Jarrod W. Ramos has been charged with five counts of first-degree murder after the maniac stalker blasted his way into the offices of the Capital Gazette newspaper in Annapolis, Maryland. But while the cops responded quickly to terrified 911 calls about America’s latest mass shooting, the sicko’s social media rants had been ignored for years — including boasts of “making corpses” out of his enemies.
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Ramos had developed an obsessive hatred for the Capital Gazette after the newspaper did an article about charges that he'd stalked a former lover. "While I did commit the offense of harassment," Ramos wrote, "the victim's version of events is a gross misrepresentation of what actually occurred." He added that staff writer Eric Thomas Hartley had "further distorted the truth."
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Ramos had sued the
Capital Gazette after the article was published, and had even said on Twitter that he'd "enjoy seeing @CapGazNews cease publication, but it would be nicer to see Hartley and [former editor Thomas] Marquardt cease breathing." But neither of the men would be among
the five victims of the homicidal attack at the newspaper's offices on June 28.
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Photo credit: Getty/Files
In another chilling rant, Ramos had declared "Open Season" on his enemies — writing that the Capital Gazette staffers were "so sure their own sh-t doesn't stink, they feel their sewage bill should be paid by the people of Annapolis...Even kings must answer to God, and a modern day Inquisition is at hand."
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Photo credit: Getty/Files
In another chilling rant, Ramos had declared "Open Season" on his enemies — writing that the Capital Gazette staffers were "so sure their own sh-t doesn't stink, they feel their sewage bill should be paid by the people of Annapolis...Even kings must answer to God, and a modern day Inquisition is at hand."
Ramos had also boasted that he was "making corpses of corrupt careers and corporate entities." But while his stalking victim had even warned that he'd become "the next mass shooter," Ramos was determined to win over the public — saying: "I certainly did a bad thing, but don't shun me for how it was portrayed by this newspaper."
Ramos had developed an obsessive hatred for the Capital Gazette after the newspaper did an article about charges that he'd stalked a former lover. "While I did commit the offense of harassment," Ramos wrote, "the victim's version of events is a gross misrepresentation of what actually occurred." He added that staff writer Eric Thomas Hartley had "further distorted the truth."
Photo credit: Getty Images
Ramos had sued the
Capital Gazette after the article was published, and had even said on Twitter that he'd "enjoy seeing @CapGazNews cease publication, but it would be nicer to see Hartley and [former editor Thomas] Marquardt cease breathing." But neither of the men would be among
the five victims of the homicidal attack at the newspaper's offices on June 28.
Photo credit: Getty Images
In another chilling rant, Ramos had declared "Open Season" on his enemies — writing that the Capital Gazette staffers were "so sure their own sh-t doesn't stink, they feel their sewage bill should be paid by the people of Annapolis...Even kings must answer to God, and a modern day Inquisition is at hand."
Photo credit: Getty/Files
Ramos had also boasted that he was "making corpses of corrupt careers and corporate entities." But while his stalking victim had even warned that he'd become "the next mass shooter," Ramos was determined to win over the public — saying: "I certainly did a bad thing, but don't shun me for how it was portrayed by this newspaper."