70°
forecast

Va. Tech families frustrated as gunman's file surfaces

Posted to: News

By Sue Lindsey

BLACKSBURG

The Virginia Tech gunman's missing mental health records have been found at the home of a former university counseling official more than two years after the killings, a discovery that angered victims' families struggling to understand how the killer fell through the cracks.

The emergence of Seung-Hui Cho's file, a development disclosed in a memo to parents, represents another lapse in the case and raises questions about how such evidence could be lost for so long.

"Deception comes to my mind in my first response," said Suzanne Grimes, whose son Kevin Sterne was wounded. "It gives me the impression, 'What else are they hiding?' "

The contents of the file have not been made public, and Gov. Timothy M. Kaine said it is unclear why Dr. Robert C. Miller, former director of the campus clinic where Cho was counseled because of his disturbing behavior, took the records home more than a year before Cho killed 32 people and committed suicide on April 16, 2007.

Because Miller brought the file to his attorney's attention and it was not found by law enforcement, its discovery calls into question the thoroughness of the criminal investigation and the findings of a commission appointed by the governor. The commission never interviewed Miller.

Victims' families want to know whether the file contains warning signs that could have prevented the nation's deadliest shooting rampage.

"Would things have been different if we had this information? What information is in those records?" asked Lori Haas, whose daughter Emily was wounded in the shootings.

Miller, 54, declined to comment.

State officials said they would release the records publicly as soon as possible, either by getting consent from Cho's estate or through a subpoena. The medical records are protected under state privacy laws.

Miller told his attorney about Cho's file last Thursday, said Mark Rubin, the governor's chief legal counsel. According to a university memo shared with victims' families, Miller took the records for Cho and several other students home around the time he left his job at the center in 2006.

After the massacre, the counseling center conducted a search for the records in 2007, and Miller told investigators that he didn't know where they were, university spokesman Mark Owczarski said.

Virginia State Police are investigating whether a criminal act was committed, spokeswoman Corinne Geller said. Kaine said it was illegal to remove records from the center.

The governor said he was dismayed that it took two years to find the records.

"That is part of the investigation that I am very interested in and, of course, I'm very concerned about that," Kaine said.

The families of two of the dead were already claiming that Miller withheld troubling information about Cho. A lawsuit they filed in April claims Miller was told by Cho's English professors about his disturbing behavior and by the school's residential director that Cho had a history of erratic behavior and suicidal thoughts and had "blades" in his room.

The lawsuit claims Miller never passed that information on to either of the therapists from the counseling center who dealt with Cho during three 45-minute triage sessions in 2005.

Notes of the warnings to Miller or those made by the therapists concerning the three meetings were never found by investigators. It is unclear if those are part of the recovered records.

"Why would he take any student mental health records to his home at any time, and why that student?" said Robert Hall, an attorney for the two families. "It certainly is a question of whether there is more to the Seung-Hui Cho mental health history than we've been told."

The Virginia Tech Review Panel appointed by Kaine interviewed more than 200 people. The leader of that investigation, former Virginia State Police Superintendent Gerald Massengill, said Wednesday that investigators interviewed Miller's successor at the clinic, but not Miller.

Massengill said Cho's records could be critical to understanding the rampage and "should give us a better understanding of what actions the university did or did not take."

COMMENTS ADVISORY: Users are solely responsible for opinions they post here; comments do not reflect the views of The Virginian-Pilot or its websites. Users must follow agreed-upon rules: Be civil, be clean, be on topic; don't attack private individuals, other users or classes of people. Read the full rules here.
- Comments are automatically checked for inappropriate language, but readers might find some comments offensive or inaccurate. If you believe a comment violates our rules, click the report violation link below it.

raise the tax

Raise the tax sky high on all guns and ammunition sold.

my thoughts

After reading this article and the comments posted, my feelings are pulling towards suspicion and distrust of Dr. Miller. As previously stated, he could very well have been trying to avoid any blame being placed on him or other personnel at the University for not taking action prior to the shooting which could have prevented this from happening. The fact is unless he's being honest (which most people aren't these days) we will never know how long he knew that he was in possession on these files or why they were in his home to begin with. My concern here is that he very well could have tampered with the information included in the files during this period in any number of ways (destroyed specific pages and information, altered documents, ect.) I tend to believe that most people take a sliver of truth and create a story from there when there asses are on the line or are up to no good. Regardless of the matter, it infuriates me to see all the lawsuits in the fallout of this horrific travesty. No monetary reparations could ever fill the void that was left in the wake of that event. Simply put, there are good people and bad people in this world and they are that way for many reas

Something is mighty fishy here!!

It is obvious Miller knew those records were important and did not come forth right away to hand the information over to the police. What kind of crackpot team did Gov. Kaine have doing the investigation that would over look former employees that may help the investigation, especially with missing files. Maybe they should look at a little CSI or Law & Order to get some idea of how an investigation is suppose to be conducted.

The bottom line is there was a cover up, but who else is involved? Why would Miller wait two years and all of a sudden,here are the records you were looking for. Something is mighty fishy and it is an injustice to the family and the slain victims.

or perhaps you should stop

Maybe they should look at a little CSI or Law & Order to get some idea of how an investigation is suppose to be conducted.

These are fictional television dramas that use by and large fictional science and techniques as plot points. The Va Tech shootings happened in a little place called reality. Reality, unlike television, doesn't have a script writer, doesn't have make believe--quick, easy and infallible-- science and doesn't play out in discrete seven and a half minute increments. This makes police work and forensics much harder in reality than as seen on TV.

Also, incidentally reality has less attractive people per capita than TeeVee land. When was the last time you saw a model/homicide detective?

Aha!

I have been wondering where the records went (and, quite honestly, if anyone was even looking for them). There is a reason those records were not in Cook Center. Now it's up to the experts to find out that reason.

I will be interested in this story as it unfolds. Looks like the conclusions reached by the panel may have to be amended!

Why is he always in the news?

Why is it that every time something about the VT shootings is in the news, his picture is shown.....
MY TURN- I choose to think about my daughter. not "that guy"
I also choose to to do something positive.
www.hogs4hokies.org
3rd anual charity ride this coming May. all the proceeds go to the 32 Endowment scholarships. If you ride check out the website. If you don't ride, check out the website anyway, please. Lets see how many kids we can give scholarships to go to school in Memory of and to Honor the victims
Sincerly
Dave McCain

Please take his photo off the site

It is totally offensive to me, and I am sure to many others.

Smells of a cover-up

It really sounds like someone or some people were trying to hide the records to avoid responsibility. Mentally ill people with violent tendencies should not be allowed to own or operate firearms, plain and simple.

I agree, but

I agree the mentally ill should not be allowed to operate a gun, but there are hundred's of thousands that do, and probably a large number in our own area.

HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS DO??

Gotta love these "facts" without a source.

Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.
Please note: Threaded comments work best if you view the oldest comments first.

More articles from: News rss feed   


Toolbox