[The] man of sin [shall] be revealed, the son of perdition, who opposeth and exalteth himself above all that is called God, or that is worshipped, so that he as God sitteth in the temple of God, shewing himself that he is God. (2 Thessalonians 2:3-4 KJV)
Jesus saith, "I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me." (John 14:6 KJV)
For whosoever shall call upon the name of the Lord shall be saved. (Romans 10:13 KJV)
Showing posts with label Eddie Ray Routh Not Guilty by Reason of Insanity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eddie Ray Routh Not Guilty by Reason of Insanity. Show all posts
March 15, 2015
Dr. Phil Speaks with the Parents and Sister of Eddie Ray Routh
Dr. Phil: Inside the Mind of the Man Who Shot the "American Sniper" | March 16, 2015
WWLP-22 – In a national television exclusive, Dr. Phil speaks
with Jodi and Raymond Routh, Sr., the parents of former Marine Eddie Ray
Routh, who just last week was convicted of killing Navy Seal
sharpshooter Chris Kyle. Kyle’s autobiography was the subject of the
critically acclaimed movie “American Sniper,” and he, along with friend
Chad Littlefield, was shot point blank by Routh at a Texas shooting
range in 2013. This is the first time they have spoken publicly about
their son since the trial. Dr. Phil also talks with Eddie’s sister Laura
about her brother and the events of that tragic day in 2013.
During the trial, Eddie Ray Routh’s attorneys argued he was not
guilty by reason of insanity citing Post-Traumatic Stress Disorderpsychosis and schizophrenia. On
February 25th, a jury convicted him of capital murder. The judge then
sentenced him to life in prison without the possibility of parole.
Killings at a five-star, 11,000 acre shooting rang favored by the Bush family, with 24 surveillance, yet investigators never obtained any of the footage from the day of the shootings...
February 16, 2015
Gordon Duff, Veterans Today - Chris Kyle, the former Navy SEAL revered as a national hero was worth
more dead than alive, financially and politically. Martyred, murdered
by a former US Marine, or so we assume, his political capital is soaring
as Americans relearn love of bravado and swagger and, as is so often
the case, embrace mythology and outright lies.
As the trial continues, the narrative becomes more and more fanciful,
two heroes gunned down while armed to the teeth, country boys at a
millionaire’s dude ranch, a killer who shoots, gets tacos, and moves
right on with life. Nothing wrong here, not so far, happens every day.
Living or dead, there was little truth behind Chris Kyle, now a
Hollywood “golden calf” and poster boy for more wars, for torture, a
poster boy for indecency.
Kyle, portrayed in the blockbuster film, American Sniper,
is portrayed by Bradley Cooper. Kyle’s death is left out of the film and
perhaps for good reason. It is very likely that Kyle, killed by Eddie Ray Routh,
an Adam Lanza clone, was murdered simply to shut him up.
Dead, Kyle is a key asset supporting America’s illegal wars in Iraq
and Afghanistan and cleanses the filth from the Bush name, as Jeb plans
his run for the American presidency.
The American Sniper phenomena is surprising. There is enough “out
there” to trash Kyle already. His “aw shucks” demeanor on TV appearances
had been overshadowed by his nearly endless fabrications.
Every time Kyle opened his mouth, he put his foot in it, from his
wild claim of beating up former governor of Minnesota and professional
wrestler, Jesse Ventura to stories about killing looters in New Orleans
or “street thugs” trying to steal his car. Perhaps Kyle had seen
Ventura with Alex Jones?
AP - Iran's supreme leader has criticized the film "American Sniper," saying
the movie about a U.S. soldier fighting in Iraq encourages violence
against Muslims, a state-run newspaper reported Tuesday.
The comments by Ayatollah Ali Khamenei,
published in the daily IRAN Farsi newspaper, come amid renewed
criticism of the West by the leader as his country negotiates with world
powers over its contested nuclear program.
The newspaper quoted Khamenei as saying he hadn't watched the film directed by Clint Eastwood and starring Bradley Cooper,
but had heard about its plot from others. The film focuses on the life
of U.S. Navy SEAL marksman Chris Kyle, who with 160 confirmed kills is
considered the most lethal sniper in American military history.
"The movie 'Sniper' that is made by Hollywood encourages a Christian or
non-Muslim youngster to harass and offend the Muslims as far as they
could," the newspaper quoted Khamenei as saying.
Khamenei also reportedly discussed neo-Nazis attacking Muslims in Germany, saying Muslims have no safety in the West.
"You are seeing what sort of propaganda there are against Muslims in Europe and the U.S.," he reportedly said.
Iraq War Veteran Eddie Ray Routh Was Diagnosed with PTSD, Psychosis and Severe Mental Illnesses: He Pleads Not Guilty by Reason of Insanity to Murdering Chris Kyle
Chris Kyle decided to put Routh in the backseat of his truck and drive him two hours to a shooting range. While Routh sat in the backseat by himself with a small arsenal of guns and ammo, Kyle and his friend Littlefield, both of whom Routh had never met, sent text messages to each other about Routh, barely speaking to him. Kyle's text to Littlefield read, "This dude is straight up nuts." Littlefield, in the passenger seat, texted back: "He's [sitting] right behind me, watch my 6," a military term for "watch my back." During the drive, Routh, who was under psychiatric care and taking anti-psychotic prescription medications (one being Risperidone, used to treat schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, with side effects that include aggressive behavior, agitation and anxiety), became convinced that the two men intended to kill him.
On February 2, 2013 Chris Kyle and his
friend Chad Littlefield were fatally shot on a Texas gun range. Former marine Eddie Ray Routh,
who had been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder, psychosis and severe mental illness, confessed to the murders. Routh had been a small
arms technician who served in Iraq and was
deployed to earthquake-ravaged Haiti before leaving the Marines in 2010.
Eddie Routh's mother, who worked as an aide at the Kyle kids' school,
was the person who asked Kyle to take on her son in a program to help
rehabilitate wounded and troubled veterans through exercise. The
program, sponsored by Fitness Cares Foundation, was established in 2011; however, the company, Fitness Cares, or FITCO, "an elite fitness equipment industry," approached Kyle in 2012 to help promote the foundation by using his name to raise funds. In 2013,
the foundation raised $263,067 in private donations: $112,603 (or 43%
of funds raised) was used to purchase fitness equipment from the
company, FITCO, to then give to veterans; and $96,583 (or 37% of funds
raised) was spent on indirect costs/overhead (which included $26,485 for
salaries, although none of the seven directors are paid, and a
suspicious $11,406 for payroll taxes); leaving $53,881 (or 20% of funds
raised) in donations to be invested ($10,014 of the fund balance was
used to payoff expenses that exceeded revenue from the previous year).
Kyle agreed to work with Routh a week before the fateful trip to the gun
range. Kyle and his neighbor and hunting buddy, Chad Littlefield — a
facilities and logistics manager with a lab in DeSoto, Texas, who was
not a veteran — decided to take Routh shooting on February 2, 2013.
However, no one in Routh's inner circle, including Routh himself, knew
that Kyle was planning to pick him up that day: Kyle made multiple calls to Routh's home phone that day, the last call being around noon, before he pulled up in Routh's driveway at 1:07 p.m.
For years the Routh family
sought help through the Veterans Health Administration but found
themselves adrift in a system struggling to meet the demands spurred by a
decade of war and the aging veterans of past conflicts.
In 2004, the V.A. Inspector General called the Dallas facility the worst
in the nation; in 2012, a Dallas TV station interviewed veterans who
alleged that the facility was so poor that it put “lives at risk.”
Routh had been in and out of a psychiatric hospital and the Veterans
Affairs hospital in Dallas three times in the months leading up to the killings, and area police reports documented Routh’s mental problems.
Six months before a hunting guide found Kyle and Littlefield's bodies,
police caught up with a shirtless, shoeless Routh walking
the streets of his hometown. He was crying and smelled of alcohol,
police said. His mother told police that Routh had just had an argument
with his father who said he was going to sell Routh's gun. Routh left
the house, threatening to "blow his brains out," she said.
The former Marine was suffering from PTSD, though his family didn't
understand what he was going through, according to a September 2, 2012,
police report.
He would be placed in protective custody and sent to Green Oaks Hospital in Dallas for mental evaluation.
On January 19, 2013, Routh and his
girlfriend were hanging around her apartment when he fell into a state
of paranoia. He began ranting to her and her roommate about
government-surveillance activities. He once told a friend that the
helicopters overhead were watching him. Outbursts of this nature had
become more frequent. He made sure to cover the camera on his computer
(“He felt very strongly about that,” his mother said), and confided to
family and friends, “They know what we’re doing.” He also worried that
he would be forced to return to Iraq. And yet, for all his distress,
Routh sometimes contemplated going back into the service. “He had a lot
of guilt that he wasn’t still in the Marines, overseas helping people,”
his girlfriend said.
Inside the apartment, Routh began pacing in front of the door,
clutching a knife. He said that he was prepared to defend her from
government agents who were out to get them. For hours, she tried,
unsuccessfully, to calm him. Finally, her roommate texted the police,
who arrested Routh and took him to Green Oaks psychiatric hospital. He was transferred to the
Dallas V.A. the next day.
After Routh arrived at the Dallas V.A., his mother and girlfriend
visited him in the evenings. A week later, he did not seem much better.
He was taking several medications, and his mother felt that he could
hardly carry on a conversation. She urged the doctors to keep him
hospitalized, at least until he was stable. Ignoring his mother's
request, the V.A. discharged Routh the next day. When his mother drove
to the V.A. to pick up her son, he was already out, wandering in the
parking lot. She brought him home and told him about Chris Kyle. “I
said, ‘This guy has a big reputation. He’s a really good man and he
really wants to help you.’ And then he’s like, ‘Mom, that is so
awesome’,” his mother recalled. “Eddie was happy. He could feel that
somebody wanted to help him, somebody that understood better than me.”
Routh and His Girlfriend, Who Met on a Dating Website in March 2012
The next few days were difficult. Routh's girlfriend, who is Catholic,
said he was fixated on “demons and devils.” He went with her to Mass on
Sunday, hoping that it would help him. At home with his mother, Routh
fluctuated between being angry and wound up, and being dazed and
emotionless. “I could see him having flashbacks,” his mother recalled.
“You know when you’re daydreaming? You just kind of get that glaze in
your eyes? That was what was happening to Eddie. I knew what he was
seeing was not good, ’cause he looked like a scared little child. He
didn’t look like a man.” At night, he popped out of bed at the slightest
sound, running into his mother’s bedroom to make sure that she was
safe. “I thought someone was trying to get you,” he told her. His mother
said that during the day “he still wasn’t able to carry on a good
conversation. He wasn’t making good sense. He was crying a lot. He would
come lay down in our bedroom. We’d bring in the dog and lay in the bed
and he’d say, ‘Mom, will you hold my hand? I’m so scared. I don’t feel
good. I’m not good.’ ” As she held him, Routh said, “I just wish you
could be in my head for just a second, just so you could know what I’m
feeling like.” “I wish I could,” she told him. “I would take it from
you.”
On January 30, 2013, Routh's mother brought him back to the V.A., for a
follow-up appointment. As a psychiatrist reviewed his chart, he noted
that Routh had been prescribed only half the recommended dosage of
risperidone — a powerful antipsychotic that has been widely used in V.A.
hospitals to treat PTSD. The psychiatrist adjusted the prescription and
ordered the medication to be sent to the Routh house in two days.
Routh's mother was livid. When the psychiatrist questioned Routh, he
looked to his mom. “He just wasn’t capable of speaking for himself,” she told the reporter.
She explained to the psychiatrist that Routh wasn’t sleeping and
“couldn’t think straight.” She pleaded with the psychiatrist to readmit
him to the hospital, where “he’s not going to be a danger to others or
to himself.” But the psychiatrist, according to Routh's mother, shook
his head and said that hospitalization wasn’t necessary. Routh's mother
then asked the psychiatrist if he could refer Routh to a residential
program for people with PTSD, in Waco, Texas. The psychiatrist told her,
“He’s not stable enough for that program.” He instructed Routh to come
back in two weeks. His mother recalled, “I thought, Two weeks! That’s a
long time. I told the doctor, ‘You know, he can’t even answer your
questions! He can’t even carry on a conversation. I really think he
needs to be in the hospital’.”
On February 2, 2013, Kyle, driving his custom, black Ford-350 truck, and
Littlefield, who was in the passenger's seat, picked up Routh at his
home and drove him two hours to a shooting range. Routh was looking
forward to an excursion with Kyle: “He
needed someone to validate what he was feeling, that it was O.K. for
other people to go through it,” his girlfriend said.
However, when Routh awoke on February 2, 2013, he, along with his
girlfriend and his parents (who were out of town), did not know Kyle was
coming by to pick him up. Kyle called Routh at him home multiple times
that day, the last time at 12:30 p.m., before pulling into his driveway
at 1:07 p.m.
While Routh sat in the backseat by himself with a small arsenal of guns
and ammo, Kyle and his friend Littlefield, both of whom Routh had never
met, sent text messages to each other about him, barely speaking to
Routh. Kyle's text to Littlefield read, "This dude is straight up nuts."
Littlefield texted back: "He's [sitting] right behind me, watch my 6," a
military term for "watch my back." During the drive, Routh, who was
under psychiatric care and taking anti-psychotic prescription
medications (one being Risperidone, used to treat schizophrenia and
bipolar disorder, with side effects that include aggressive behavior,
agitation and anxiety), became convinced that the two men intended to
kill him.
When they arrived at the resort around 3 PM, they turned up a snaking,
3-mile road toward the lodge, where Kyle parked in front of the
main lodge and went inside with Littlefield to register, leaving Routh
alone in the backseat of the truck. Then then drove another few miles to
the remote shooting range. Kyle was given "exclusive access to the
range" as was the case
whenever "he came out" to the resort. On the day of the fatal shootings,
he said he was going to use the range for about 45 minutes, a resort
employee testified.
Shortly after arriving at the the shooting range, Kyle and Littlefield were shot at close range
multiple times. With one handgun, Kyle was shot six times, including
one shot that struck several major arteries and damaged his lungs. One
shot went through his cheek and struck his spinal cord. Several of the
shots were considered “rapidly fatal.” With another handgun, Littlefield
was shot seven times, including four that would have been instantly
fatal. One bullet went through the top of his head, indicating it was
likely fired while Littlefield was on his knees. Testimony from the
person who conducted the autopsies
proves that all the shots, except maybe one, went through his front
side. One of those shots traveled through his mid-section, causing
massive internal bleeding.
The shot to the palm of his left hand exited the front of his hand and
could have been one of the shots that hit his face, neck and chest. The
shot that the coroner said entered through his back seemed more likely
to have entered from the front upper chest, exiting through his lower
back. For two years prosecutors claimed that Kyle was shot four times in
the back and Littlefield was shot five times in the back, but this is
false. They continued to propagate this lie before the jury during testimony in Eddie Ray Routh's murder trial in February 2015.
Barnard said the neither Kyle nor Littlefield had a chance of survival. Click here
to read the testimony of Dr. Jeffery Barnard, who conducted the
autopsies on Kyle and Littlefield, and Howard Ryan, a forensic operation
specialist from New Jersey. Both testified for the prosecution.
The
bodies were found by a hunting guide around 5 PM.
Littlefield's body was found on a shooting platform, while Kyle's body
was found a few yards away in the dirt in front of the elevated
platform. "Chris was face-down with his nose in the dirt," said a former resort employee who discovered the bodies. "Chad was
on the platform on his back." Both men were armed
with .45-caliber 1911-style pistols when they were killed, but neither
gun had been unholstered or fired, and the safeties were still on.
Prosecutors have not elaborated on how Routh initiated the attack or
whether he opened fire on the
two men at the same time. Kyle was killed with a .45-caliber pistol,
while Littlefield was shot with a 9mm Sig Sauer handgun. Both guns
belonged to Kyle, and the Sig Sauer was found in Routh’s possession later that night. The only loaded weapons at the crime scene were the two 1911-style handguns that were in Kyle and Littlefield's waistband holsters, with their safeties on.
Shooting Platform at Crime Scene: Kyle and Littlefield's Bodies Cropped from Image
After leaving the scene in Kyle's truck,
Routh stopped briefly at his uncle's house and then drove to the home
of his sister and brother-in-law, 65 miles away from the gun range. He
admitted to the killings and told his sister, "People were sucking his
soul." He left their home in Kyle's truck and headed to his parents'
small home in Lancaster, where he had been living. He’d gone home to get his dog
and planned to drive to Oklahoma. His sister called 911, telling the
operator he claimed to have killed two men. "He said that he killed two
guys. They went out to a shooting range. Like, he's all crazy. He's
f***ing psychotic. I'm sorry for my language."
Routh's sister, who drove with her husband to the police station
immediately after calling 911, told police that her brother "was out of
his mind, saying people were sucking his soul and that he could smell
the pigs."
Routh's sister told The New Yorker
that her brother said “he killed them” — Kyle and Littlefield — “before
they could kill him; he said he couldn’t trust anyone anymore.”
Routh's Sister's Terrified 911 Call
In Routh's sister's 911 call (video above), she does not say that her
brother told her that "I sold my soul for a truck," which was reported
by the mainstream media. The person who said that is Randy Fowler, an
investigator with the Erath County Sheriff’s Department in Texas. Fowler wrote in the affidavit: "Routh drove to his sister’s home in Midlothian, about 50 miles
from the gun range where the shooting took place, shortly after the
incident. Routh was driving what his sister, Laura Blevins, described as
a 'big dark or black Ford F-250 pickup that she had never seen before.' It substantiated Routh’s claim that he
had murdered Chris Kyle and his friend, and he told the Blevinses
that he had killed Kyle and that he had 'traded his soul for a new
truck'." Routh's sister told The New Yorker
that her brother asked her if the world was freezing over, then
announced that he had a new truck. She then asked if he had traded in
his car, a Volkswagen Beetle; he said no, but added, “I sold my soul for
a truck.” It is this statement that the defense is using as
a motivation for the crime, rather than insanity due to Routh's severe
mental illnesses. It is important to note that there was no other
vehicle at the crime scene when Routh drove off in Kyle's truck, so it
was the only vehicle he could take to flee the scene.
Officers were waiting for Routh that evening when he arrived at his parent's home. A police video displayed for the jury at Routh's trial,
which began on February 11, 2015, showed police at Routh's home trying
to coax him from Kyle's pickup. Officers in the video are seen trying to
talk Routh into surrendering as he makes comments such as: "The
[expletive deleted] anarchy has been killing the world," "I can
feel everybody feeding on my soul," "Is this about hell walking on earth
right now?," "Is voodoo all around us?," and "I didn't sleep a wink
last night at all." He also expressed concerns about
being stalked by cats and at one point announced, "I need to take a
nap"
and said he wanted his parents to come home (his parent were out of town). "There's no trust anymore," the
video showed Routh saying. Police Dashboard Camera Show Officers Arresting Eddie Ray Routh
One police officer, who happened to be a neighbor of Routh’s, was
recorded by his body camera telling him: “I don’t want to hurt you,
buddy. We all grew up together here.” Routh reportedly told the police
officer: “It happened so fast. I don’t know if I’m going insane.” Kyle
refused to leave the vehicle and eventually sped off with police in
pursuit. He stopped six minutes later after a police vehicle rammed into
the truck. Police video showed Routh opening the driver's-side door,
emerging with his hands up, and sinking to the ground. He surrendered
peacefully, police said. An officer is seen on the footage giving himself the sign of the cross.
Routh told police: "It wasn't a want to. It was a need to, to get out of
that situation out there today or I was going to be the one out there
to get my head shot off." Weapons and Shooting Platform at Crime Scene
Weapons, Shooting Platform and Crime Scene Markers
Kyle's Custom, Black Ford-350 at Crime Lab
"When he took their lives, he was in the grip of a psychosis," Routh's court-appointed defense attorney said,
"a psychosis so severe that he did not know what he was doing was
wrong." The defense said Routh's psychosis kicked in during the two-hour
drive to the gun range as he sat amid "an arsenal" of guns large enough
to support "a small army." During the drive, Routh apparently became
convinced that the two men intended to kill him. Their texting back and
forth to each other about Routh as he watched from the back seat, no
doubt, had something to do with it. "He thought he had to take their
lives because he was in danger," Routh's attorney said.
According to an affidavit, Routh told his brother-in-law he "couldn't trust them, so he killed them before they could kill him."
According to reports
on the opening days of his trial, Routh had a "fitful" last night
before the killings. He proposed to his girlfriend (who accepted
the proposal) but also paced
throughout the home, warning her not to speak out loud "because people
were listening."
The prosecution is alleging that Routh drank whiskey that fateful
morning and may have smoked "wet" marijuana
(cannabis laced with formaldehyde) before getting into Kyle's truck. A
Texas ranger found Routh's anti-psychotic prescription medications (one
being Risperidone, used to treat schizophrenia and bipolar disorder,
with side effects that include aggressive behavior, agitation and
anxiety), a whiskey bottle on the table, a bong, and rolling papers when
he searched Routh's home after the arrest. However, on cross
examination, the ranger said he saw no evidence that Routh was
intoxicated or under drug influence at time of his arrest.
Routh's
uncle, James Watson, 45, testifying for the prosecution, said the two
of them smoked non-laced marijuana between 30 minutes and an hour and a
half before Routh left to go to the gun range, and said that they may
have had whiskey that morning. Watson was at Routh's home because
Routh's
then-girlfriend was concerned for his well-being after the two had
argued that morning. The previous evening, Routh had proposed to Jen. “We were in the
kitchen,” she recalled. “I was getting him his medicine. I turned
around, and he got to one knee and asked me to marry him.” Routh didn’t
have a ring — he was broke — but pledged to save up for one. Jen accepted
the proposal, and spent the night at Routh's home. They got into an argument the next morning, however, and she
left around 10 AM.
Prosecutors,
trying to support their contention that Routh's motivation for the
crime was to steal Kyle's truck, also had Routh's uncle testify about
the truck. After Routh left the crime scene, he first drove to his
uncle's home, where he stopped briefly. Watson testified that Rough
said: "Check out my truck. I'm driving a dead man’s truck." On the "dead
man's truck" comment, Watson testified: "I thought he was talking about
himself... he would often make bizarre comments like that."
On
deferred adjudication for assault on a paramedic in Johnson County,
Texas, Watson denies he made any deal with prosecutors. Watson testified
that he grew up with Routh and that he learned about religion and
morality from his family. “We’re God-fearing people," he said. When the
prosecutor asked, "Does he have a sense of morality?," Watson replied:
"Yes, he does." When the prosecutor asked, "Does he know right from
wrong?," Watson replied, "Yes, he does."
Routh’s attorney is making the case that his client is
not guilty by reason of insanity. In opening statements he said that
Routh was suffering from severe
mental illness at the time of the crime and could not tell right from
wrong. Prosecutors have described Routh as a troubled drug user who used
marijuana and whiskey the day of the killings, but say he knew right
from wrong despite any history of mental illnesses.
Part of the grand jury indictment of Eddie Ray Routh, handed down on July 24, 2013, was the judge’s gag order,
effective immediately:
"Due to the 'unusually emotional nature' of the
case, its 'unique nature of security issues' and the 'extensive local
and national media coverage' that it has already received, the judge
directed all relevant law enforcement and judicial bodies, as well as
Routh and his family, to refrain from any interaction with the media
that might 'interfere with the defendant’s right to a fair trial'."
Despite the gag order, Routh’s lawyer was able to say his client will
plead not guilty by reason of insanity and that he planned to present
evidence Routh was suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder when he
killed Kyle and Littlefield. The gag order applied
only to the Routh family: the Kyle and Littlefield families were free to
speak to the media. In an interview with The Los Angeles Times in January 2015, widow Taya Kyle said she believes the PTSD defense is a cop out.
Houston criminal defense attorney George Parnham said
Routh — who has been imprisoned since the 2013 murders — is at a
disadvantage because of the gag order issued on his family members and
attorneys in 2013. At the time, the judge said he was issuing it because
of the “unusually emotional nature of the issues involved in the case.”
In light of the movie, Parnham said the gag order is now unfair. He
explained: “It’s going to be very difficult for him to get a fair trial,
not only because of the movie, but because of the media surrounding the
movie. Mr. Kyle
is a hero in many people’s eyes. Due to the fact that this movie has
gained intense public attention, it’s doubtful that a fair jury can be
selected anywhere.” Anticipating that finding an unbiased jury would be
difficult, Kyle's court-appointed attorney filed a motion in 2013 to
change the location of the trial, but it
was denied.
Before the gag order, on February 27, 2013,
it was reported
that Jodi Routh, Eddie Ray Routh's mother, thanked the family of Chris
Kyle for trying to help her son: "Jodi Routh hoped Chris Kyle could help
her son 25-year-old, who was suffering from post-traumatic stress
disorder. Eddie Routh is currently on medication and finally agreed to
see his family. Today it was his mother Jodi and father Raymond who
released an statement, expressing their sorrow their son caused to the
Kyles and Littlefields, as well as thanking Kyle for trying to help her
son." The family issued the following statement:
"Raymond
and I want to express our deepest condolences to the Kyle and
Littlefield families. We are incredibly heartbroken for your loss.
We wish we could thank Chris Kyle for his genuine interest in
helping our son overcome his battle with Post Traumatic Stress
Disorder.
We want others with PTSD to know their struggle is recognized and we
hope this tragedy will somehow help in getting greater care for and
assistance to those in need.
No words can truly express the sorrow we feel for the Kyles and
Littlefields, their extended family and friends. Our thoughts and
prayers continue to be with you all."
– The Routh Family
Brian J. Klingenberg · Survey Technician at Premier Factory Safety"
"Routh is a friend of mine, deployed with him and was in the same units as he was. Something must have spooked him, it's very unlike his personality to be violent..."
Corey Smalley, Waynesburg, United States:
"I lived and slept next to Eddie while in Iraq when he was not on prison duty. Although Eddie was like my brother, what he did is wrong and he needs to pay for it. If the people writing this crap [lies about Eddie] want the truth, look me up on Facebook (Corey Smalley). I will be glad to help you understand."
When we lose our economic security, we also lose our freedom and are forced to survive any way we can. The subliminal, one-world religion is self-preservation — the survival instinct. It's basic to human nature. The Bible shows a coming world leader who will exploit this self-preservation instinct and will bring this religion to its logical conclusion. And, if possible, even some of the very elect will be deceived by this appeal to their pocketbook and personal security.
“Beloved, believe not every spirit, but try the spirits whether they are of God: because many false prophets are gone out into the world.” (1 John 4:1 KJV)
"And ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free." (John 8:32 KJV)
"For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places." (Ephesians 6:12 KJV)
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