Family: Shooter Saw Hope in Invention By Associated Press Published December 10, 2006, 5:57 PM
CST
CHICAGO -- The gunman who went on a deadly
shooting spree at a downtown law office was convinced a toilet
he invented for truck drivers would transform his quiet life,
his family said.
Joe Jackson, 59, who drove trucks and
taxis, also believed an attorney was trying to steal his
invention, his family said.
Photo Victims December 10, 2006
Joe Jackson (Police mug shot)
Photo gallery Joe
Jackson's letter
Graphic Portions of the note written by Joe
Jackson (Staff) December 12, 2006
Photo gallery Downtown shooting
StoriesStatement
of McKenna family
Graphic Location of shooting December 8, 2006
Video
At
the scene
StoriesLetter
reveals shooter's anger December 12, 2006
Shooting
rampage casts pall of anxiety December 12, 2006
Family
saw anger build December 11,
2006
Victims'
families, friends grapple with law office tragedy
December 10, 2006
Shots
rip law firm as workweek ends December 9, 2006
Commuters
caught in chaos, panic December 9, 2006
2
attorneys made marks beyond firm December 9, 2006
"I believe he just snapped," son Darrin
Jackson, 39, told the Chicago Sun-Times. "I believe he was
just frustrated."
At the end of the bloody, 45-minute
attack, three employees of the law firm -- including one
attorney, Michael R. McKenna, whose business card Jackson kept
in his pocket -- were dead and another wounded. SWAT snipers
killed Jackson, shooting him in the face and chest as he held
a hostage.
Investigators were trying to determine
whether Jackson had been McKenna's client, police
Superintendent Phil Cline said.
Jackson sought help
from attorneys a few years ago to get something patented, his
family told the newspaper in Sunday editions.
"He went
to them, he trusted them," niece Brenda Jackson, referring to
the attorneys. "He said, 'This is gonna pay off big.'"
McKenna researched it and told Jackson that it was
already patented, the paper reported.
On Friday,
Jackson forced a security guard at gunpoint to the 38th floor
offices of intellectual property and patent law firm Wood,
Phillips, Katz, Clark & Mortimer, locking and chaining the
door, and demanded to see McKenna, police said.
McKenna, a patent attorney, rented office space from
the firm.
The niece said someone at McKenna's office
hung up on a phone call from him. He tried to enter the office
at least one other time Friday, but was turned away because he
did not have an appointment, police said.
"Under
pressure ... who knows how you will react?" she told the
Sun-Times. "You really don't know."
McKenna, 58, and
Paul Goodson, 78, a retired teacher who worked part time in
the office, both died from a gunshot wound to the head, the
Cook County medical examiner's office said Sunday. Allen J.
Hoover, 65, a partner at Wood, Phillips, died from a gunshot
wound to the neck.
Jackson shot McKenna's paralegal,
Ruth Zak Leib, in the foot, police said. Her husband, Larry
Leib, told the Chicago Tribune that Jackson ordered his wife
at gunpoint to identify McKenna.
"He didn't even know
who Mr. McKenna was," he said. "He was so oblivious, she had
to tell him who he was looking for. He had a gun to her head."
In a statement, John S. Mortimer, the firm's managing
partner, called the attack "brutal and senseless." The firm
will remain closed on Monday while staff members gather to
remember their co-workers and receive grief counseling.
The Associated Press left messages at numerous phone
listings for Brenda Jackson in the Chicago area. A telephone
listing for Darrin Jackson was unlisted.
Copyright © 2006, The Associated
Press
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