Tools
Change country:

The Columbine-Killers Fan Club

Mass shootings didn’t start at Columbine High, but the mass-shooter era did. Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold’s audacious plan and misread motives multiplied the stakes and inspired wave after wave of emulation. How could we know we were witnessing an origin story?

The legend of Columbine is fiction. There are two versions of the attack: what actually happened on April 20, 1999, and the story we all accepted back then. The mythical version explained it all so cleanly. A pair of outcast loners dubbed the “Trench Coat Mafia” targeted the jocks to avenge years of bullying. Dwayne Fuselier, the supervisory special agent who led the FBI’s Columbine investigation, is fond of quoting H. L. Mencken in response to the mythmaking: “There is always a well-known solution to every human problem—neat, plausible, and wrong.”

The legend hinges on bullying, but the killers never mentioned it in the huge trove of journals, online posts, and videos they left to explain themselves. The myth was so insidious because it cast the ruthless killers as heroes of misfits everywhere. Fuselier warned how appealing that myth would sound to anyone who felt ostracized. Within a few years, the fledgling fandom would find one another on social media, where they have operated ever since.

Around the world, Eric and Dylan are idolized as champions of “the nobodies.” Eric hated the nobodies. He mocked them mercilessly on his website and in his journal. He wasn’t a loner or an outcast, and neither was Dylan. Eric and Dylan made clear in their writings that they were planning the attack for their own selfish motives—certainly not to help the kids they ridiculed at the bottom of the social food chain.

They were not in the Trench Coat Mafia. They were not Nazis or white supremacists, and they did not plan the attack for Hitler’s birthday. They did not target jocks, Christians, or Black people. They targeted no one specifically. They shot randomly and designed their bombs to kill indiscriminately. That’s where “they” ends: Their polar-opposite personalities drove opposite motives. Psychopaths are devoid of empathy; Eric was a sadistic psychopath who killed for his own aggrandizement and enjoyment. Dylan was suicidally depressed and self-loathing. Eric lured him into punishing the world for the pain it inflicted on him, instead of punishing himself. Columbine was a suicide plan, but on “Judgment Day,” as they called it, Dylan would show the world the “somebody” we’d never seen.

The Columbine killers have fans. Eric and Dylan’s adoring online following spreads across nearly every continent, and it’s growing across multiple platforms. In Russia, the government, which has been plagued by an explosion of both Columbine fandom and mass shootings, estimates that more than 70,000 members exist. They call themselves the TCC, for “True Crime Community,” and I’ve spent much of the past 15 years inside their online world. My book Columbine made me enemy No. 1 for portraying Eric and Dylan as ruthless murderers.

In 2016, a young fan tweeted: “hey @DaveCullen block me or else i shoot my school.” She’d been ranting for hours, posting pictures of school shooters, and tweets such as: “It’s also something a lot of people need, To die....I wish i was dead...I LIKE VIOLENCE...I want to be killed in front of an audience. … I think someone failed to abort me (:”

These teens are ensnared in an American tragedy that just keeps growing worse.

diagram of shootings inspired by Columbine

I’ve tried to leave this story so many times, but this diagram haunts me, ruthlessly expanding like an unstoppable spider web, devouring all the lives and futures in its path. It demands that we address the cause—25 years too late. That web is made up of 54 mass shootings that have killed nearly 300 people and wounded more than 500. And every gunman left evidence that they were inspired or influenced by the murderers at Columbine. The Columbine effect.

Eric and Dylan’s bombs failed. Yet the legend made them heroic to their progeny and gave birth to their fandom. By the tenth anniversary, a small band of “Columbiners” had formed online. They gravitated to the TCC, to Ted Bundy, to the younger Tsarnaev brother, ‎to Dylann Roof, and to others—but Eric and Dylan are the megastars. The groupies multiply, as fresh crops of teens join their ranks each season.

Most gunmen die in the act, so the 54 attacks itemized in the diagram are just the ones that we know of, and that were carried out. A 2015 Mother Jones investigation of Columbine copycats found more than two thwarted attacks for each one that succeeded. It identified 14 plotters targeting Columbine’s anniversary and 13 striving to top its body count. Surviving mass shooters have admitted that they were competing with one another.

All roads lead back to Columbine. The Virginia Tech shooter, Seung-Hui Cho, wrote in a school assignment that he wanted to “repeat Columbine” and that he idolized its “martyrs.” The Northern Illinois University killer marked a third generation, explicitly inspired by both Virginia Tech and Columbine. Sandy Hook was the fourth generation; Adam Lanza had studied all three. Six more school shooters later referenced Sandy Hook and Columbine. Five generations of fallout, all reenacting the original legend.

Most early Columbiners were just curious teenagers interested in the criminal mind or in analyzing Columbine. Many still are, and their analyses are often useful. Many are angry about being tarred with the group’s reputation, but they have been outnumbered by new arrivals unabashedly calling themselves fans. Many use the killers’ faces as avatars, extoll their virtues, and compose love poems, fan fiction, and gory memes about them. Sue Klebold said she was shocked by the volume of letters she received calling Dylan “heroic” and by the number of girls saying, “I wish I could have his baby.”

How little these groupies know about the murderers they obsess over is ironic. They keep repeating the misreporting that was debunked decades ago, convinced it’s true because it has metastasized into TCC dogma. The TCC twists the story to recast the murderers as victims; and the dead, wounded, and traumatized as villains. The groupies didn’t start these myths; we in the media bear that shame. But the groupies are now the carriers, spreading the legend of Dylan and Eric to remote reaches of the globe.

Seventy thousand is a tiny fraction of the adolescent population, but a magnet for a dangerous cohort of marginalized, disaffected, and hopeless teens—a major pool of aspiring shooters. Most TCC members outright say that they condone the Columbine murders, often in their profiles. They have turned Eric and Dylan into folk heroes, and they celebrate them as avenging angels. Adam Lanza obsessed over the Columbine killers and spent years immersed in these groups online. Then he murdered 20 little kids and six adults at Sandy Hook Elementary School.

Here’s the twist: Most of the TCC members I’ve engaged with describe themselves as awkward outcasts desperate to fit in. The TCC embraces them. The TCC feels cool—Eric and Dylan are super cool—and so they finally feel cool. I find it heartbreaking to hear them describe the pain they endure at school and the affinity they feel for “Dylan” and “Eric,” the fictional characters they’ve constructed. These kids are shocked when I tell them that other members of the TCC have told me the same—that they are putting on the same show, sure that all the others really mean it. Did Adam Lanza believe the posers? We’ll never know, but we can be certain that as you read this, a distraught, lonely kid somewhere is contemplating an attack—and the one community they trust is screaming, Do it!

Lots of kids fantasize about killing. Two days after Columbine, Salon ran “Misfits Who Don’t Kill,” in which three people came clean about their youthful fantasies of enacting mass murder. The phenomenon was widely reported that week. But none of those people did anything, because they knew how horribly wrong acting out the fantasy would be. Inside the TCC bubble, the constant message is that if your classmates are tormenting you, killing them is not just moral —it’s heroic and noble.

The TCC has a tell: Actual shootings unnerve them. Their posts grow quiet, respectful, and even mournful after some troubled young person heeds their call. I can gauge the change instantly, because the incessant harassment I get from them stops cold—for a week or two. Parkland was different: Six months went by before the taunts began trickling back in, and I haven’t gotten a death threat in the six years since. Why? I have no way to be certain about this, but my educated guess is that David Hogg, X González, and the rest of the March for Our Lives kids were suddenly cooler than the young shooters. And so much more powerful.

Eric and Dylan weren’t powerful—their plan failed. They’d planned Columbine as a bombing, the primary terrorist tactic. They thought they were launching a three-act drama: The cafeteria bombs would kill nearly 600 people instantly; what they called the “fun” part would be shooting up hundreds of survivors; and the massive car bombs set in the parking lot outside were to be the coup de grâce. Those timers were set to explode 45 minutes after the initial blast, wiping out countless more survivors and first responders, live on national TV. The Columbine killers’ performance was staged as the most apocalyptic made-for-TV horror film in American history. Eric complained in his journal that his “audience” would fail to understand. He got that right. He got everything else wrong.

Every element fizzled. All of the big bombs failed. Eric and Dylan went down to the cafeteria in a last desperate move to ignite the bombs with gunfire and a Molotov cocktail. Failed. Experts on psychopaths say they get bored after their initial kills, and Eric had likely lost interest. His gun’s recoil had broken his nose, so he spent that time in acute pain. The cops refused to kill them in the blaze of glory that they’d described as their final curtain. The smell of all the blood and already decomposing bodies was overpowering. Out of options, each shot himself in the head.

A more obscene and pathetic way to die is hard to imagine. Yet their fans have never confronted that ugly reality, because the opposite story took hold, making Eric and Dylan masterminds of the “worst school shooting in American history.”

The Columbine effect has gone global. It has inspired mass shootings in Finland, Sweden, Brazil, Mexico, Canada, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Ukraine, and Russia—as well as knife and axe attacks in places as remote as Siberia. In 2022, Russia designated the online “Columbine movement” a terrorist group. To comply with the ruling, my publisher required me to disavow the group in the Russian translation of Columbine. Mass murder inspired by those inept perpetrators is America’s most revolting cultural export.

I know when the TCC colonizes a new region, because I start getting a barrage of taunts in a different language. It’s a social contagion. Researchers have described school shootings as the American equivalent of suicide bombings—an ideology joined with a tactic. The phenomenon is escalating and self-perpetuating.

The Columbine groupies have no idea that they’re exporting a fraud. The media set this whole thing in motion 25 years ago. To untell a legend is a formidable task. It will be possible only when the media finally begin to convey how pathetic and gruesome the killers’ final moments were. The fans need to hear the ugly truth. Eric and Dylan viciously murdered innocent kids for their own selfish and petty agendas, and they died miserable failures.

This essay is adapted by the author from the new preface to a 25th-anniversary edition of Columbine.


Read full article on: theatlantic.com
Girl Groups Changed Pop.
slate.com
James Paxton delivers strong six innings, helps Dodgers beat visiting Reds
James Paxton delivered his second consecutive six-inning, zero-walk game, helping the Dodgers earn a 7-3 win over the Reds at Dodger Stadium on Friday.
latimes.com
Mets are primed to make a run at wild card — even after mediocre start
The Mets are going to make the playoffs. You heard it here first. 
nypost.com
UPenn anti-Israel protesters arrested after attempt to occupy building, police say
The University of Pennsylvania police department made several arrests after hundreds of protesters descended into a campus building and attempted to occupy it.
foxnews.com
Pacifica repeats as Southern Section Division 1 softball champion
Brynne Nally threw a shutout in Garden Grove Pacifica's win over Orange Lutheran in the Southern Section Division 1 softball championship game.
latimes.com
Knicks have Game 7 Garden history on their side going into Pacers matchup
The Knicks' Game 7 home history is mostly successful... mostly.
nypost.com
DJ LeMahieu’s Yankees injury return still not imminent
LeMahieu, out all season with a non-displaced foot fracture, played three innings at third base for Double-A Somerset, but didn’t have any balls hit to him.
nypost.com
Juez de Indiana dice que "tacos y burritos son sándwiches mexicanos" y permite que restaurante abra
El restaurantero señaló que su nuevo restaurante familiar, The Famous Taco, debería abrir en dos o tres meses.
latimes.com
Stephen A Smith implores Knicks to ‘get it done’ in Game 7 in impassioned rant: ‘Figure it out!’
Stephen A. Smith doesn't want them to miss their shot.
nypost.com
Mets not concerned as Edwin Diaz’s late-game struggles fester: ‘Nothing wrong’
It’s hardly been the Diaz who electrified baseball in 2022 with an all-time great season for a closer, which earned him a five-year contract worth $102 million.
nypost.com
Yankees’ Nestor Cortes tosses gem after controversial illegal pitch
After Nestor Cortes was called for an illegal pitch, the rest of his pitches just could be called nasty.
nypost.com
Familiares de jornaleros mexicanos muertos en choque en Florida lloran a sus seres queridos
El choque provocó lesiones a docenas de jornaleros más, quienes habían sido contratados por un granjero mexicoestadounidense con visas temporales
latimes.com
Being Muslim in Modi’s India
Families grapple with anguish and isolation as they try to raise their children in a country that increasingly questions their very identity.
nytimes.com
Slovakian Charged in Shooting ‘Was Against Everything’
People who know the suspect described a ‘weird and angry’ loner who wrote erotic poetry, and whose resentments ranged across the political spectrum.
nytimes.com
A Would-be Assassin Stirs Europe’s Violent Ghosts
Political violence and polarization stalk Europe today, with ominous echoes of the past.
nytimes.com
Biden’s China Tariffs Are the End of an Era for Cheap Chinese Goods
The president’s move to protect strategic manufacturing sectors from low-cost competition aims to increase jobs, but consumers might not like the costs.
nytimes.com
5/17: CBS Evening News
Video appears to show Sean "Diddy" Combs assaulting ex in 2016; How compassion, not just free tuition, helped one Ohio student achieve his college dreams
cbsnews.com
Donald Trump Blames 'Crappy Contractor' After Onstage Wobble
The former president appeared to lose his balance while speaking at a campaign rally Friday night.
newsweek.com
Collin Morikawa atoning for Masters finish with hot PGA Championship start
Morikawa seized control of his round with five consecutive birdies on Nos. 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8.
nypost.com
Ex-Knicks stars distraught while watching ugly Game 6 loss to Pacers
Knicks legends couldn't hide their emotions as they watched their former side scuffle.
nypost.com
1,200 UMass Dartmouth grads surprised with $1,000 in cash from billionaire commencement speaker — under one condition
"These trying times have heightened the need for sharing, caring, and giving," Hale said.
nypost.com
Human arm washes up 50 miles from where Milwaukee student Sade Robinson was dismembered
A person made the horrifying discovery Saturday while walking along Waukegan Municipal Beach Saturday.
nypost.com
Angels deliver Ron Washington's first win over Rangers as a visiting manager
Zach Neto and Taylor Ward homered, Tyler Anderson pitched two-hit ball over seven innings during the Angels' 9-3 road win over the Rangers on Friday.
latimes.com
Jerrod Carmichael Never Wanted You to Watch His Reality Show
The HBO series’ finale ends with one last meta twist.
slate.com
From ‘Billions’ to Broadway: How Acting ‘Saved’ Corey Stoll
Photo Illustration by Elizabeth Brockway/The Daily Beast/GettyAs the chit-chatting, bicycling, late spring afternoon life of Brooklyn’s Prospect Park swirled around us, Corey Stoll excitedly spoke about the need to be reminded multiple times a day of his own mortality. “My favorite app is called WeCroak,” the actor said, smiling wide, holding his s
thedailybeast.com
Did ‘SNL’ Quietly Shelve Its Trump Impression?
Photo Illustration by Luis G. Rendon/The Daily Beast/Getty ImagesIf you are among the more-than-half of Americans not paying much attention to Trump’s hush money trial, two pieces of news may still have managed to make their way to you: that Trump appears to be farting quite frequently, and he also seems to be falling asleep in the courtroom.What c
thedailybeast.com
AOC Scolds Fetterman over Democrat Senator's Criticism of Brawl with MTG
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) criticized Sen. John Fetterman (D-PA) after the senator made fun of her argument with Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) during a House Oversight and Accountability Committee hearing. The post AOC Scolds Fetterman over Democrat Senator’s Criticism of Brawl with MTG appeared first on Breitbart.
breitbart.com
This Accused Murderer Has Superfans Bankrolling Her Defense
Photo Illustration by Luis G. Rendon/The Daily Beast/Getty ImagesThe prosecution of Karen Read for the murder of her Boston cop boyfriend has galvanized a group of volunteers—most of whom have never even met her—to proclaim her innocence and raise hundreds of thousands of dollars for her legal defense.Supporters of the “Free Karen Read” movement sp
thedailybeast.com
SEAN HANNITY: Reliable blue states are now starting to look awfully purple
Fox News host Sean Hannity reacts to President Biden's most recent poll numbers and agreement to debate former President Trump.
foxnews.com
IRS whistleblowers ask judge to dismiss Hunter Biden’s lawsuit against tax agency: ‘Conflicts of interest could not be more clear’
Hunter Biden sued the IRS last September over alleged improper leaks of his tax information.
nypost.com
This Map Led Callum Robinson on Doomed Birthday Trip to Mexican Paradise
Photo Illustration by Luis G. Rendon/The Daily Beast/LinkedIn/Facebook/InstagramIt took a chance meeting, a beach photograph, and a couple of beers for Callum Robinson to hear about San Diego photographer Randy Dible’s “sacred” Mexican surfing spot.The hulking 6-foot 4-inch Australian with shoulder-length brown curly hair stopped by Dible’s photogr
thedailybeast.com
Jewish-American political appointee publicly resigns from Biden administration over US support of Israel
An Interior Department staffer became the first Jewish-American political appointee to publicly resign in protest of President Biden's support of Israel.
foxnews.com
Trump, Still Stuck in 2020, Recycles His Tired Drug Test Demand
Scott Olson/Getty ImagesFormer President Donald Trump, who four years ago called on Joe Biden to take a drug test prior to the pair’s first debate that September, decided to make the same demand on Friday—one that Biden is sure to wave away once more.At a campaign rally in Minnesota—where he said he would never return if he lost the state in 2020—t
thedailybeast.com
Knicks down to final chance after Pacers’ Game 6 rout
The Knicks' hopes of clinching things on the road have been dashed.
nypost.com
Scottie Scheffler Comes on Strong at PGA Championship Hours After Arrest
Scottie Scheffler, the world's #1 pro golfer, came on strong at the Valhalla Golf Club Friday despite being arrested that morning. The post Scottie Scheffler Comes on Strong at PGA Championship Hours After Arrest appeared first on Breitbart.
breitbart.com
Chiefs’ Wanya Morris, Chuk Godrick arrested on marijuana possession charges
Kansas City Chiefs offensive tackles Wanya Morris and Chukwuebuka Godrick were arrested late Thursday evening for misdemeanor marijuana possession in what's proving to be a difficult off-season for the Chiefs.
nypost.com
Así celebró Laura Pausini su cumpleaños número 50
La estrella italiana Laura Pausini invitó a cantar a su hija, su padre y su hermana Silvia en su gran fiesta de cumpleaños.
latimes.com
Tylor Megill’s Mets return set for series opener with Guardians
Tylor Megill was a winter sensation for Mets officials with his development of two highly regarded new pitches, but before he could really test them, discomfort in his shoulder emerged.
nypost.com
Van Jones: Marjorie Taylor Greene Is a Disgraceful 'Clown'
CNN commentator Van Jones said Friday on "The Situation Room" that Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) is a disgraceful "clown" while discussing several verbal scuffles at Thursday's House Oversight Committee hearing. The post Van Jones: Marjorie Taylor Greene Is a Disgraceful ‘Clown’ appeared first on Breitbart.
breitbart.com
Hepatitis A Report at California Grocery Store Sparks Dire Warning
Health officials are advising that customers who may have interacted with the infected grocery store worker should receive a hepatitis A vaccine.
newsweek.com
The Expert’s Guide to the ‘Wicked’ Trailer
Photo Illustration by Luis G. Rendon/The Daily Beast/UniversalThis week:I Couldn’t Be HappierIt was around minute seven of my 13-minute monologue about the plot of Wicked that I realized, wait…not everyone knows every single plot point, lyric, costume, and casting trajectory of this musical??? The three-and-a-half minute trailer for the upcoming fi
thedailybeast.com
Josh Hart asked out of Game 6 in apparent Knicks injury concern
Josh Hart, who appeared visibly in pain on the court, was subbed out by the Knicks in the third quarter of Game 6 on Friday night against the Pacers at Gainbridge Fieldhouse.
nypost.com
Ex-Shohei Ohtani teammate placed bets with same alleged bookie Ippei Mizuhara used
An alleged California bookmaker's client list reportedly included a former teammate of Shohei Ohtani and another former minor leaguer.
nypost.com
Tiger Woods misses PGA Championship cut after disastrous Day 2 start
Woods, who began the second round at 1-over par following his opening-round 72, made a mess of his early second round Friday and took any suspense out of his making the cut.
nypost.com
Joey Gallo returns, but Nats endure another quiet offensive night
The punchless Nationals end a scoreless streak that reached 20 innings but can’t get much else going against Zack Wheeler and the NL East-leading Phillies.
washingtonpost.com
Exlíder de OpenAI dice que la seguridad “ha pasado a segundo plano” en la empresa
Un exlíder de OpenAI que renunció a la empresa esta semana dijo el viernes que la seguridad “ha pasado a segundo plano” en la influyente compañía de inteligencia artificial (IA).
latimes.com
L.A. County investigating reported hepatitis A case at Beverly Hills Whole Foods
Officials said they were investigating a reported case of hepatitis A affecting an employee of a Beverly Hills Whole Foods, just days after announcing that several cases had been detected among unhoused people in L.A. County.
latimes.com
Christian Scott roughed up as Mets routed by Marlins to continue brutal stretch
Christian Scott’s second homecoming game of his brief major league career wasn’t nearly as electric as his first.
nypost.com