Two British teenagers meticulously plotted “the greatest massacre ever,” inspired by the Columbine killings in the US, a prosecutor said as their trial opened.
The two wrote up detailed plans for what they called “Project Rainbow,” plotting to bomb a shopping center before killing teachers and students at their school on the 10th anniversary of the April 1999 massacre in Colorado, the prosecutor in Wednesday’s hearing said.
“We will walk into school and at the end of it no one will walk out alive,” Ross McKnight, 16, wrote in his diary, prosecutors said.
It would, the teen wrote, be the “greatest massacre ever.”
The defense denie the charges but has not yet argued its case.
The jury was told that a safe in 18-year-old Matthew Swift’s bedroom contained plans of the school and instructions on using acetone peroxide as a detonator. The safe also contained a notebook with plans, jottings and an image of the two Columbine attackers taken from closed circuit camera footage taken during the 1999 killings.
Underneath was written: “They say a picture paints a thousand words. This is my favorite picture in the whole world.”
Prosecutor Peter Wright said the two British teens “planned to copy and emulate the actions of Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold,” who killed 12 students and a teacher at Columbine High School before committing suicide.
“They had discussed, they had fantasized and eventually they had agreed to convert their fantasies into reality,” Wright said.
The jury was told that McKnight called a girl in March to tell her that he “couldn’t wait until April 20 — the 10th anniversary of the Columbine High School massacre.”
The girl said McKnight was revealed the plans while drunk.
The girl, who cannot be named, testified that she believed what he was saying, “just by the way he was saying it.”
She told her mother the next day and they went to the police.
McKnight and Swift were arrested. In interviews with police, McKnight refused to comment, while Swift said he was “a confused teenager with a vivid imagination.”
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