Just a month before unleashing a deadly rampage at the Washington Navy Yard, crazed gunman Aaron Alexis told cops he hearing voices and that people were sending “vibrations to his body” to keep him from sleeping, officials said Tuesday.
Alexis ‘ bizarre rantings can be found in a police report in Rhode Island , where Newport cops came to his hotel room one day last month at 6 a.m. and listened to him ramble about a “microwave machine” that that was being used to send vibrations through the ceiling to keep him from sleeping.
Just a month before unleashing a deadly rampage at the Washington Navy Yard, crazed gunman Aaron Alexis told cops he hearing voices and that people were sending “vibrations to his body” to keep him from sleeping, officials said Tuesday.
Alexis ‘ bizarre rantings can be found in a police report in Rhode Island , where Newport cops came to his hotel room one day last month at 6 a.m. and listened to him ramble about a “microwave machine” that that was being used to send vibrations through the ceiling to keep him from sleeping.
Just a month before unleashing a deadly rampage at the Washington Navy Yard, crazed gunman Aaron Alexis told cops he hearing voices and that people were sending “vibrations to his body” to keep him from sleeping, officials said Tuesday.
Alexis ‘ bizarre rantings can be found in a police report in Rhode Island , where Newport cops came to his hotel room one day last month at 6 a.m. and listened to him ramble about a “microwave machine” that that was being used to send vibrations through the ceiling to keep him from sleeping.