The following is an archived discussion of a featured article review. Please do not modify it. Further comments should be made on the article's talk page or at Wikipedia talk:Featured article review). No further edits should be made to this page.

The article was removed 15:21, 21 May 2007.


Columbine High School massacre[edit]

Review commentary[edit]

Messages left at SmthManly, Disaster management, and Criminal Biography. SandyGeorgia (Talk) 17:30, 30 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]

This article was promoted to FA almost 2 years ago and since that time the criteria have improved. This article is quite large, but has many unsourced statements, including allegations that the columbine high school gunmen were influenced by specific people, movies or music. Statements to that extend are potentially libellous and should always be sourced to reliable references. If the referencing is improved, I see no further objections to this being FA, but others are welcome to post their suggestions ofcourse. --Cpt. Morgan (Reinoutr) 21:06, 17 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Well, honestly, most of the shooting section is put under just one citation, due to the fact it all came from that one main place (official investigation report), you can't link each portion directly since it's all .pdf files where there are thousands of pages in one link, technically, it could have dozens more links but it's too much work to link each one directly. ---- SmthManly / ManlyTalk / ManlyContribs 21:39, 17 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I appreciate that, but an FA should really use much more in-line references. This article has whole sections without inline referencing, even for "controversial" statements, like I explained above. --Cpt. Morgan (Reinoutr) 21:52, 17 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
No, I agree with you, a lot of these controversial statements were added over the past two years that I never liked to see, and many people have fought tooth and nail to keep them there so they have remained, still, a lot of the statements in this article are grouped together into one reference, the first few references contain a lot of information themselves, if you want, maybe you, or we, can try and get a few people to go in there and decipher the 40 references and break them down, but it's too much of a task for one or two people. -- SmthManly / ManlyTalk / ManlyContribs 22:00, 17 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I agree that the page could stand a whole lot more sourcing, though it's reasonable to take the the timeline of the killings directly from the sheriff's report.

I think that someone has correctly identified the two most problematic sections of the page, "Warning Signs" and especially "Third shooter theory." "Warning Signs" is on the right track, but it gets several details wrong.

Here is a breakdown on several key dates/events for the Warning Signs section. Most of the text came from this website: http://www.columbine-angels.com/History.htm -- but I have checked each one of these references while researching my book, and they're all correct. (I added a few sources where I verified them, but my primary timeline spreadsheet is separate, so what I only typed the verification info into this document in a few places):

August 7, 1997 - An unidentified citizen called the Jefferson County Sheriff's Office to complain about Eric Harris's violent laced web site. The tip was investigated by Deputy Michael Burgess who forwarded the report and print outs of the web site to the investigator in charge of computer-related crime, John Hicks. This was the end of the investigation

January 30, 1998 - Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold are arrested by Jefferson County Deputy Tim Walsh for breaking and entering an electrician's van and stealing equipment from it

February 15, 1998 - Using a search warrant, Jefferson County sheriff's deputies found and defused a pipe bomb in a field at Garrison and Field Streets (verified: Source: grand jury report, draft affidavit to search Eric’s house, from GJ report, aug 19, 2004.)

March 1998 - Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold are placed in Jefferson County's Juvenile Diversion Program and given anger management classes

March 18, 1998 - Randy and Judy Brown meet with investigators to discuss the violent writings and threats against their son, Brooks, posted on Eric Harris's website

From dave: Mar 31, 98: Mike Guerra met with Investigators Hicks and Grove. They discussed the Browns’ complaint, and Eric’s bomb descriptions on his website. Source: grand jury report, draft affidavit to search Eric’s house, from GJ report, aug 19, 2004.

The "Third shooter theory" section is complete nonsense, in my opinion. I think it's reasonable to include a brief sentence or two on the idea--since rumors about it abound--with the main emphasis on how little evidence there is to back it up. Both killers left huge stacks of writings about the killings and created videos together, all of which make it abundantly clear that it's a two-man plan. They cite each other regularly (and did the videos together), and also explicitly state that no one else was involved. Is the theory that it was a three-man plan, with two of them proud about it and the third insistent on anonymity--to which the other two agreed to play along and never slipped up? OK. Then we have the hard evidence: the video cameras in the cafeteria and a Patti Nielson's extensive 911 tape in the library captured the two killers on video and audio tape and no third gunman appears either place. Also, the vast majority of witness testimony made it clear that there were two. It is not surprising that some witness think they saw someone else: witness testimony in general is extremely unreliable, and you always have conflicting testimony. Finally, the cops were initially assuming there was a conspiracy, and investigated all Harris and Klebold's friends intensely, confiscated emails and writings etc., and could find nothing on anyone. (Harris and Klebold would have had to be extremely careful to avoid ever referencing the third person in anything they said.)

This theory is about as credible as the idea that the Appolo moon walk was faked at that men have never set foot on the moon.

I can't tell you how many emails I have received (and comments on my website) advancing the third-shooter theory, and I have yet to see one remotely convincing argument, or anything supported by substantial evidence. Some of the other sections lack citations, but the bulk of the info elsewhere is correct (and has been documented elsewhere, even if not here. I'll cite a few exceptions below.) But this third-shooter section lacks any citations and is almost universally accepted as complete myth. Therefore, I strongly urge deleting it unless/until someone can support it with any citations.

Overall, I think the Columbine Massacre entry gets most of the information right, and it is dramatically better than the last time I reviewed it a few years ago. I think the jocks thing is still played up too much, though, and should be balanced by the opposing facts: especially that Columbine was planned primarily as a bombing, and the cafeteria bombs would have been about as indiscriminate as you can get. (Also, many of the most prominent jocks had lunch that hour, but almost always went out for lunch, which was widely known. A great number of them were not even in the building.)

The fact that the massacre was intended primarily as a bombing seems to be very underplayed overall in the article. It's in there, but it's kind of buried. I think the fact that what happened is vastly different from what the killers' planned should be in the lede.

Also, the section on the killers' choice of date for their attack could use work. There is contradictory evidence on whether they were planning to do it on the 19th or 20th. The best evidence that they were actually planning on the 19 comes from the sheriff's report and is not cited here. Quoting from the report:

"There were also indications that Harris and Klebold initially planned the shootings to occur on April 19. They specifically mentioned Monday and another time said, 'Today is the 11th, eight more days.' They never articulated why they chose the day they did and never mentioned that April 19 was the anniversary of Waco, Texas or the Oklahoma City bombing. They never verbalized that they even knew April 20 is Adolph Hitler's birthday."

I suggest citing and quoting that. You can find the quote here, almost at the bottom: http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/2000/columbine.cd/Pages/SUSPECTS_TEXT.htm

I'll have to check, but I think this sentence is citing a discredited theory: "One theory states that the original date chosen was April 19 because it was a date on which Robyn Anderson, one of the people who purchased the guns and a close friend of Klebold, would not be present." I'm pretty sure that Robyn told the cops she was in school on the 19th.

Davecullen 05:45, 24 April 2007 (UTC) Dave Cullen 23 April 2007[reply]

I just read through a few sections more closely, and the section on journals and videotapes badly needs work. This sentence, is particularly problematic: "The entries contained blurbs about ways to escape to Mexico, hijacking an aircraft at Denver International Airport and crashing into a building in New York City, as well as details about the attacks. The pair hoped that after setting off bombs in the cafeteria, they would rampage through the school and shoot any survivors, then continue their attack on surrounding houses as neighbors came out to see the commotion . . ." Those things are all mentioned, briefly, but they are grossly unrepresentative of Eric's journal. (I assume they came from an early account when Sheriff Stone had only quoted a few passages, and that moron--who eventualy lost credibility with everyone--chose ridiculous passages to share with the media.) That passage does not give the flavor of what Eric's journal was like at all (and no mention is made of Dylan's), and it gives the reader the impression that they were planning something different from Columbine. Eric dreamed big and wanted to do something far bigger than blowing up his school. But once he was actually making the bombs, he complained about how much work it was even to make enough explosives to destroy a string of buildings, much less a city. He realized that he had to be practical and scale back his dreams, and long before April 20, he/they were set on just the attack on the school, though it was primarily going to be a series of bombings, without a shootout in the middle. This passage gives a very different impression.

This statement is also way off: "The pair also kept videos that were used mainly as documentation of explosives, ammunition, and weapons they had acquired illegally." The Basement Tapes did do that, but they were mainly about bragging about what they were going to do, and about explaining themselves. This sentence takes a relatively minor aspect of the tapes and describes it as the main focus.

(Also, the section does not distinguish between The Basement Tapes--as they're widely known--and other videos now on the web, such as the one where Eric and Dylan are praticing firing their weapons at Rampart Range. This distinction has caused a lot of confusion, especially among people who want to see the tapes. They have heard that the videos are online, and want to see the Basement Tapes, but don't know that there were different kinds of videos.)

Davecullen 06:35, 24 April 2007 (UTC) 24 April 2007[reply]


I agree with everything in Dhartung's last post.

Davecullen 00:55, 28 April 2007 (UTC)Dave Cullen[reply]

FARC commentary[edit]

Suggested FA criteria concern is referencing (1c). Marskell 16:50, 3 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
The above discussion is preserved as an archive. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the article's talk page or in Wikipedia talk:Featured article review. No further edits should be made to this page.