Authorities trying to make sense of why a gunman killed 12 people at a southern California bar are not publicly discussing what they have learned, but at least one Instagram post he made after beginning the massacre has emerged as an early focus.
Social media platforms have scrubbed that entry, along with any other posts following Wednesday night’s massacre.
One law enforcement official said Ian David Long, a 28-year-old former Marine, posted about his mental state and whether people would believe he was sane.
Authorities are investigating whether he believed his former girlfriend would be at the Borderline Bar and Grill, said the official.
A second law enforcement official, Ventura County Sheriff's Captain Garo Kuredjian, said that – based on time stamps – the gunman apparently stopped shooting inside the bar and posted to Instagram.
Mr Kuredjian said he did not know the content of any posts. Instagram and Facebook refuse to discuss individual accounts and did not respond to a request for comment.
Authorities described an attack of military efficiency. None of those injured was hurt by gunfire. When the gunman fired his .45-calibre pistol, he shot to kill.
As scores of police officers closed in, Long apparently shot and killed himself.
Several people who knew Long in the suburb of Thousand Oaks, where he went to high school and eventually moved back in with his mother, described him in disturbing terms.
Long had made others feel uncomfortable going back to his teens.
Dominique Colell, who coached girls' track and field at the high school where Long was a sprinter, remembers an angry young man who could be verbally and physically combative.
In one instance, Ms Colell said Long used his fingers to mimic shooting her in the back of the head as she talked to another athlete.
“I literally feared for myself around him,” Ms Colell said in an interview. “He was the only athlete that I was scared of.”
As investigators worked to figure out what set him off, President Donald Trump blamed mental illness, describing the gunman as "a very sick puppy" who had "a lot of problems".
At the White House on Friday, President Trump touted his efforts to fund work on post-traumatic stress disorder among veterans, and ignored questions about stricter gun control laws.
Agitated behaviour
Investigators have not commented on whether mental illness played a role in the rampage. A mental health specialist who assessed Long after sheriff’s deputies responded to a call about his agitated behaviour last spring worried he might be suffering from PTSD.
The incident happened in April, when yelling and loud banging noises coming from the home Long shared with his mother prompted a next-door neighbour to call authorities.
The mental health specialist concluded there were no grounds to have him involuntarily committed.
Among the dead in the shooting rampage were a sheriff's sergeant gunned down as he entered the bar and a US Navy veteran who survived last year's massacre in which a gunman in a high-rise Las Vegas hotel killed 58 people at an outdoor country music festival. – Associated Press