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Media coverage of mass shootings may spur new murderers seeking the limelight, experts say

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The media ’camp’ on Orange Avenue, just north of the Pulse nightclub in Orlando, where gunman Omar Mateen opened fire, killing 49 people. Photo: AP
Associated Press

Among the most chilling details to emerge in the Orlando, Florida massacre is that the killer paused during his three-hour rampage at the Pulse nightclub to search Facebook for news about it.

“Pulse Orlando” and “shooting”, Omar Mateen typed into his smartphone, investigators found.

His real-time search is a striking data point in what has become a pattern in mass shootings: killers deeply attuned to their media coverage and in some cases engineering it.

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The 2007 Virginia Tech shooter interrupted his killing spree to mail a videotape to NBC to claim credit and explain his motives. The 2014 Isla Vista shooter posted a manifesto on YouTube. Others have discussed their plans in online forums.

Omar Mateen checked online for news of his shooting while he was in the middle of it. Photo: AFP/Myspace.com
Omar Mateen checked online for news of his shooting while he was in the middle of it. Photo: AFP/Myspace.com
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Media outlets have long taken the position that they simply report the news. But experts who study mass violence say they are also part of the story, because the intense coverage that such tragedies receive can inspire new shooters.

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