Six weeks before Robert Card killed 18 people in Lewiston, Maine, a fellow reservist told supervisors he feared Card was about to conduct a mass shooting.
The Army has yet to decide how it will fix an admin error threatening retirement plans for participants in the Green to Gold Active-Duty Option program.
An independent commission investigating the Oct. 25 mass shooting in Maine moved to seek subpoena power so it can obtain the shooter’s military records.
Two senators from Maine are asking the U.S. Army inspector general to provide an accounting of interactions with Robert Card before the Oct. 25 shootings.
An autopsy suggests that Army reservist Robert Card was alive and possibly on the run during a portion of the huge search that followed his disappearance.
Though cuts are more severe in support and enabler areas, officials say those are the vital areas needed in Army SOF to compete against peer adversaries.
Robert Card’s family alerted the sheriff they were concerned about his mental health. The sheriff said his office reached out to Card’s Army Reserve unit.
Investigators are still searching for a motive for the massacre, but have increasingly been focused on Army reservist Robert Card’s mental health history.