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Blunders allowed Charleston accused to buy gun – FBI

Agence France-Presse

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Blunders allowed Charleston accused to buy gun – FBI
FBI chief James Comey admits the 21-year-old alleged white supremacist should never have been able to get his hands on the .45-caliber weapon but was able to do so because of a breakdown in an FBI background check

WASHINGTON DC, USA – The man accused of shooting dead 9 black Charleston churchgoers was only able to purchase the handgun that killed them because of FBI failures, its director said Friday, July 10.

FBI chief James Comey admitted that the 21-year-old alleged white supremacist should never have been able to get his hands on the .45-caliber weapon used on June 17 to devastating effect in Charleston, but was able to do so because of a breakdown in an FBI background check.

“I’m here today to talk to you about a mistake, in a matter of heartbreaking importance to all of us,” Comey told reporters at Federal Bureau of Investigation headquarters.

“Dylann Roof, the alleged killer of so many innocent people at the Emanuel AME Church, should not have been allowed to purchase the gun he allegedly used that evening.”

Comey said a review was under way to prevent a repeat of the blunders and they were in touch with family members of the victims.

Roof was arrested on a drugs charge on March 1 and his admission of guilt for possession would have been sufficient to block a gun sale during an FBI-administered background check.

But a series of missed opportunities and mistakes, including over the geography of where the arrest took place, meant the FBI analyst doing the check did not see the offense.

Consequently there were no red flags raised within 3 days, so the gun sale could proceed in April.

Two months later he shot 9 people dead during a Bible study at the South Carolina church – allegedly with the same weapon. (READ: Racist ‘manifesto’ lays bare Charleston motive)

“We are all sick that this has happened. We wish we could turn back time because from this vantage point everything seems obvious, but we can’t,” Comey added.

Comey’s admission that the massacre might have been prevented came the same day that the divisive Confederate flag came down at South Carolina’s legislature, drawing a line under a furor rekindled last month by the mass murder.

Roof, who was indicted on 9 counts of murder and is in jail, had been photographed before the attack brandishing firearms and the Confederate flag. – Rappler.com

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