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Dylann Roof: Charleston suspect 'illegally' bought weapon as result of failure in background check, says FBI Dylann Roof: Charleston suspect 'illegally' bought weapon as result of failure in background check, says FBI
(34 minutes later)
Dylann Roof, the man charged with shooting dead nine people at a black church in Charleston, should not have been able to purchase the gun used in the attack and was only able to do so because of breakdowns in the FBI’s background-check system.Dylann Roof, the man charged with shooting dead nine people at a black church in Charleston, should not have been able to purchase the gun used in the attack and was only able to do so because of breakdowns in the FBI’s background-check system.
The FBI Director James Comey told reporters at FBI headquarters, on Friday that failures in the gun purchase screening system.The FBI Director James Comey told reporters at FBI headquarters, on Friday that failures in the gun purchase screening system.
“This case rips all of our hearts out, but the thought that an error on our part is connected to a gun this person used to slaughter these people is very painful to us,” said Comey.“This case rips all of our hearts out, but the thought that an error on our part is connected to a gun this person used to slaughter these people is very painful to us,” said Comey.
Nine people were killed on June 17 when they were attending bible study class at the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church. Dylann Roof was arrested a day after the shooting in Charleston
Nine people were killed on June 17 when they were attending bible study class at the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church. Mr Roof has been charged with nine counts of murder and three of attempted murder.
In the days after the killing, a racist manifesto was found online along with 60 photographs of Mr Roof posing with the Confederate flag and standing at Confederate Civil War sites. Officials believe Mr Roof authored the document and became 'self-radicalised' after reading extremist material onine.
Among the images posted online was one of Mr Roof with a handgun that appeared to be a .45 Glock pistol, a type of firearm that was also found in his car when he was arrested the morning after the attack, the Washington Post said.
Pastor and politician Clementa Pinckney was among the nine killed at the Emanuel AME Church
Mr Roof’s ability to purchase the gun has been a focus for investigators since the killings and it was reported that his father had given him the money for a weapon as a birthdaygift.
The young man had been arrested for possession of narcotics in February, afelony charge that should have surfaced on criminal databases and prevented him from buying a weapon at a gun store.
But Mr Comey said the data was not properly entered in federal criminal justice computer systems, or had been mishandled by an analyst with the National Instant Criminal Background Check System.
The gun transaction went through after three days because the examiner did not have enough information to authorise or deny it. "If she had seen that police report that purchase would have been denied," he said, according to the Associated Press. 
He said he had only learned of the error on Thursday night and had told officials in South Carolina to meet with members of the nine people who were killed at the church to explain what had happened.