Thursday, March 29, 2007

Sulejman Talovic's, The Utah Killer, Happiest Day was his Martyrdom?

TROLLEY_UPDATE_nat_zx.jpg
Where Sulejman Talovic the Utah Killer get the Gun? Rocky Anderson, SLC nutty Mayor and the SLC PD ain't saying. I wnder WHY?The Illegal hand gun was hot and changed hands 6 or 7 times after it was stolen. A girlfirend Offers a Clue Maybe? She Claims Sulejman had 2 or 3 friends:
Talovic also knew one man through his mosque in Utah.
"I don't know if he was his friend, but he liked to talk to him," she said. They only saw each other during services at the mosque. "They only saw each other like three or four times."
Suljeman Also told her the day before he killed and injured People at the Mall this:
"His exact words were, 'You're going to be mad at me, but ... tomorrow's supposed to be the happiest day of my life."'
March 29th, 2007 @ 12:02pm
(KSL News) We have new information this morning about Trolley Square shooter, Sulejman Talovic. Detectives know how he got the revolver used in the shootings.
The Salt Lake Tribune reports Talovic got the gun from someone in June or July last year. Investigators now think they know where the man responsible for the Trolley Square shootings got his handgun.
Originally the gun was bought legally. It was later stolen. Then it changed hands six or seven times between three people before reaching Talovic.
Police plan to pursue charges against those three people, though none were involved in the planning or execution of the February 12 shooting spree.
Officials say it's important to charge anyone for illegally selling or trading the gun to prevent it from happening in the future. Detectives do not believe the gun was used in any other crimes.
Talovic was carrying the .38-caliber revolver and a 12-gauge shotgun during the shootings. Investigators say he used the shotgun to kill five people and injure four others before he was killed by police
From Deseret News:
The day before he killed five people and wounded four at Trolley Square, Sulejman Talovic told the girl who loved him that the next day would be the happiest of his life.
Monika
Monika
Monika, a 17-year-old fellow refugee from Bosnia who now lives in Amarillo, Texas, did not know what he meant. (At her request, the Deseret Morning News is not using her last name.)
"His exact words were, 'You're going to be mad at me, but ... tomorrow's supposed to be the happiest day of my life."'
She asked him about that statement and he replied,
"Oh, no, you should be happy."
"And I was like, 'So what does it involve?' He goes, 'It involves everything but you."'
She could not imagine he was talking about his last day. His shotgun-and-pistol rampage ended when police officers killed him.
"I thought he was going to have a child or something like that," she said.
Talovic had courted a girlfriend almost a year before, she said, and she thought the girl might be having his child, although he never said so. Actually, that wasn't the case, Monika added.
.
Talovic had "two or three" friends, according to Monika. She did not know their names. "He talked about friends, but he never mentioned names."
He had friends at work and had had friends at the first school he attended in Utah, Monika said.
Talovic also knew one man through his mosque in Utah.
"I don't know if he was his friend, but he liked to talk to him," she said. They only saw each other during services at the mosque. "They only saw each other like three or four times."




During that last talk, "he was actually pretty happy," Monika said. Besides his expected happiness the next day, he talked about a sister he dearly loved, who was his best friend. He did not seem angry or filled with concern.

Monika and Sulejman Talovic talked about the war in Bosnia only twice, she said. Most of the time they covered ordinary teen topics, "what we liked, what was our favorite music, colors, whatever."
Talovic's favorite movie was the 1992 film "Malcolm X" about the late black nationalist leader who was the spokesman for the Nation of Islam movement involving black Americans.
He never discussed playing video games or talked about weapons, Monika said. He did not tell her why he had dropped out of school.
"He said like there was drugs and violence going on, he didn't want to be part of that in his first school. I don't know what happened in the second school after he moved, I don't know what happened there."
"He was talking about going into business," she said. "He wanted to become a business manager."
The young man did not talk about mental problems or hallucinations. He told her he never took drugs. He never acted crazy or seemed upset. "He never told me about hurting nothing. I mean, he was nice to everybody."
Their conversations ended on Feb. 11. On Feb. 13, after not hearing from Talovic for two days, Monika tried to call him.
"I called his cell phone and an FBI agent answered it," she said. The agent asked for her name and identified himself as with the FBI in Salt Lake City.
She complied, so he told her Talovic had been in a shooting and had died.
"I asked who was the shooter and he goes, 'He was.' ... I guess he tried to talk to me. I was on the floor after that ... I was in so many tears.
If all sounds to fishy just like when it took the Press days to announce that Suljeman Talovic was Mulsim!......

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