Grusome, and a bit telling. As that certainly looks like the suspect's car, it helps explain the whole "left and came back thing" because he was so close, it wouldn't take him very long. So even if there was a "silent alarm" for theater staff, they may not have gotten there before he went out, got his guns, and came back in.CaptainChewbacca wrote:Grusome image of the backdoor of the theater.
http://s3.reutersmedia.net/resources/me ... 234041.jpg
From reuters.
It also goes into planning, because seriously to get a parking spot like that you have to get there pretty early. Unless theater 9 is in the back or something. Still, a parking space right against the building like that isn't easy to acquire.
Regarding alarming the doors and such, not sure if it would make a difference. As I said, with the silent alarm, if somebody's planning something like this (as was clearly the case here) they'd have their 'outside stash' pretty close by, so it's debatable whether theater staff would even have time to show up and go latch the door before the gunman came back - and it's not like the 16 or 17 year old kid they'd probably send would do much good at that point besides become another potential victim. And as far as the more mundane issue of people sneaking in, well, again, by the time an employee got there whoever was sneaking has probably done so and taken a seat; and they're hardly going to go around the theater demanding to see ticket stubs, so what's the point?
And as pointed out, they don't make them "Emergency Exit Only - Alarm Will Sound" style doors because people routinely leave them to exit the theater (often being more convenient than trekking back through the lobby) so they'd either have to disable the alarms at the end of every movie or deal with lots of false alarms. And even during the movie people might try to leave by them for whatever reason, like young children getting too upset or uncontrollable or whatever other reasons someone might have to leave a theater mid-movie.
And locking them from the inside is obviously not going to happen, because I'm pretty sure they'd be violating fire codes and such by doing so.
I think most modern alarms do that, just because people might wake up and leave early so they don't want the music/alarm beeping going off all day long. An auto-sleep thing, if you will.CaptainChewbacca wrote:It appears it could have been much worse. He had set an alarm to blast loud music in his apartment around midnight, apparently to have a neighbor call in a noise complaint which would have resulted in police kicking down his door and setting off a bomb. That would have pulled all emergency response away from the theater, and would have given him a lot longer to rampage in the movie theater.
The only reason this didn't happen is for some reason his stereo turned itself off before a neighbor got fed up enough to call.
And I guess we'd have to get Kamikaze Sith or SVPD to answer the question, but what are the odds police would force the door on a noise complaint, even if nobody ever answered after repeated attempts at knocking?