Identified as Spc. Ivan Lopez by Lt. Gen. Mark Milley, Ft. Hood's commanding general, the Army veteran reportedly walked into one of the area buildings with a .45 semi-automatic handgun and started shooting. He kept firing even as he used a vehicle to make his way to another building, where the gunfire continued.
When military police confronted him, Lopez put his hands into the air before pulling out his gun from his jacket and shooting himself in the head.
According to the AP, an investigation into the gunman's mental health background was initiated immediately after the violence ended. Part of the probe will also focus on the possibility that a fight or argument triggered the shooting.
"We have to find all those witnesses, the witnesses to every one of those shootings, and find out what his actions were, and what was said to the victims," a federal law enforcement official said to the AP on condition of anonymity.
In a press conference Wednesday evening, Lt. Gen. Mark Milley confirmed that the shooter was being treated for numerous health issues after being transferred to Fort Hood in February. Lopez was also being evaluated for post-traumatic stress disorder in connection to his four months spent in Iraq in 2011, though he had yet to be officially diagnosed.
There was strong evidence that the shooter had a medical history that indicated an unstable psychological condition, said Milley. There was a "strong possibility" that a verbal altercation with another soldier had preceded the shootings, he added, although there was no indication specific people had been targeted in the shooting. Lopez had been prescribed anti-depressants and the sleep aid medication Ambien.
"Obviously, we are digging deep into his background," Milley said to ABC News. "He was undergoing behavioral health, psychiatric treatment for depression and anxiety and a variety of other psychological and psychiatric issues. ... He was not diagnosed, as of today, with PTSD, he was undergoing a diagnosis process to determine if he had PTSD. That is a lengthy process."
Milley also confirmed that he was being treated with anti-depressant medication, though it is unclear if that was responsible for any violent or suicidal thoughts. As RT noted on Wednesday, there were reports of the man complaining about a traumatic brain injury that occurred while he was in Iraq. According to a recent tweet by the AP, however, the Army secretary said the shooter "saw no combat in Iraq, was not wounded."
BREAKING: Army secretary says Fort Hood shooter saw no combat in Iraq, was not wounded.The Washington Post reported that the gunman was married and living in the Fort Hood area before the shooting spree occurred, but neighbors said the family did not interact with many people.
- The Associated Press (@AP) April 3, 2014
"He was the kind of person that even if you tried to talk to him wouldn't open up," neighbor Jessie Brown said to the newspaper.
Family members were not aware that Lopez was receiving treatment for mental issues according to their spokesman, Glidden Lopez Torres.
"He was a very laid-back person. I would even say a bit shy," Torres said. "That's why we are so surprised."
This was the second shooting at Fort Hood since 2009, when an Army psychiatrist killed 13 people and injured 32 others. He was convicted and sentenced to death in August 2013.
Speaking shortly after the most recent violent outbreak, President Obama made the connection to the previous incident.
"We know these families. We know their incredible service to our country and the sacrifices that they make," he said, according to ABC. "Obviously, our thoughts and prayers are with the entire community, and we are going to do everything we can to make sure the community of Fort Hood has what it needs to deal with a tough situation, but also any potential aftermath."
I am sure that there were many factors involved in this shooting, but the one glaring detail that I see is that the shooter was taking Ambien aka Zolpidem, the sleep medication. I see this all the time now in the news, reports of people doing outrageous things, shootings, assaults, out of control drivers, just to name a few, who acted out after taking Ambien.
It happened to me 5 years ago, I took Zolpidem every night for sleep, one night I woke up in jail. I didn't know where I was or why I had been arrested, never arrested before. It turns out that I had been picked up by police after taking some kind of wild, reckless joy ride in my car and I slammed into a police car. To this day I have no memory of this event. I am now looking for a large class action law suit against the makers of Ambien/Zolpidem to represent me. I am happy to say that I am off all the crazy drugs they gave me for mental illness. I take Magnesium every day and I have never felt better in my life!