The Daily - The Alarming Findings Inside a Mass Shooter’s Brain
Episode Date: March 13, 2024Warning: this episode contains descriptions of violence and self harm.Last fall, an Army reservist killed 18 people at a bowling alley and restaurant in Lewiston, Maine, before turning the gun on hims...elf.Dave Philipps, who covers military affairs for The Times, had already been investigating the idea that soldiers could be injured just by firing their own weapons. Analyzing the case of the gunman in Lewiston, Dave explains, could change our understanding of the effects of modern warfare on the human brain.Guest: Dave Philipps, who covers war, the military and veterans for The New York Times.Background reading: Profound damage was found in the Lewiston gunman’s brain, possibly from explosions.The finding has broad implications for treatment strategies in veterans and for criminal justice.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.
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From The New York Times, I'm Sabrina Tavernisi, and this is The Daily.
A mass shooting last fall by an Army reservist in Maine prompted my colleague, Dave Phillips,
to search for answers about whether the soldier's service could have been a factor.
Today, the surprising answer Dave found, and how it may change our understanding of the
effects of modern warfare on the human brain.
It's Wednesday, March 13th.
So, Dave, you've been working on a series of stories on injuries to soldiers in the U.S. military.
And last week, there was kind of a sudden and unexpected discovery related to that reporting you've been doing.
Tell me about it.
So, what I've been looking into for a couple months was the idea that soldiers can be injured just by firing their own weapons, by standing next to the blast of a mortar or launching a rocket from a shoulder
fired rocket launcher. Some of these big heavy weapons, the blast wave is strong enough to
really injure their brains. And I'd been working on that over a couple months because it's very
new and there's a lot of uncertain stuff. And I was still working on it in October when I got a call from the New York Times National Desk.
And they said, hey, there's been a mass shooting in Maine.
We need your help.
The suspect was in the military.
So I dropped everything and got on it.
Right, because you're the guy who covers military affairs.
So they call you.
Right.
Right, because you're the guy who covers military affairs, so they call you.
Right.
And the situation was that there's a 40-year-old man in Maine named Robert Card.
He'd been a Sergeant First Class in the Army Reserves for almost 20 years.
And he killed several people in a small town in Maine, Lewiston, in a restaurant and in a bowling alley.
Then he goes on the lam, and the whole region is in lockdown for two days.
And after a massive manhunt,
they eventually find his body
15 minutes away from the shooting site.
He had shot himself in the head.
And in the aftermath,
his family said that he had been hearing voices.
It started right after he had
gotten some hearing aids last spring, and he grew to have these nearly constant paranoid delusions
that people at the supermarket, people on the street, even people in his own family were saying
terrible things about him, essentially saying that he was a pedophile, and he grew obsessed
with these delusions that just simply were not happening. The Army saw this, and they tried to intervene. And in fact,
he was actually hospitalized for two weeks by the Army. But ultimately, it was not enough,
and he committed these shootings, which killed 18 people. And so, whenever any veteran is involved in any crime, our first move is generally to ask
the Pentagon for that person's background. We want to know, is there anything in their military
record that can help us understand the present by looking at their military past?
And so did you find anything in this main shooter's military records?
In the case of Robert Card, the answer is really no.
You know, remember,
we've been at war for more than 20 years
and more than a million people have deployed,
many of them multiple times.
He had been in the military that whole time.
He had never deployed.
Never in Iraq or Afghanistan.
Never in Iraq or Afghanistan.
Never even in Germany or Korea.
And he also had a really
humdrum job. The official title for it was Petroleum Supply Specialist. What does that mean?
Essentially, you're the gas guy who makes sure that the tanks and the Humvees and everything
else has enough fuel to run. Pretty dull. And so there was nothing at all in his service that suggested
it had anything to do with what had happened. So at this point, you're like, okay, nothing to
see here. This mass shooting is probably totally unrelated to his time in the military because he
never deployed, right? Well, not quite. I actually picked up one thing that I thought might be really
tied to this and potentially extremely important, and that was his hearing aids.
What was it about his hearing aids?
Well, here's a guy who's 40 years old, a young, fit guy who has hearing aids.
I would expect that from somebody who worked around artillery cannons or worked around mortars, worked around tanks.
In the military, you see it all the time. But this guy didn't seem to have any of that. He's like a petroleum supply guy. And so I was
thinking, okay, something here doesn't make sense. And I was able to track down some people who'd
actually served next to Robert Card in his platoon. And they said, yes, he had been a petroleum supply specialist years ago.
But in 2014, he switched over to a training battalion where he was exposed to lots and lots of blasts.
And basically what this battalion did is every summer, they held a summer camp for cadets at West Point that taught them how to use all sorts of weapons, taught them how to use
machine guns, grenade launchers, shoulder-fired rockets, and hand grenades. And that's where
Robert Card worked, I learned. Every year in the summer, he was on the hand grenade range where
about 1,200 cadets would come through, and most of them threw two grenades. So every year,
most of them threw two grenades. So every year he's getting exposed in the course of a few weeks to 2,000 grenade blasts. Now, according to the military, this is safe,
this is fine, no problem, move along. But emerging research, like the stuff that I've been reporting
about in the previous months, had shown that this repetitive blast from firing your own weapons can
be really damaging. And so I thought, okay, Robert Card was exposed to a lot of blast.
Maybe that could help explain what happened to him.
So what did you do next? Like, how do you start to answer that question?
Well, we knew that the answer would be in Robert Card's brain, that if he did have a brain injury from repeated blast exposure, you can see it.
And what I learned soon after was that the main state medical examiner knew that too.
And in fact, after he died, they had saved his brain and then shipped it to Boston,
where one of the best brain labs that looks at traumatic brain injury
is at Boston University. These folks specialize specifically in documenting CTE in football
players and other contact sports athletes. So Dave, is the thinking here that maybe Robert
Card had something like CTE, that it's that kind of injuries like we see in football players?
Well, they didn't know.
And the only way to figure it out
was to essentially slice his brain
into slices that are about the 10th of a thickness
of a piece of paper.
And then they look at it under two microscopes,
a normal optical microscope
and a really detailed electron microscope that can look at things on a
subcellular level. And in the first microscope, they're looking for CTE, which is easy to see.
They can stain it brown and it creates these floral patterns around blood vessels in the brain.
But when they looked at it, they didn't find that. And if you're just exposed to blast, maybe that's not a big surprise
because the research suggests that blast exposure leads to something else,
something that really doesn't have an accepted name yet,
but in a sense is damage to the wiring that's deep in the brain.
And under the second microscope, that's essentially what they found in Robert
Card's brain. And what they're looking at is sort of the cables in the brain. So your brain has
outside of the brain gray matter, which is where thoughts happen. And inside the brain is white
matter that is essentially wiring that connects all that gray matter together.
So it can talk to itself.
It can understand itself.
It can act.
But it turns out that when blast waves surge through the brain,
those long stringy pieces of white matter essentially get whipped really hard,
hard enough that they get frayed or broken.
You know, think of it like the cable you use to charge your iPhone.
You know, you can twist that and twist you use to charge your iPhone. You know,
you can twist that and twist it up and untwist it and it'll be fine. Right. But it's the repetitive
over and over that causes problems. So imagine twisting your iPhone cable 10,000 times and then
it might still be there, but you plug it in and it doesn't work anymore. And so that's what they're looking at
in Robert Card's brain. So the results were definitive. Despite never having served in combat,
Card really suffered pretty severe brain damage from these repetitive blasts at this training camp, it seems like. Right. And we have to be careful
because we can't definitively say with Robert Card right now
that not only those grenade blasts caused this injury,
but that that injury caused his behavior.
What we can say is that it's a very, very good match.
It certainly seems that that's the case.
And Dave, what is the implication of this?
Well, this is something that means so much more than just what happened to Robert Card or what
happened in a shooting in Maine. And that's because for years, the military has known that blasts from combat, from roadside bombs, from enemy
attacks are dangerous and they can damage the brain.
But they haven't known what the effect of training is because most of the people who
served in the military also went overseas.
They might have gotten hit by an IED.
They might have experienced something traumatic
in combat. And so if they come back with brain injuries, it's very hard to say,
are those brain injuries tied to firing their own weapons? But Robert Card's almost like a
control study. We know that he never went overseas. He also never played football in high school.
He was never in a serious car accident.
He didn't do a lot of things that could have caused a brain injury to him.
As far as we know, the only thing that could have damaged his brain
is this blast injury of working on the grenade range.
And so if that is true, that means that a lot of the brain injury that is happening in the military is being caused by the military.
That's a big deal.
We'll be right back.
So Dave, what exactly did the military know about brain damage caused by blasts? And when did it know it?
Well, it starts with the IED problem.
During the height of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan around 2005, 2006, if you remember, roadside bombs were the leading way that insurgents were hurting American forces.
Right.
And so the United States poured a ton of money into trying to understand, okay, these blasts that these guys are experiencing, these men and women, they appear fine.
They get up and walk away, but there's something going on there.
It's not like, you know, you're missing a limb or something.
So when someone walks by, you may look absolutely normal, but it's a very invisible wound.
The military started gathering these stories and even shared some of these interviews.
When I came home, I was not the same person.
And when I got out, I didn't think that I had any issues or mental health issues that would affect me in the civilian life.
I found that I was having trouble controlling my emotions sometimes, my anger.
Soldiers were coming home, complaining to military leaders of all sorts of problems, you know, feeling different, acting different, thinking different.
I ended up losing the job because I was getting violent.
Started another job, was getting violent there, was real irritable, hard to deal with.
So I was self-medicating, trying to hide, you know, feelings and things like that.
You know, I had the suicidal thoughts.
They were almost coming back as different people.
And the Defense Department poured hundreds of millions of dollars into this,
starting probably around 2008,
trying to answer the question of what kind of blast is dangerous and why?
And they started getting answers, but it was still really murky.
and they started getting answers,
but it was still really murky.
And so in 2012, they set up a brain bank to essentially collect brains
from anyone and everyone they could get who was in uniform
because this injury couldn't be seen through an MRI,
through a PET scan,
through the normal things that we think of
for imaging the brain.
It was too subtle,
but you could slice it up and see it in the brain.
And what they were seeing
was this telltale scarring in the white matter.
And at the same time,
there were a lot of families
that got results back from this brain bank
and saw that characteristic scarring in the white matter.
And they knew that their loved ones
had been affected by blast.
And they also knew that enemy blasts
were only a small fraction
of what their loved one experienced.
And so how could you untangle
what was training caused
and what was caused by the enemy?
And so a lot of these families, they started
taking this information to Congress. In 2018, they said to Congress, the military is not taking
blasts seriously enough. They don't understand it. They can't tell who's injured. They need to do
something. Congress at that point passed a law forcing the military to look at this research and figure out how we can track this.
But here we are in 2024, and a lot of those questions are still not answered.
And then, of course, came CARD, right?
Which seems to give us something of a new data point, a new answer.
That's right, because the military, for all of this time, they had
kind of been saying, well, this is complicated. We did some studies, but we still don't have
clear answers. And they would hem and haw and essentially use the lack of a definitive answer
as a way to postpone action. But here's Robert Card. And he's really important because the only thing he's been exposed to is grenade blasts.
And that's supposed to be safe.
You know, something did happen after all those years of research.
The military, they finally put in place a safety threshold that basically said,
above this power of blast, there could be hazard.
And they use a number for that.
They measure blast blast in four pounds
per square inch. That's the strength of the blast wave hitting anybody. But you can think of that
four as a safety level. Anything higher, probably dangerous. Anything lower, supposed to be safe.
And that's why Card is so important because if he was only exposed to grenades
and he has a blast injury,
those grenades come in not at four,
not even at 3.9,
they come in at like one PSI
or maybe one and a half.
So that suggests that this safety threshold
that got put in place is way off
and that's really important,
not just for Robert Card, but for all sorts of
troops who are training right now, because there are many weapons out there, mortars,
shoulder-fired rocket launchers, big artillery that come in at higher levels, some of them as
high as eight or nine PSI. And what that threshold doesn't take into account is that we're not just talking about one
blast. We're talking about hundreds or thousands of blasts. And how does that change how any blast
is a threat or a hazard? So essentially, all of this study and research didn't actually translate
into procedures that kept soldiers safer.
Right. You know, it's sometimes frustrating for me to see this research because there are brilliant people who are building computer models that model how energy waves go through brain
matter, or they are very carefully blowing up lab rats and then cutting open their brains to see the effects. And none of that
expensive and time-consuming research has made any difference to the people in uniform.
Dave, how many vets are we talking about here? I mean, how many people
may be suffering or at risk of this kind of brain damage? Do we know the scale here?
That's a really hard question to answer. We know that more than 450,000 people have been diagnosed with a traumatic brain injury by the military since 2000.
But that probably leaves out tens of thousands of people who, like Robert Card, were exposed to repeated blasts and may have a brain injury,
but never were diagnosed.
So the universe is potentially very large.
That's why this is such a huge deal.
Dave, stepping back for a second,
you know, it seems like what we're learning here
through this example of Robert Card
is kind of bringing us into a moment where we're sort of rethinking what it means to have combat trauma, right?
Like that it might actually have a lot more to do with the physical blast than with the mental or psychological trauma that one goes through in, say, a combat deployment?
One thing that I've been reporting about for years is when soldiers come home different and why.
You know, and I started out really focusing on post-traumatic stress disorder and just the
horror of war and how that can change and erode your character. And then I learned that traumatic brain injury
can be a big part of that
and that those two things may be tangled together
in ways that are impossible to unravel.
But what's really interesting about Robert Card
and other people I've talked to who've never deployed,
but they've been around a lot of blast,
is if you sent them into a typical army clinic and had them
list their symptoms, they would probably get diagnosed with PTSD. They're sleepless. They
have anxiety. They have panic attacks. They are socially withdrawn. They're depressed.
So there are all these things that we have long thought are products of war, of combat,
that may actually be an underlying condition that is not related to war at all.
You know, to put it in the plainest terms possible,
it's basically related to a workplace safety issue that we haven't acknowledged or addressed.
So when Johnny comes home different from the war,
it might not actually be the war.
It might not actually be the war.
But I also think that there's a broader implication
beyond the military.
And we can see it in Robert Card, right?
You know, here was a man whose blast injury wasn't understood,
who did something horrendous.
And so I think we have to think about
what is the cost of not doing anything here?
Now, of course, we don't know for sure
that Robert Card did this because of his blast injury,
but we do know that he had profound injuries deep in his brain.
And we also know from talking to people that he served with
that it's not just Robert Card.
Other people that served with him on the grenade range are also struggling.
You know, a number of them are getting help
for pretty persistent mental health problems.
And one of his best friends was just recently hospitalized for a psychiatric crisis,
and he's now facing a domestic violence charge.
So how do we look at those people differently now after seeing CARD,
and how do we look at this problem in a way that tries to prevent that from happening?
Dave, I'm curious if you've heard
from the family of Robert Card since this diagnosis.
And I wonder what this diagnosis has meant to them,
if anything.
Well, they didn't get a choice
when his brain went to the lab.
That was the decision of the state,
which really wanted to understand in whatever way it could what had happened.
But when they got these results back
and the family sat around their kitchen table
listening to the doctor who had looked into his brain
and learned there was damage
in a way that I think was really surprising to them,
it allowed them to have some forgiveness.
To not see their brother, their son, as a monster,
but to see him as somebody who was hurt.
Kind of gives them a different story about their brother.
Absolutely.
Dave, thank you. Thank you. We'll be right back. should know today. My assessment in the report about the relevance of the president's memory was necessary and accurate and fair. On Tuesday, in a tense appearance before the House Judiciary
Committee, former special counsel Robert Herr testified about his investigation and February
report into President Biden's handling of classified documents. You could have written
your report with comments about his specific recollection
as to documents or a set of documents,
but you chose a general pejorative reference
to the president.
The four-hour session quickly descended
into a brutal partisan fight.
In his report, Herr had called Biden,
quote, an elderly man with a poor memory,
a conclusion that had infuriated Democrats.
Republicans, for their part, grilled Herr about his conclusion that the evidence was insufficient to charge Biden with a crime.
Like, here's what I see. Biden and Trump should have been treated equally. They weren't.
And that is the double standard that I think a lot of Americans are concerned about.
And accused Herr of protecting Biden.
You exonerated him.
I know that the term willful retention has a... Mr. Herr, it's my time.
But Herr made clear during the testimony that his report had not cleared Biden of wrongdoing,
rejecting a suggestion by Democrats that it had.
Today's episode was produced by Jessica Chung, Claire Tennesketter, and Olivia Natt, with
help from Sydney Harper.
It was edited by M.J. Davis-Lynn, contains original music by Dan Powell and Marian Lozano,
and was engineered by Chris Wood.
Our theme music is by Jim Brunberg and Ben Lansford of Wonderly.
That's it for The Daily. I'm Sabrina Tavernisi. See you tomorrow.