Stories about Connecticut shooter Adam Lanza have a familiar theme: He was a smart, quiet, polite kid who was was socially awkward and gave no sign this might happen. Samples of coverage about the 20-year-old, who attended the same elementary school where the rampage took place:
- Hartford Courant: Ex-classmate Kateleen Soy recalls him as "painfully shy" and a "little hard to talk to," but adds, "I wanted people to know he wasn't always a monster. He became one, but he wasn't always that way." Another, Andrew Lapple, recalls: "He was always carrying around his laptop holding onto it real tight. He walked down the halls against the wall almost like he was afraid of people. He was definitely kind of strange but you'd never think he'd do something like this."
- Associated Press: "Family and friends remember Adam Lanza as many things—intelligent, nerdy, goth, remote, thin." AP says police officials think he might have had some kind of personality disorder. Ex-classmate Joshua Milas from Newtown High School: "We would hang out, and he was a good kid. He was smart. He was probably one of the smartest kids I know. He was probably a genius."
- Danbury News-Times: "A woman who lives near the Lanza family said Lanza was a 'reserved' and shy youth who appeared to be 'troubled.'"