The killer's parents won't talk about him.That at least is what
their friend told CNN on Thursday.Their thoughts are on the other six victims of Friday's KILLING SPREE in Santa
Barbara, the friend said.
Elliot Rodger, who fatally stabbed three people and shot three
others, himself was found dead with a gunshot wound to his head after crashing
his black BMW.
"We
are crying in pain for the victims and their families. It breaks our hearts on
a level we didn't think possible," Rodger's family said in a statement
read by a family friend on "New Day."
"The
feeling of knowing that it was our son's actions that caused the tragedy can
only be described as hell on Earth."
In a
137-page document, not to mention videos and musings on social media,
22-year-old Rodger hinted that years of rejection and jealousy led him to lash
out against beautiful women and popular men.
Simon
Astaire, the family friend, shed some light on the kind of person that Rodger
was.
"As
soon as you met him, he was unbearably reserved, self-contained; he seemed to
merge into the walls," he said.
In one
brief conversation, Rodger asked Astaire, a novelist, whether writing was a
lonely experience.
Astaire
described the process as "solitary," and Rodger replied with "I
know what you mean" and turned away.
"He
seemed the loneliest person in the world," Astaire said.
As the
tragedy unfolded near the University of California, Santa Barbara campus,
Rodger's parents were putting the clues together that it might be their son who
was involved.
His
mother received Rodger's manifesto, and after reading just four lines, she
immediately went to YouTube to look at the videos her son had posted, Astaire
said.
She
watched the first 20 seconds of a video titled "Retribution" and then
called her ex-husband. Both got on the road toward Santa Barbara as the shooting
was unfolding.
The
mother's fears were realized when she heard on the radio that a black BMW, like
Rodger's, was involved.
"It
was the longest journey of their lives and, I would suggest, everyone's
nightmare," Astaire said.
Among the victims were Rodger's two roommates and a visitor, Cheng
Yuan Hong, 20; George Chen, 19; and Weihan "David" Wang, 20. Each was
stabbed to death.
But
Rodger didn't stop there. He embarked on a shooting rampage Friday night,
killing two young women: Katherine Cooper, 22, and Veronika Weiss, 19, both
members of the Delta Delta Delta sorority.
He then
went into a deli and killed UCSB junior Christopher Martinez, 20, who was
getting a sandwich.
Martinez's
father, Richard Martinez, has publicly called for stricter gun control laws.
One of
the parents of a child killed in the Sandy Hook school shooting in Newtown, Connecticut, wrote
an open letter to Richard Martinez.
The
tragedy of losing a child to gun violence has made them part of the same
extended family, Mark Barden wrote.
"My
heart breaks for you because I know just a little about the long road ahead of
you," he wrote, encouraging Richard Martinez to continue being an advocate
for gun safety regulations.
"You
will find your own path down this difficult road," Barden wrote. "But
know that we are here for you and all of you who have been touched by this
tragedy. Together we can and will build a safer world for all our
children."
The
firearms shop Shooters Paradise of Oxnard sold Rodger a gun just before the
killings, manager Kevin White said.
Rodger
had an Isla Vista address and wasn't acting strangely when he bought the gun,
White said.
White, an
alum of UCSB, said he spoke briefly with Rodger about Isla Vista.
There was
a 10-day waiting period -- no red flags arose in the background check -- and
then Rodger picked up the gun, White said.
The
manager pointed out that a gun wasn't the only weapon used in the killings.
"It
happens from time to time, but what about the guy who sold him the knives or
the swords that he used, or what about the guy who sold him the car that he was
driving around and hit people?" White said.
"Do
they feel bad, or did they know he was going to do something bad with it? I
mean, we sell tools. They're items. It's no different than the guy that sold
him the knife that he used," White said.
George Chen, 19, was at home near the University of California, Santa Barbara, on Friday, May 23, when his roommate Elliot Rodger, 22, went on a deadly rampage. Rodger stabbed Chen and two other people to death at his apartment before shooting and killing three more in a nearby neighborhood, authorities said. More than a dozen others were injured before Rodger died of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound.
Cheng Yuan Hong, 20, was also stabbed to death. He was listed on the lease with Chen and Rodger.
The third stabbing victim, 20-year-old Weihan Wang, was also a roommate.
Veronika Weiss, 19, was killed outside the Alpha Phi sorority house. Her father, Bob Weiss, says she was exactly the kind of person who would want to help Rodger. "She was kind. She was the person who would reach out to the kids who weren't the popular kids, some of the nerdy kids, some of the kids that were a little bit like this Rodger kid described himself as."
Katherine Cooper, 22, was with Weiss when the two were killed. They were both members of the Tri Delta sorority. "Katie will be remembered for her generous spirit and warm heart. Veronika will be remembered for her vibrant personality and enthusiasm for life," Delta Delta Delta President Phyllis Durbin Grissom wrote.
Chris Martinez, 20, was later gunned down at a deli. He dreamed of being a lawyer like his dad. Now his grieving father, Richard Martinez, has emerged as the public face of gun control advocates in the aftermath of the six killings in Isla Vista.