When William Patrick Williams called his grandmother from a hotel room on July 13, she could hear him fiddling with the AK-47 rifle he had bought two days earlier. He told her he was homicidal and suicidal, according to a criminal complaint filed by the U.S. attorney's office, and said he wanted to "shoot up" the hotel and then "commit suicide by cop when the police arrived."
The grandmother, who was not identified, persuaded the 19-year-old Texan to let her bring him to Covenant Medical Center in Lubbock, Texas, where he was admitted for psychiatric evaluation.
After a brief hospital stay, Williams gave Lubbock police his hotel room number and permission to enter, telling them that he had "laid out all his weapons on the bed." According to the complaint, officers recovered an AK-47 rifle, 17 magazines loaded with ammunition, a black trench coat, black tactical pants and fingerless gloves, and a black T-shirt with the words "Let 'Em Come."
"We avoided another huge crisis," said U.S. Attorney Erin Nealy Cox in a phone interview Monday, referring to a shooting at the Dallas federal courthouse in June.
Williams had not been on any state or federal watch list. Had his grandmother not stepped up, Cox said, "we wouldn't have known he was contemplating this. She saved his life, injury to him and probably to multiple people's lives."