Portland, Min – Survivors and family members of the most bloody victims Group fire In the history of Maine, they restored a lawsuit against the United States government in the wake of an observer report to defend the new US Defense Department, which is mistaken in the US military because of the failure of failure to report violent threats by members of the service.
Eighteen people were killed in Lyston in October 2023 when Robert Card opened the fire in the bowling alley, Bar and Shasa. Dozens of survivors and relatives filed a lawsuit against the federal government earlier this month on the basis that the US military could have stopped the card, and he warned, against shooting.
Lawyers presented the group to amend them suit Tuesday. A report issued by the Inspector General of the Ministry of Defense will be cited this month, which concludes that the army has failed to submit mandatory reports on violent threats about half the time.
Military law is required to report violent threats to the Military Criminal Investigation Organization for the service. The review found that the army did not follow this policy in 32 of 67 violent investigations in 2023.
The report specifically mentioned the card, which died in suicide two days after the shooting. She says the failure to report continuously of violent threats “can increase the risk of additional violent accidents by members of the service, such as what happened with the SFC (first sergeant) card.”
Travis Brennan, the group’s lawyer, said the old style of uneducated threats gives Lyston victims a stronger case.
“If the army followed its own policies, it would have prevented an unstable member and also in service from returning to this society without warning, protection or plan to maintain our safety,” Brennan said in a statement.
Lawyers filed the lawsuit at the US boycott court for Main County. It states that the plaintiffs are looking for unlimited damage. The names of the defendants in the American army, the Ministry of Defense and the Killer Hospital, the Army of Community, and all of them have not yet responded to the lawsuit.
The spokesman for the Ministry of Defense and the hospital said they did not comment on the continuous litigation. The army did not respond to the requests for suspension on Thursday.
An independent committee was concluded by the governor of Maine after several sessions Opputing opportunities By both army officials and civil law enforcement. Lawyers told the victims that the card was in the midst of the mental health spiral that was known to many, which led to his admission to the hospital and left him crazy and delusional and expressing the ideas of killing.
The members of the card family and colleagues said by his colleagues that he had shown fake behavior and madness months before the shooting. “I think he will pick up and shoot.”