Society's Child
Long joined the Marine Corps in 2005, worked as a data network specialist and served in Iraq before being discharged as a sergeant in 2010, according to the U.S. military.
Long had filled a prescription for Ativan, an anti-anxiety drug, as recently as June, said the source, who spoke on condition of anonymity. He also had prescriptions for Valium and the sleep aid Lunesta, the source said.
It wasn't immediately clear whether anyone had diagnosed him with PTSD. CNN has filed a Freedom of Information Act request with the military to obtain records about Long's service. Under Defense Department rules, health records that might include any information on Long's mental health are considered protected, even though he is dead. The records are part of the criminal investigation.
Valium, like Ativan, is a benzodiazepine -- a class of medication with sedative properties that are prescribed for anxiety, insomnia and other conditions.
Media outlets report police officers discovered 19-year-old Fred Barley on Gordon State College campus last weekend.
Barley told officers that he rode his little brother's bicycle more than 50 miles from Conyers to Barnesville to register for classes. He planned to stay there until the dorms opened in August.
Instead of ticketing Barley for trespassing, the officers put him in a motel room. Word of Barley's story traveled fast. He was offered a job at a local pizza shop.
Barnesville resident Casey Blaney set up a GoFundMe page for Barley, which had raised more than $40,000 as of Friday morning.

Muslims prepare to pray at Central London Mosque for Friday prayers in central London
In a statement, chief superintendent David Boyle told the Luton Herald & Post that the force is attempting to get the injunction "due to concerns that their presence in these areas could increase the possibility of disorder and antisocial behavior." The application, to be heard next month, will ask that Golding and Fransen be banned for three years from "entering any mosque or Islamic cultural center or its private groups within England and Wales without any prior written invitation."
It also seeks to ban the pair from entering Luton's Bury Park without police permission, and that they give at least two weeks' written warning should they wish to enter Luton town center. They would not be allowed to enter Luton more than once every two months should any consent be given.
Comment: The police are right to uphold the Freedom of Association of Muslims and their wish to not have to endure harassment from the Britain First hate group. Britain First's 'right to exist' is based on a pathological worldview that victims actually have no rights and no freedom to associate or not associate with whom they wish.
The remedies they offer are bogus. But the illnesses are real. If governing elites continue to fail to offer convincing cures, they might soon be swept away and, with them, the effort to marry democratic self-government with an open and co-operative world order.
What is the explanation for this backlash? A large part of the answer must be economic. Rising prosperity is a good in itself. But it also creates the possibility of positive-sum politics. This underpins democracy because it is then feasible for everybody to become better off at the same time. Rising prosperity reconciles people to economic and social disruption. Its absence foments rage.
The McKinsey Global Institute sheds powerful light on what has been happening in a report entitled, tellingly, Poorer than their Parents?, which demonstrates how many households have been suffering from stagnant or falling real incomes. On average between 65 and 70 per cent of households in 25 high-income economies experienced this between 2005 and 2014. In the period between 1993 and 2005, however, only 2 per cent of households suffered stagnant or declining real incomes. This applies to market income. Because of fiscal redistribution, the proportion suffering from stagnant real disposable incomes was between 20 and 25 per cent. (See charts.)
"A person wearing a long coat, with wires coming out, is considered the suspect," Brussels police spokesperson Ilse de Keere said, as quoted by Le Soir media outlet.
A bomb squad is at the scene, and shops in the vicinity have been evacuated.
Several streets are currently blocked.
After he watched Melania Trump's speech last night, journalist Jarrett Hill noticed something peculiar — he'd heard it before.
The pledge was spotted by SITE Intelligence, a jihadi monitoring group, on ISIS's messaging app of choice - Telegram.
In the Telgram channel titled Ansar al-Khilafah #Brazil, the Brazilian jihadis announced their dedication to ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.
It comes less than three weeks before the 2016 Olympic Games are set to begin in Rio de Janeiro on August 5.
Comment: Fear levels in this chaotic world seems to be at unprecedented levels. It looks like the coup in Brazil wasn't enough. Now they're pulling out the ISIS card...
Members of the KKK, Black Lives Matter, and Westboro Baptist Church reportedly threw urine at each other and police had to step in in an attempt to keep the peace, a police spokesperson told KPLC.
A scuffle also broke out when conspiracy theorist and radio show host Alex Jones started speaking in downtown's Public Square. Police on bicycles pushed back a surging crowd, and Jones was whisked away.
"You guys are OK?" the serviceman asks.
"This is what I get for playing this dumbass game," the driver answers miserably.
There were other people in the car. Luckily, none of them was hurt in the crash.
After the incident, the Baltimore Police issued a message for local residents, warning them to be vigilant when playing Pokémon Go.
"It's a game, but it's not a game when you're behind the wheel," Baltimore Police spokesman T.J. Smith said at a news conference Tuesday. "This could have easily, easily been a tragedy."
Comment: Meanwhile in Bosnia, NGO Posavina Without Mines has had to issue a warning to Pokemon Go zombies to keep off minefields when searching for imaginary Pokemon. In Indonesia, authorities detained a French man for wandering into a restricted military base. Spanish police have had to remind people of such strange phenomena as "pedestrian crossings, traffic lights, street furniture". Manchester police might actually have more luck than they think:
Just when we thought humans couldn't devolve any further... It seems there is no limit.
The World Anti-Doping Agency [WADA] report into Russia's alleged state-sponsored doping during the 2014 Sochi Olympics has been delivered by Canadian lawyer Richard McLaren. The report concludes that Russian athletes' test samples were swapped and the process was controlled by the Ministry of Sport.














Comment: Acts of kindness can spread by reminding us of our own capacity for caring. If the officers arrested (or worse) him for trespassing, we would be reading a different story.