Teacher Fired And Involuntarily Committed For Questioning Sandy Hook Shooting


The person Heller was chatting with online informed the FBI that Heller had received a rifle from a friend soon after the Sandy Hook shootings. Police then monitored him online and off. After Heller purchased a gun police questioned him at his home, which eventually led to his involuntary commitment.

Interestingly, the same week we also saw a Sandy Hook investigator die of unexplained causes.

According to court documents, Heller, a Pound Ridge, New York resident, acquired a Russian military rifle on Dec. 14, 2012, the day Adam Lanza gunned down 20 elementary school children and six adults at the Sandy Hook school in Newtown, Connecticut.

That same month, Heller began having online conversations with Georgia O’Connor, described in court documents as a “medium,” about government conspiracies.

During these conversations, Heller expressed “concerns about government power and corruption, including the potential use by the government of technology to effect weather patterns and nationwide conspiracies,” according to court documents.

Their instant messaging occurred in the context of playing “Words with Friends,” an online Scrabble game that has a private messaging feature.

A couple of weeks after Newtown, and the purchase of the first of his two guns, Heller received a .22 caliber rifle from a friend. Concerned about Heller’s well-being, O’Connor reportedly contacted the FBI, who in turn contacted Bedford Police Chief William Hayes.

Hayes reached out to Pound Ridge Police Chief David Ryan and alerted Hochman.

Heller joined the district in 2003 and earned $97,391 in 2012-13 according to records. Before Fox Lane, Heller taught English at Harry S. Truman High School in New York City for two years.

Bedford and Pound Ridge police monitored Heller’s online communications and activities and kept “a vigilance at the high school where he taught,” according to court filings.

On Jan. 18, 2013, police followed Heller after school to Precision Armory, a gun store in Carmel, where he looked into buying a .22 caliber rifle with a removable barrel. On his way back, police pulled him over, and asked to go to his house to talk.

According to Heller’s suit, there were about eight law enforcement officers already there. After questioning, Heller was taken to Westchester Medical Center’s Behavioral Health Unit, where it was determined that he had a “fast pulse” and taken to the emergency room.

Ryan said police seized his guns.

On Jan. 23, 2013, Heller was transferred to the Behavior Health Unit, where he was “involuntarily committed and, over the course of a week, seen by many doctors,” according to the petition filed by Heller’s lawyer, Michael Sussman. Heller was ultimately discharged with a clearance letter saying he “could return to work on Feb. 11,” and he contacted Hochman with the news.

Hochman asked Heller to undergo psychiatric evaluation.

Heller met with Dr. Alexander Lerman twice in April, after which Hochman brought Heller up on disciplinary charges in June 2013. Hochman said in the charges that Heller made intentionally false statements during Lerman’s evaluation.

Source: usatoday.com
Photo: usatoday.com

Heller has filed a federal lawsuit against the school district:

The Fox Lane High School teacher who was fired last year for ranting online that the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting was orchestrated by the government and that he wanted to “kill people” has filed a federal lawsuit against the district, asking for his job back.

Adam Heller, 36, who was fired by the Bedford school district, is alleging that his constitutional rights were violated by the “chilling of his protected speech,” confiscation of his legally acquired firearms, false arrest, and wrongful involuntarily commitment at a hospital.

The federal lawsuit names the district, the town of Pound Ridge, Westchester Medical Center and the doctors who evaluated Heller following his arrest in January 2013.

Source: lohud.com



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