Appalachian School
of Law Killer Still Haunted by Paranoia, Delusions
By CHRIS KAHN Associated Press Writer
(June 10, 2004) -- Peter Odighizuwa spends most of his time in a
cramped cinderblock jail cell several counties away from the mountain campus
he plunged into terror.
He's alone now with the
delusions and paranoia that drove him to gun down
three people and wound three others at the Appalachian School of Law on Jan.
16, 2002. In his first extended interview, Odighizuwa told The Associated
Press he thinks often of that day, though he still has trouble explaining
why he did it.
"I really don't know what happened," Odighizuwa said. "I feel like I'm
God sometimes, and I was running demons out of the school. It was like an
exorcism."
Understanding Odighizuwa, who has been
diagnosed with paranoid
schizophrenia, remains an important issue for his victims and his former
school. After 2{ years, the 46-year-old Nigerian native is now the focus of
a series of lawsuits that could force the fledgling law school to pay $23
million.
The lawsuits were filed by the family of slain student Angela Dales and
three students who survived the rampage. They claim school officials were
well aware Odighizuwa had a
history of outbursts and spousal abuse, and
should have realized he was a threat.
"Not only was this situation foreseeable, it was probable, based upon
Peter's prior conduct," said E. Brent Bryson, the lawyer representing the
Dales family and Rebecca Brown, Stacey Beans and Madeline Short.
The lawsuits also contend Odighizuwa was allowed to re-enroll after
flunking out because he was one of the school's few black students and
administrators were desperate to show diversity to get full accreditation.
He opened fire after flunking out a second time.
Law school attorney Daniel Caldwell couldn't be reached at his office
Wednesday and Thursday but has denied the claims in earlier interviews.
Odighizuwa spoke to an AP reporter at the New River Valley Regional Jail,
where he's waiting to be transferred into the state prison system. He
shuffled into a tiny interview room and slid into a plastic stack-up chair,
his cuffed hands slumped over his chained ankles.
He wore the same thick-rimmed glasses and black-and-white striped jump
suit that he wore in court. But unlike the past two years of court hearings,
Odighizuwa seemed focused--he wanted to talk.
"I didn't flunk out," he said. "People say I did, but I got a C average."
He spoke for about an hour, rubbing the palms of his hands between
questions. He paused for several seconds when asked about his victims.
"The students shouldn't get anything from the school," he said with a
snort and quick wave of his hand. "The law school isn't a psychiatrist. It
doesn't know what's in my head."
Odighizuwa said the shooting was like an explosion, a culmination of
frustration and anger that bottled up inside him as he struggled to become a
lawyer.
"I'm not a violent person," he said. "You ask any of the inmates here. My
fellow inmates, they like me."
Odighizuwa said he
came to the United States in 1980 and worked for
several years as a bus driver and a factory clerk in Portland, Ore. He later
moved to Ohio, where he briefly enrolled at Ohio State University before
going to Central State University. Though he studied math, Odighizuwa said
he developed a keen interest in the law.
"I wanted to practice public interest law ... you know, help the people
that are low income, people who have disabilities, immigration. I'm an
immigrant myself."
Odighizuwa started applying for law school and soon received letters from
the Appalachian School of Law in the tiny southwestern Virginia town of
Grundy. He'd never heard of the school, but Odighizuwa eventually decided to
enroll there and take his wife and four children with him.
But Odighizuwa said law school was difficult, not just academically, but
socially. He had no friends.
"I would show up in the library and everybody would leave. They would go
like this when I came around," Odighizuwa said, coughing and snorting
vigorously. "Like that."
Odighizuwa said that for months before the shooting he brought a pistol
to school for protection after finding an unfired bullet outside his door.
"I don't know if someone was threatening me or what."
The day of the shooting, Odighizuwa said he doesn't remember pulling the
gun out of his car and walking upstairs. He said he only has a foggy
recollection of shooting dean Anthony Sutin and professor Thomas Blackwell.
He does remember walking into the student lounge and seeing Dales, Beans,
Short and Brown. Odighizuwa said all four were particularly mean to him,
though he didn't recall any specific examples. As he walked down the stairs,
Odighizuwa aimed at the four women.
"I wasn't just shooting all over the place," Odighizuwa said. "I saw the
people who were menacing me. It happened so fast."
These days, Odighizuwa said he regrets what happened. But at the same
time, he still can't be sure that his paranoia isn't real. "I just felt this
feeling of taking care ... I was taking care of FBI and CIA agents. And the
KGB too."
Odighizuwa, who pleaded guilty in February to firearms, capital murder
and attempted capital murder charges, will likely spend the rest of his life
behind bars. However, he recently sent Circuit Judge Michael Moore a letter
asking to retract his plea and order a jury trial.
"I never wanted a plea bargain," Odighizuwa said. "I wanted the
opportunity to get psychiatric help. But they (defense lawyers) kept telling
me I was better off in jail."
Jimmy Turk Jr., who represented Odighizuwa, said it will be unlikely that
the judge agrees.
"There's absolutely no question in my mind that Peter suffers from mental
illness," Turk said. "But that's not a valid defense for someone who's
committed a capital crime."
Read: How Others Can Help the Schizophrenic
and How Family Members Can Maintain Their Own
Health and Emotional Well-being
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