----- Original Message ----- From:
Parents Against TeenScreen To: Parents Against TeenScreen Sent: Monday, April 23, 2007 2:00 PM Subject:
Michael Moore, School Shooters and Are Drugs to blame for Cho's
rampage?
In 2002, Fox
National News reporter Douglas Kennedy exposed the
link between psychiatric drugs and school shootings; Click
here to watch video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9S-7aNPf33A Filmmaker
Michael Moore has also called for a federal investigation
into school shooters and psychiatric drugs. Click here to watch video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dSZ9YTnSkLc In
September 2005, following confirmation that Red Lake Indian
Reservation school shooter, Jeff Weise, was under the influence
of the antidepressant Prozac, the National Foundation of Women
Legislators, together with American Indian tribal leaders, called
for a Congressional investigation into the correlation between
psychiatric drug use and school massacres. Congress has yet to
investigate the role of psychiatric drugs relating to school
shootings despite international drug regulators warning these
drugs
can cause mania, psychosis, hallucinations, suicide and homicidal
ideation. At least eight of the recent
school shooters were under the influence of such drugs,
and according to the NY Times, prescription medications said
to be related to treatment of psychological problems were found
among Cho Seung-Hui's effects. The Associated Press
reported today that "Pathologists sent blood samples for
toxicology testing to determine if Cho was on drugs at the time
of his rampage, but it could take as long as two weeks to
get the results."
VIRGINIA TECH
MASSACRE
Are meds
to blame for Cho's rampage?
Experts
say psychiatric drugs linked to long list of school shooting
sprees
April 23, 2007
By Bob
Unruh
![]() Cho Seung-Hui |
Cho Seung-Hui's murderous rampage during which he killed 32 students and faculty members at Virginia Tech is prompting research into gun laws, resident aliens and graphically violent writings. Investigators also may want to check his medicine cabinet, because psychiatric drugs have been linked to hundreds of violent episodes, including most of the school shootings in the last two decades.
The New York Times has reported the killer was on a prescription medication, and authorities have said he was confined briefly several years ago for a mental episode. They also have confirmed that the "prescription drugs" found among his effects related to the treatment of psychological problems.
Dr. Peter Breggin, a prominent critic of psychiatric drugs and founder of the International Center for the Study of Psychiatry and Psychology, said even if Cho wasn't taking psychiatric drugs the day of the shooting, "he might have been tipped over into violent madness weeks or months earlier by a drug like Prozac, Paxil, or Zoloft."
While media reports have focused on guns and gun laws, Cho's violent writings and autistic behavior at Virginia Tech and the delay in notifying students and faculty of the beginnings of the shootings, there are those who say the focus should be on his medical history.