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YouTube shooting: suspect motivated by anger at streaming service’s policies, authorities say Nasim Aghdam: YouTube shooting suspect visited firing range hours before attack on California campus
(about 1 hour later)
The woman suspected of shooting three people at YouTube’s headquarters before killing herself was driven by anger about how video streaming service treated her content, authorities said. Hours before YouTube employees were sent fleeing from a shooter on their campus, the suspected assailant practised her aim at a shooting range.
“It is believed the suspect was upset with policies and practices of YouTube”, San Bruno Police chief Ed Barberini told reporters.  “This appears to have been the motive for this incident”. Soon after suspect Nasim Najafi Aghdam visited the gun range, authorities said, she strode into the video streaming giant’s headquarters and opened fire with a legally obtained Smith and Wesson semiautomatic handgun before fatally shooting herself. 
Authorities identified the suspect as Nasim Najafi Aghdam, a 39-year-old resident of San Diego. An emerging timeline suggests that she travelled from southern California to Silicon Valley in the days before the shooting, propelled by a sense of grievance at YouTube. An emerging timeline suggests that Ms Aghdam travelled from southern California to Silicon Valley in the days before the shooting, propelled by a sense of grievance at YouTube.
Her family reported her missing in the days leading up to the shooting, and police officers in Mountain View - a community that is near YouTube's San Bruno campus but hundreds of kilometres from San Diego - located her the morning before the shooting. Mr Barberini said Mountain View authorities had not contacted his department. “It is believed the suspect was upset with policies and practices of YouTube”, San Bruno police chief Ed Barberini told reporters.  “This appears to have been the motive for this incident”.
On the morning of the shooting, Mr Barberini said, Ms Aghdam visited a shooting range. She entered YouTube’s campus via a parking garage and opened fire with a Smith and Wesson semiautomatic handgun that she had legally obtained, wounding three people.  Her family told San Diego authorities that she had disappeared at the end of March, Mr Barberini said. She resurfaced more than 450 miles (725 km) later in the Silicon Valley town of Mountain View, where police officers discovered her sleeping in the car early in the morning the day before the shooting.
While initial reports suggested that the shooting may have been spurred by domestic violence, authorities discounted the notion of a personal vendetta by saying there was no evidence she targeted anyone specific. With no reason to detain Ms Aghdam, Mountain View police officers moved on and contacted her family.
“We have no indication she was selecting individuals to fire at”, Mr Barberini said. In an initial conversation with authorities, Ms Aghdam’s father gave no indication that his daughter had any weapons or was nursing a grievance against YouTube, the Mountain View police department said. About an hour later, the father called back to say his daughter believed YouTube had done something to upset her but did not hint at looming violence.
Instead, it appears that she was acting on the belief that YouTube had worked to silence her. As authorities executed search warrants on two southern California residences associated with Ms Aghdam, their investigation turned to her online life.  The next day, she visited the gun range. She then parked her car behind a business near YouTube's headquarters, entered the campus through a garage and began firing, authorities said. 
Investigators reconstructing Ms Aghdam’s history have a long digital trail to follow. A website under her name featured angry diatribes about YouTube suppressing her content and stymying traffic. Mountain View authorities had not communicated with the San Bruno police about their interaction with Ms Aghdam or their conversation with her family, Mr Barberini said.
As authorities executed search warrants on two southern California residences associated with Ms Aghdam, their investigation turned to her online life and her apparent belief that YouTube had worked to silence her. 
Investigators reconstructing Ms Aghdam’s history have a long digital trail to follow. A website under her name featured angry diatribes about YouTube suppressing her content and impacting her traffic.
“Youtube filtered my channels to keep them from getting views!“ the site says, adding that “There is no equal growth opportunity on YOUTUBE or any other video sharing site, your channel will grow if they want to!!!!!”“Youtube filtered my channels to keep them from getting views!“ the site says, adding that “There is no equal growth opportunity on YOUTUBE or any other video sharing site, your channel will grow if they want to!!!!!”
Investigators were working to gain access to and comb through Ms Aghdam's social media postings in an effort to further elucidate her motives, Mr Barberini said. Investigators were working to gain access to and comb through Ms Aghdam's social media postings in an effort to further elucidate her motives, Mr Barberini said. She is believed to have acted alone.
Her father told the Bay Area News Group that Ms Aghdam had expressed fury about YouTube’s policies, saying she “hated” the company.
In response to a question about allegations that certain users and videos are downplayed, YouTube pointed the Independent to public statements in which Google CEO Sundar Pichai and YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki expressed grief and thanked first responders.In response to a question about allegations that certain users and videos are downplayed, YouTube pointed the Independent to public statements in which Google CEO Sundar Pichai and YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki expressed grief and thanked first responders.
“There are no words to describe how horrible it was to have an active shooter @YouTube today”, Ms Wojcicki said. “Our deepest gratitude to law enforcement & first responders for their rapid response. Our hearts go out to all those injured & impacted today. We will come together to heal as a family.”“There are no words to describe how horrible it was to have an active shooter @YouTube today”, Ms Wojcicki said. “Our deepest gratitude to law enforcement & first responders for their rapid response. Our hearts go out to all those injured & impacted today. We will come together to heal as a family.”
The website under Ms Aghdam’s name also features content promoting veganism and featuring animals, buttressing evidence that Ms Aghdam may have been involved in animal rights activism. A 2009 San Diego Union-Tribune story quotes a woman by the same name at a demonstration saying “animal rights equals human rights”. The website under Ms Aghdam’s name also features content promoting veganism and featuring animals, buttressing evidence that Ms Aghdam may have been involved in animal rights activism. A 2009 Los Angeles Times story quoted a woman by the same name at a demonstration saying “animal rights equals human rights”.
Two of the three people who sustained gunshot wounds had been released from the hospital, a spokesman told reporters, and a third still being treated had seen his condition improve from critical to serious.Two of the three people who sustained gunshot wounds had been released from the hospital, a spokesman told reporters, and a third still being treated had seen his condition improve from critical to serious.