Office shooting suspect's life spiraled downward
By MIKE SCHNEIDER and MATT SEDENSKY
Associated Press Writers
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) - His marriage long ago went sour, his home
taken in foreclosure, his job lost to incompetence, his finances
sunk in bankruptcy. Everything Jason Rodriguez sought ended in
failure. Except his alleged plot to kill.
The 40-year-old man whose life seemed to just keep getting worse
was charged Saturday with first-degree murder, accused of killing
one and wounding five Friday at his former office. He said nothing
in his brief court appearance Saturday, but his attorney portrayed
him as a mentally ill man who fell victim to countless problems.
``This guy is a compilation of the front page of the entire year
- unemployment, foreclosure, bankruptcy, divorce - all of the
stresses,'' said the public defender, Bob Wesley. ``He has been
declining in mental health. There is no logic whatsoever, which
points to a mental health case. It looks like a classic case of
stress overload.''
Police refused to say anything more Saturday about their
investigation into the shooting. But as Rodriguez remained on
suicide watch at the Orange County Jail, a portrait of his
crumbling life began to emerge.
He couldn't pay the child support he owed for his 8-year-old
son. He was nearly $90,000 behind on bills, his bankruptcy file
showed. A once-promising, but short-lived career at an engineering
firm faded into a job at a fast-food chain.
Wesley described his client as ``very, very mentally ill'' but
offered no specifics. His former mother-in-law, America Holloway,
said he was a schizophrenic who was constantly paranoid, blaming
others for all of his woes and who always thought everyone disliked
him.
The suspect's own mother struggled Saturday for words to defend
her son. She could only muster an apology.
``Sorry for the families involved,'' Ana Rodriguez said. ``I'm
really very sorry, it is very hurtful.''
Police said Rodriguez himself also offered words of remorse as
he was handcuffed Friday, explaining he was just going through a
tough time. But it offered little solace to victims, all of whom
worked at Reynolds, Smith and Hills, where the suspect was an
entry-level engineer for 11 months before being fired in June 2007.
Identified as the single fatality in the shooting spree was Otis
Beckford, 26, the father of a 7-month-old daughter who was standing
near the receptionist's desk when the gunman entered the office.
Beckford's mother told The Palm Beach Post that she had last
talked to him Thursday night, firming up the family's Thanksgiving
plans.
``Now, he won't be there,'' Icilda Cole told the newspaper.
``Such a shame! I had two children. Otis and my daughter. I have
one left. I never thought something like this would happen to
him.''
Five others were wounded: Gregory Hornbeck, 39; Ferrell Hickson,
40; Guy Lugenbeel, 62; Edward Severino; 34; and Keyondra Harrison;
27. All were in stable condition at Orlando hospitals and were
expected to survive. Several employees reached Saturday said the
firm has told them not to publicly discuss the shooting.
The Legion Place building, where the shooting occurred, remained
cordoned off Saturday with police tape, though some workers
returned to get purses and other belongings left behind in a
scramble to escape. Courtney Moore, a paralegal on the building's
17th floor, returned for her car, and remembered frequently sharing
an elevator with Beckford or seeing him in the cafeteria.
``He was always so polite and friendly,'' she said.
As for Rodriguez, a neighbor said he moved into his mother's
apartment about six weeks ago and said his appearance had grown
disheveled in recent weeks. Cassandra Mizhir said she found
Rodriguez ``creepy'' - whenever she sat out on her back porch to
smoke a cigarette, he would stand on his nearby balcony and stare
at her.
She said he would sit outside the low-slung, seafoam green
building in his broken-down SUV, blasting classic rock music for
hours. The vehicle remained in the parking lot Saturday, a brochure
on claiming unemployment benefits lying on the passenger seat.
Associated Press writers Antonio Gonzalez and Tamara Lush in
Orlando and Sarah Larimer in Miami contributed to this report.
11/07/09 16:10
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