KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A southwest Missouri man who confessed this week to plotting to shoot up a “Twilight” showing and a Walmart store was detained in 2009 after threatening a store clerk, police said Saturday.

Bolivar Police Chief Steve Hamilton said Saturday that Blaec Lammers, 20, of Bolivar, followed a female clerk around a Walmart store in 2009, threatening her. He wasn’t charged, but was committed for 96 hours for a mental health examination. Lammers, whose own mother turned him in Thursday, faces three felony charges in the alleged shooting plot.

In Missouri, hospitals, law enforcement officials and private citizens can request a person be held against their will for up to 96 hours if he or she appears to be a threat to themselves or others.

“It looks like everything was done appropriately at that time,” Hamilton said. “The average person will look at it and say `Why was he not charged criminally?’ And the reality is the law only allows so much when a person is having some mental issues.”

Lammers was charged Friday with first-degree assault, making a terroristic threat and armed criminal action. He is jailed in Polk County on $500,000 bond. Those charges focus on the alleged Walmart plot.

Polk County prosecutor Ken Ashlock said Friday that his office would file a motion asking for a mental exam of Lammers.

Phone messages left by The Associated Press at Lammers’ home weren’t returned Friday or Saturday. No attorney is listed for him in online court records.

The investigation into the shooting plot began Thursday, when Lammers’ mother contacted authorities, saying she worried that her son “may have intentions of shooting people” during the opening weekend for the final film in the popular vampire series, police wrote in the probable cause statement.

She said her son recently had purchased weapons – two assault rifles and hundreds of bullets – that were similar to those used by a gunman who opened fire inside a theater in Aurora, Colo., during the latest Batman movie in July. That attack killed 12 people.

Police wrote in the probable cause statement that Lammers was “off of his medication.”

Hamilton said Saturday he didn’t have details about Lammers’ mental condition, although he said Friday that Lammers was under a doctor’s care.

Lammers was questioned Thursday afternoon and told authorities he bought tickets to a Sunday “Twilight” screening in Bolivar and planned to shoot people inside. The town of roughly 10,000 people is about 130 miles southeast of Kansas City.

According to the probable cause statement, Lammers also said he planned to “just start shooting people at random” at a Walmart store less than a mile away. He said he’d purchased two assault rifles and 400 rounds of ammunition, and if he ran out of bullets, he would “just break the glass where the ammunition is being stored and get some more and keep shooting until police arrived,” investigators wrote.

Police said Lammers bought one firearm Monday and another Tuesday, then went to Aldrich to practice because he “had never shot a gun before and wanted to make sure he knew how they shot and how they functioned.”

Hamilton said it appeared that Lammers obtained the firearms legally.

He said his office has no information to indicate anyone else was involved but was interviewing people just to be certain.

Hamilton said it’s “very difficult to say what (Lammers) would have done.”

“I think he would have been adaptive,” Hamilton said. “If one target wasn’t available, I think he would have changed to something else.”

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    <em>”Lizzie Borden took an axe
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  • “Texas Mother Charged with Killing Her 5 Children” -CNN

    In a case of mother-gone-mad that startled a nation, Andrea Yates, to her few friends and neighbors, was known as a mere recluse suffering from postpartum depression leading up to the birth of her fifth child.
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    Known as the “Long Island Lolita,” Fisher became involved with Joey Buttafuoco in May of 1991. Shortly after the two began a sexual relationship (she, 16, while he, 35, was married with two children), his presence and influence in her life became all she cared for.
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    In the highly publicized trial that ensued, Fisher accepted a plea deal for 15 years in prison in exchange for a testimony against Joey, who faced and served out charges of statutory rape.

  • “Murder of a Little Beauty” -People Magazine

    With a face that graced the covers of nearly every news and gossip rag during the winter of ’96, it’s hard to suggest the death of child beauty pageant queen JonBenét Ramsey had little effect outside the city of Boulder, Colorado.
    Found dead from a blow to the head and strangulation in the family’s basement, coupled with a ransom note left on the staircase asking for $118,00 (conveniently or coincidentally, nearly the same amount Mr. Ramsey received as a bonus that year), as well as no obvious signs of forced entry into the house, the evidence was overwhelmingly stacked against parents John and Patsy, who managed to maintain their innocence throughout the investigation.
    The case reopened in 2010, but critics cite poor handling of the crime scene as obstructing what remains a mystery regarding the events of that Christmas day.

  • “F.B.I. Joins Probe in Slaughter of 8 Nurses” -Nashua Telegraph

    Tattooed with “Born to Raise Hell” on his arm, Richard Speck made good on his mantra through a history of violence, theft, alcoholism, and spousal abuse, but made his infamy known to all when, on July 13, 1966, he walked into a dormitory armed with a knife.
    After leaving 8 student nurses dead in his wake, only one, Cora Amurao, was spared–hiding under a bed until 6 a.m.
    Speck was found guilty of murder and died of a heart attack in prison. As one of the most press-worthy crimes of the decade, the grim events were used most recently as the backdrop for an episode of <em>Mad Men</em>.

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    Perhaps the most terrifying figure in American crime to have never actually killed anyone himself, Charles Manson founded a “family” of wayward individuals who hailed him as a prophet.
    So strong was his manipulation, he ordered, on the night of Aug. 8, 1969, four of his followers to kill everyone at the residence of 10050 Cielo Drive–including Roman Polanski’s wife, Sharon Tate, and her unborn child. Tate was stabbed 16 times, and her blood was used to write “pig” on the house’s front door.
    The next night, Manson accompanied six of his family to the residence of supermarket executive Leno LaBianca and his wife, only to help bind them before ordering their deaths.
    In 1971, Manson and three of his fellow defendants were found guilty of murder in the first-degree and several other crimes. At the time, it was the longest murder trial in American history, spanning nine and a half months, as well as the most expensive, estimating $1 million.
    Manson was denied parole for the 12th time in April 2012.

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    Used as the basis for an Agatha Christie novel (<em>Murder on the Orient Express</em>) and dubbed “the biggest story since the Resurrection” by famed journalist H.L. Mencken, the kidnapping and murder of aviator Charles Lindbergh’s infant son continues to fascinate theorists today.
    Charles Jr. was discovered missing from his second-floor bedroom on March 1, 1932, along with a note demanding a then-unimaginable $50,000, igniting a media frenzy like no other. The tabloid pandemonium prompted many tips and leads, but none as concrete as a package containing the boy’s pajamas and another message demanding the ransom.
    After some misdirection from the presumed kidnapper, Lindbergh’s child was soon after discovered in the woods along a road near the family residence.
    Notwithstanding the evidence stockpiled against the easily vilified illegal German immigrant Bruno Hauptmann (who was sentenced), speculation prevails as to the true identity of the caper responsible in this tragic tale of one of America’s greatest heroes.

  • “Not Guilty as Sin” -NY Post

    Still fresh in the minds of many and not to easily be forgotten, the trial of Casey Anthony turned Orlando, Florida into anything but the “happiest place on earth.”
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    After resorting to throwing her family under the bus, incriminating people entirely made-up (“Zanny the Nanny”), and fabricating elaborate stories for the police, Casey was found not guilty of murder due to evidence deemed mostly circumstantial and not meeting the burden of “beyond reasonable doubt,” inciting much debate regarding whether true justice was served.

  • “An American Tragedy” -TIME

    Known and heralded as the “trial of the century,” former football star and actor O.J. Simpson found himself in the middle of the nation’s biggest, most-televised trial following the deaths of his ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ron Goldman, but not before fleeing an all-points bulletin in his Ford Bronco with 20 units in tow, interrupting game 5 of the NBA Finals.
    By enlisting a dream team including Johnnie Cochran, Robert Shapiro, and Robert Kardashian, the defense claimed Simpson was merely a victim of police fraud with regard to contaminated DNA evidence, while famously quipping “If it [the glove] doesn’t fit, you must acquit.”
    On October 3, 1995, an estimated 100 million people from around the world tuned in to watch the jury hand down a verdict of not guilty, consequently resulting in an estimated loss of $480 million in productivity and inciting an ongoing discussion of race in the judicial system that continues to this day.