened fire.

Anything else finding print looks like a repeat Columbine -- digging into the past for any shred of any activity that the pundits can use to rally for or against a cause. It looks like the guy's time to take that last step overboard had simply arrived.

Sutter Kane
04-07-2009, 09:48 AM
Extremists will always be a fact of life be they Left, Right or Religious each one would rather use force than reason to try to get his or her point across. Ignorance is their weapon.

This sort of thing happens from time to time. I feel bad for the families of the officers shot, no one deserves to go out like that but every time a cop dies or a blond female gets kidnapped the media goes crazy plastering the news 24/7. its disingenuous to the families because behind the scenes news producers are doing Hurricane Kicks in the air out of excitement for the rating boost these tragic events give their stupid networks.

Report the crimes but don't give it the week long exposure and analysis, if there is some new details tells us about it and move on. And downplay the killer as much as possible don't give them a stage.