Current:Home > StocksMother of Colorado supermarket gunman says he is ‘sick’ and denies knowing about plan-LoTradeCoin
Mother of Colorado supermarket gunman says he is ‘sick’ and denies knowing about plan
View Date:2025-01-11 10:38:22
BOULDER, Colo. (AP) — The last time Khadija Ahidid saw her son, he came to breakfast in 2021 looking “homeless” with big hair so she offered to give him $20 so he could go get a shave or a haircut that day. Hours later, he shot and killed 10 people at a supermarket in the college town of Boulder.
She saw Ahmad Alissa for the first time since then during his murder trial on Monday, saying repeatedly that her son, who was diagnosed after the shooting with schizophrenia, was sick. When one of Alissa’s lawyers, Kathryn Herold, was introducing her to the jury, Herold asked how she knew Alissa. Ahidid responded “How can I know him? He is sick,” she said through an Arabic interpreter in her first public comments about her son and the shooting.
Alissa, who emigrated from Syria with his family as a child, began acting strangely in 2019, believing he was being followed by the FBI, talking to himself and isolating from the rest of the family, Ahidid said. His condition declined after he got Covid several months before the shooting, she said, adding he also became “fat” and stopped showering as much.
There was no record of Alissa being treated for mental illness before the shooting. After the shooting, his family later reported that he had been acting in strange ways, like breaking a car key fob and putting tape over a laptop camera because he thought the devices were being used to track him. Some relatives thought he could be possessed by an evil spirit, or djinn, according to the defense.
No one, including Alissa’s lawyers, disputes he was the shooter. Alissa has pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity in the shooting. The defense says he should be found not guilty because he was legally insane and not able to tell the difference between right and wrong at the time of the shooting.
Prosecutors and forensic psychologists who evaluated him for the court say that, while mentally ill, Alissa knew what he was doing when he launched the attack. They point to the planning and research he did to prepare for it and his fear that he could end up in jail afterward to show that Alissa knew what he was doing was wrong.
Alissa mostly looked down as his mother testified and photographs of him as a happy toddler and a teenager at the beach were shown on screen. There was no obvious exchange between mother and son in court but Alissa dabbed his eyes with a tissue after she left.
The psychiatrist in charge of Alissa’s treatment at the state mental hospital testified earlier in the day that Alissa refused to accept visitors during his over two year stay there.
When questioned by District Attorney Michael Dougherty, Ahidid said her son did not tell her what he was planning to do the day of the shooting.
She said she thought a large package containing a rifle that Alissa came home with shortly before the shooting may have been a piano.
“I swear to God we didn’t know what was inside that package,” she said.
Dougherty pointed out that she had told investigators soon after the shooting that she thought it could be a violin.
After being reminded of a previous statement to police, Ahidid acknowledged that she had heard a banging sound in the house and one of her other sons said that Alissa had a gun that had jammed. Alissa said he would return it, she testified.
She indicated that no one in the extended family that lived together in the home followed up to make sure, saying “everyone has their own job.”
“No one is free for anyone,” she said.
veryGood! (5)
Related
- Horoscopes Today, November 12, 2024
- Global journalist group says Israel-Hamas conflict is a war beyond compare for media deaths
- 70-year-old woman gives birth to twins in Uganda, doctor says
- Atmospheric rivers forecast for Pacific Northwest, with flood watches in place
- Lou Donaldson, jazz saxophonist who blended many influences, dead at 98
- South Africa intercepts buses carrying more than 400 unaccompanied children from Zimbabwe
- 11 bodies recovered after volcanic eruption in Indonesia, and 22 climbers are still missing
- Takeaways from The AP’s investigation into the Mormon church’s handling of sex abuse cases
- Georgia's humbling loss to Mississippi leads college football winners and losers for Week 11
- The World Food Program will end its main assistance program in Syria in January, affecting millions
Ranking
- Parts of Southern California under quarantine over oriental fruit fly infestation
- The high cost of subscription binges: How businesses get rich off you forgetting to cancel
- Paris stabbing attack which leaves 1 dead investigated as terrorism; suspect arrested
- Watchdog: Western arms companies failed to ramp up production capacity in 2022 due to Ukraine war
- Mason Bates’ Met-bound opera ‘Kavalier & Clay’ based on Michael Chabon novel premieres in Indiana
- Wisconsin city files lawsuit against 'forever chemical' makers amid groundwater contamination
- Historian Evan Thomas on Justice Sandra Day O'Connor
- 50 Fascinating Facts About Jay-Z: From Marcy to Madison Square
Recommendation
-
Arizona Supreme Court declines emergency request to extend ballot ‘curing’ deadline
-
The World Food Program will end its main assistance program in Syria in January, affecting millions
-
'Colin From Accounts' deserves a raise
-
Florida State coach Mike Norvell, AD shred committee for College Football Playoff snub
-
Republican Vos reelected as Wisconsin Assembly speaker despite losing seats, fights with Trump
-
Ukrainian diplomats negotiate both climate change and Russia’s war on their nation at COP28 in Dubai
-
OxyContin maker bankruptcy deal goes before the Supreme Court on Monday, with billions at stake
-
Woman, 65, receives bloodless heart transplant, respecting her Jehovah's Witness beliefs