A gun and his newborn child.
Santiago's
rambling walk-in interview at the Anchorage office was concerning
enough for authorities to take away his gun and order a mental health
evaluation. But it wasn't enough to get him mentally adjudicated, which
would have prohibited Santiago from owning a gun.
"As
far as I know, this is not somebody that would have been prohibited
based on the information that (authorities in Alaska) have. I think that
law enforcement acted within the laws that they have," said US attorney
Karen Loeffler.
Santiago got the
gun back a month later when he retrieved the pistol from police
headquarters, and it was that weapon, law enforcement sources told CNN,
that he used to shoot 11 people Friday at the airport in Fort
Lauderdale, Florida.
Santiago also had some legal trouble and was due in court again in March. But he hadn't been convicted of a serious crime.
"He
hadn't been adjudicated a felon and he hadn't been adjudicated mentally
ill," former FBI assistant director and CNN senior law enforcement
analyst Tom Fuentes said. "So again, you know we have this situation
where he slipped through the cracks."
Here is what we know about the shooter, the victims and the facts of the case:
Who is Esteban Santiago?
Law enforcement officials have identified Santiago, 26, as the suspect in the five deaths at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport.
Santiago
faces three federal charges that each carry the possibility of the
death penalty, the US Department of Justice said Saturday.
He
will be charged Monday with counts of causing serious bodily injury to
someone at an international airport; using a firearm during and in
relation to a violent crime; and causing the death of a person through
the use of a firearm.
Santiago
confessed to planning the attack, according to a criminal complaint
filed by federal prosecutors. Santiago told investigators he bought a
one-way ticket to Fort Lauderdale and brought a Walther 9-millimeter
pistol and two magazines.
He said
he went into a bathroom stall at the airport, loaded the gun and shot
the first people he saw, according to the criminal complaint. He shot
all the rounds in one magazine and then used the other, the document
says.
He thinks he fired 15 bullets, aiming at his victims' heads, the complaint says.
Investigators believe the attack plan developed over a period of time, law enforcement officials told CNN on Saturday.
Santiago
recently began selling his possessions, including his car, and friends
and associates noticed more erratic behavior, investigators have learned
from interviews with those who know him.
Authorities
are examining writings, including online posts, that in retrospect
appear to indicate some period of planning, law enforcement officials
said.
George Piro, the FBI's
special agent in charge in Miami, said Santiago flew from Anchorage to
Minneapolis to Fort Lauderdale on a Delta Air Lines flight.
A
lieutenant with the Anchorage airport police said Santiago had one bag
-- a handgun case with a pistol inside that he checked.
Esteban lived in Alaska, where he was a security guard.
In
January 2016, Santiago was arrested and charged with assault and
criminal mischief after an argument with his girlfriend in Anchorage,
according to court documents that CNN obtained.
At
the time, Santiago allegedly yelled at his girlfriend while she was in
the bathroom, according to the complaint. He then broke down the
bathroom door.
The woman told
investigators that Santiago strangled her and struck her in the side of
the head, the complaint said. Santiago left before police arrived.
Anchorage
municipal prosecutor Seneca Theno said Santiago pleaded no contest to
criminal mischief and assault charges. Under a deferred prosecution
agreement, the charges would have been dismissed if he complied with the
conditions. He was due back in court on March 28.
The
military said Santiago's nine years of service in the National Guard
included one 10-month tour of Iraq, where he was awarded a combat action
badge.
Santiago returned from Iraq a changed man, his aunt told CNN on Saturday.
"His
mind was not right," the aunt, Maria Ruiz Rivera, said in a phone
interview in Spanish from her home in New Jersey. "He seemed normal at
times, but other times he seemed lost. He changed."
She added, "He talked about all the destruction and the killing of children. He had visions all the time."
Ruiz said she lost contact with Santiago several months ago.
"He stopped calling," she said. "He wouldn't respond to my messages. I would call and text. He seemed distant."
Her family is still in shock, she said.
"Who
would have imagined that he could do something like this?" she said. "I
don't say that because we're family. I say it because he wasn't like
that."
The suspect's brother, Bryan
Santiago, said he believes the shooting rampage resulted from mental
issues that surfaced after the Iraq tour.
Esteban Santiago requested medical help from army and federal agencies, according to his brother. He received some treatment.
Bryan
Santiago, in an interview in PeƱuelas, Puerto Rico, said he used to
speak with his brother regularly but the communication ceased about a
month ago.
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