Interesting find which leaves me completly baffled.
How do we know that the car towed is in fact AL's car.
They might have towed somebody else's car.
Interesting find which leaves me completly baffled.
There are many successful individuals with Asperger's, so why would you say she was in denial?
Does anyone know why the car the shooter drove to the school (seen here on a flatbed being driven away from the scene) is not registered to the shooter or the shooter's mother???
As noted in the raw police audio here (the plate # is read by LE 30 minutes and 15 seconds into the video, matches the plate in the photo above and is identified to be someone completely different) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ETkrxfYoQtc&t=30m15s
The car is registered to a 42 year old career criminal (several previous drug and burglary charges) who is from Norwalk CT currently living in Miami, FL.
Just throwing this info out there because it seemed odd to me. I am absolutely confident that the lone shooter is AL so please don't insinuate that I'm questioning that.
I'd be thrilled to learn your thoughts. Thanks!
Thanks for the laugh.
Seriously, maybe she was afraid he'd set the house on fire, seeing as he sometimes gets into a zone (catatonic withdrawal?) according to his past teacher.
I have to say, sometimes if I don't set my kitchen timer on when I'm cooking/baking, I too forget the stove/oven is even on and living in a big house can be even more dangerous in that regard.
"If that boy would've burned himself, he would not have known it or felt it physically," Novia told The Associated Press in a phone interview. "It was my job to pay close attention to that."
I'm with Jennifer from the article. Something happened in the past 2-3 years. Didn't we learn that his parents divorced in 2010? Could that be the disruptive catalyst?
I think it is hard on "normal" children when parents divorced. Many feel they are the cause of the divorce and breakdown mentally, suffering depression, etc. and doing poorly in school...I can only imagine how frightened and confused it must have been for AL to face the sudden breakdown of the family unit in which his dad then quickly -- within months of the divorce (?) -- remarries and moves away, his brother leaves home for college, and now his mom is talking about moving or having him moved to a residential home/school, etc.
They were separated long before the divorce. It wasn't a "sudden break up."
How do we know that the car towed is in fact AL's car.
They might have towed somebody else's car.
I didn't say they suddenly broke up. Divorce and separation are very different. Separations can be temporary. Both spouses try to work things out, and often still live together. Divorces are final. Permanent.
The fact that his dad moved 100s (?) of miles away and started a new family and AL and his dad were noncommunicado for 3 plus years says a lot about the divorce having been a catalyst for AL's mental state.
My curiosity revolves around what Nancy thought was really going on with AL.I think an important question is whether NL understood the true nature of what AL was suffering from.
IOW, he may have been diagnosed as having Asperger's at some point and that may have been in error and/or there was an undiagnosed underlying mental illness that was only recently manifesting itself. Many disabilities and MI are not diagnosed properly the first time around and treatment suffers because of it.
The reason this is particularly important to me is because the treatments that may have been sought out for AL may have been the wrong ones- in the past and potentially moving forward. If she thought Aspergers was the force behind his behavior, it would influence her decisions as to what she felt he could and could not do and what she should and should not do.
In order to gain conservatorship, it is most likely there would need to be a documented history of behavior supported by at least one physician- possibly even more.So, if true there would need to be some physician working with NL and specifically with AL. So this information should be somewhere, imo.
I don't need a link, I was alive back then and have lived in California all my life. I've seen the results first-hand. So have my husband and other people...Have a link, LinasK?
http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/?pid=6643
http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/images/names/39.gif
Executive Order 11973 - President's Commission on Mental Health
February 17, 1977
My curiosity revolves around what Nancy thought was really going on with AL.I think an important question is whether NL understood the true nature of what AL was suffering from.
IOW, he may have been diagnosed as having Asperger's at some point and that may have been in error and/or there was an undiagnosed underlying mental illness that was only recently manifesting itself. Many disabilities and MI are not diagnosed properly the first time around and treatment suffers because of it.
The reason this is particularly important to me is because the treatments that may have been sought out for AL may have been the wrong ones- in the past and potentially moving forward. If she thought Aspergers was the force behind his behavior, it would influence her decisions as to what she felt he could and could not do and what she should and should not do.
In order to gain conservatorship, it is most likely there would need to be a documented history of behavior supported by at least one physician- possibly even more.So, if true there would need to be some physician working with NL and specifically with AL. So this information should be somewhere, imo.
The plate number matches the car taken from the scene in the photo, the car that there was extensive video footage of the police investigating this car (the only car the investigated) following the tragedy and the only car towed away on a flatbed by LE investigators. I'll try to find a link with a statement from LE identifying it as the car the shooter drove.
The plate number matches the car taken from the scene in the photo, the car that there was extensive video footage of the police investigating this car (the only car the investigated) following the tragedy and the only car towed away on a flatbed by LE investigators. I'll try to find a link with a statement from LE identifying it as the car the shooter drove.
Yes it seems clear as day, the mother was trying to set the wheels in motion to make something new happen for her son..getting a job, joining clubs, taking courses to insure a better future, a residential home for special needs, etc...And her son rebelled against her decisions
And this meant CHANGE in living arrangements, routine. I'm learning Aspies have a real hard time with CHANGES in their routines and I've read from family members on this thread who have real life experiences with Aspies who even became physical when told they had to CHANGE their routines.
My understanding, the two of the parents were not living together for years before the divorce.
I agree, although in AL's case, his mom seems to make most of the social decisions for him, so I have no idea why if he didn't like the barber, she won't just take him to another barber. This is one thing that bothers me. Is it about control on her part, or just that she figures, he'll react the same way towards every barber because he doesn't like to be touched?
I hate to beg to differ since you are the verified expert, but this is highly inaccurate. ASD now includes such conditions as Aspergers (high functioning by definition), ADD, ADHD, and the like. Most individuals with ASD are able to function on their own and many, with intervention therapy, CBT, and life skills training are able to live independently, or with minimal oversight. A lot of the statistics that are given now regarding anything prior to the '90's are grandfathered studies, since before that point, individuals with ASD were assumed to be retarded, and that is the diagnosis they were given. Over time, as the dx rate for mental retardation has dropped, the ASD dx rate has climbed at almost the same rate. In other words, in years past, individuals were institutionalized because it was assumed that they were retarded and beyond help. Now that we know of autism (in the 80's, it was hardly dx'ed in the U.S.) and we know how to handle it, if the appropriate treatments are rendered at the appropriate times, there is no reason to believe that the higher functioning at least 50% of those on the spectrum cannot function independently.