Orlando Sentinel

Perceived grievances drove Va. Beach shooter, FBI says

- By Ben Finley

NORFOLK, Va. — A city engineer who fatally shot 12 people in a Virginia Beach municipal building in 2019 “was motivated by perceived workplace grievances” that “he fixated on for years,” according to findings released Wednesday by the FBI.

The investigat­ion, conducted by the FBI’s Behavioral Analysis Unit, found that DeWayne Craddock “struggled with how he perceived his own work performanc­e and how others at work viewed him.”

“The shooter’s inflated sense of self-importance contribute­d to this conflict and led him to believe he was unjustly and repeatedly criticized and slighted,” the FBI said in a news release. “Violence was viewed by the shooter as a way to reconcile this conflict and restore his perverted view of justice.”

But the FBI cautioned that no person or group was in a position to “see the confluence of behaviors that may have forewarned the attack” because Craddock had purposely isolated himself

and disengaged from his relationsh­ips.

The agency also said that Craddock suffered from significan­t mental health stressors, although they “alone cannot explain the Virginia Beach attack.”

Virginia Beach police said in March that they could not determine a motive.

Craddock had worked in the city’s public utilities department for more than nine years. He killed 11 co-workers and a contractor who was in the building at the time getting a permit. Four others were seriously wounded and a police officer

responding to the shooting received a bullet in his tactical vest but escaped serious injury. Craddock was killed in a shootout with police.

The city’s report had said Craddock’s life began to change around 2017. He was getting a divorce and started to have performanc­e issues at work. In 2018, he received a written reprimand for poor performanc­e, failed to meet expectatio­ns on an evaluation and didn’t get a merit raise.

“At times, the suspect referenced the belief he was being tasked with work outside of his pay grade,” the city’s report said. “This concern was specifical­ly addressed by his supervisor in 2018. The suspect was told that he had been making improvemen­ts and was given encouragem­ent.”

Leaders in the department said the shooter would have met job performanc­e standards in his 2019 evaluation, the report said.

The city’s report said investigat­ors didn’t uncover “any indication­s of violent tendencies or acts of violence committed by the suspect prior to May 31, 2019.”

The FBI’s report is somewhat validating for some of the victims’ families who blamed what they say was a toxic workplace environmen­t and a failure by supervisor­s to see warning signs.

Jason Nixon, whose wife, Kate Nixon, was killed, has long said that the shooter was upset because he was having trouble at work and lost out on a promotion.

“Human resources dropped the ball on policies, protocol and procedures,” Nixon said in March. “My wife warned them all the time that there’s something wrong with this guy.”

 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY/AP ?? A girl in June 2019 leaves flowers at a makeshift memorial by a municipal building that was the scene of a mass shooting in Virginia Beach. Twelve people were killed.
PATRICK SEMANSKY/AP A girl in June 2019 leaves flowers at a makeshift memorial by a municipal building that was the scene of a mass shooting in Virginia Beach. Twelve people were killed.

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