Police: Cho Stalked 2 Women In 2005
Two Women Complained, But Failed To Press Charges; He Then Went To Mental Health Agency
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Play CBS Video Video Gunman's Classmate Speaks Out Harry Smith speaks to Sara Stevens, who attended a writing class with Virginia Tech gunman Cho Seung-Hui during the past three years. Stevens recalls her classmate's "brutal and graphic" plays.
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Video Professor Saw Warning Signs Virginia Tech English professor Lucinda Roy speaks with Harry Smith about her infamous student, gunman Cho Seung-Hui, and how his disturbing writing alerted her to potential problems.
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Video Virginia Tech Mourns Thousands poured into the center of Virginia Tech's campus for a candlelight vigil to begin a period of mourning and to remember the victims of the massacre. Harry Smith reports.
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Crime scene: Norris Hall, a classroom building on Virginia Tech's campus where 30 people were killed Monday, April 16, 2007. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)
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Virginia Tech freshman Ryan Fowler, second from right, hugs his dad, Tim, of Mt. Airy, Md., as his mother, MaryEllin, hugs another student near Norris Hall, the site of a shooting on the campus of Virginia Tech in Blacksburg, Va., Monday, April 16, 2007. (AP Photo/Steve Helber)
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A Virginia Tech student visits a makeshift vigil early Tuesday, April 17, 2007, in Blacksburg, Va., to honor the victims of the shootings on the campus Monday. (AP Photo/Casey Templeton)
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Students gather in front of the War Memorial to mourn their fellow students Monday, April 16, 2007, in Blacksburg, Va. (AP/ Sam Dean, The Roanoke Times)
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Cho Seung-Hui, a 23-year-old senior at Virginia Tech, has been described as a loner. Cho committed suicide after killing 32 people and wounding 15 others in the deadliest shooting in U.S. history. (AP Photo/Virginia State Police)
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Interactive Virginia Tech Tragedy Deadly shooting rampage on Virginia Tech campus leaves 33 dead.
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Interactive In Memoriam Profiles of the students and staff who lost their lives in the massacre at Virginia Tech
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Photo Essay Virginia Tech Massacre Gunman opens fire in dorm and classroom, killing at least 32 before killing himself.
According to Virginia Tech Police Chief Wendell Finchum, in November of 2005, he made contact with a female student through telephone calls and in person. The student called it "annoying" but declined to press charges.
In December 2005, Cho, an English major, sent instant messages to a second woman. He made no threats, Finchum said, but the student complained. Officers spoke to him at that time.
An acquaintance of Cho later contacted authorities concerned he might be suicidal, reports CBS News correspondent Cami McCormick. It was at that point he was taken to a mental health facility, not connected with the university, and later released.
Neither of the two women who complained about Cho in 2005 was among Monday's victims.
Cho's creative writing also disturbed his fellow teachers and some of his instructors.
In one of the plays he wrote, "there was a character where the father raped the son and the son was going to get back at him by killing him. And it became very brutal and graphic, and vulgar with the language, Sara Stevens, a Virginia Tech junior, said on CBS News' The Early Show (Watch). "And there was another play about how he was going to get revenge on a teacher who had given him low marks."
But police and university officials offered no clues as to exactly what set off Cho Seung-Hui, a 23-year-old senior, on the deadliest shooting rampage in modern U.S. history.
"He was a loner, and we're having difficulty finding information about him," school spokesman Larry Hincker said.
"I had classes with him for three years, and he was known as being expressionless. He usually sat in class and I never heard him speak once in three years," Stevens, a former CBS intern, told Early Show co-anchor Harry Smith.
Other classmates say that on the first day of a British literature class last year, students took turns introducing themselves. When it was Cho Seung-Hui's turn to speak, he said nothing.
Click here for an interactive gallery of the victims.
The professor then looked at the sign-in sheet, and noticed that Cho had written a question mark instead of his name. The professor asked, "Is your name 'question mark?'" A classmate, Julie Poole, says Cho offered little response.
She says he then spent much of the class sitting in the back of the room, wearing a hat and seldom participating.
Poole says, "We just really knew him as the 'question-mark kid.'"
"He made me so nervous," Stevens said.
"I saw some poetry and he seemed to be very angry," Lucinda Roy, the English department's director of creative writing, said on The Early Show.
"I didn't feel that the students felt safe. They expressed to their faculty member some discomfort. And she said that she wasn't comfortable teaching him anymore," Roy said, so she tutored him herself.
She notified the university's counseling service and police department about Cho's behavior.
"They were very concerned, and their response was immediate in terms of trying to help. And then they seemed to hit a wall where there are all these legal issues," Roy said. "So unless he'd issued an actual threat, I was told he never said he was going to do harm to himself or someone else in an explicit way."
"We certainly are always sensitive to the issue of potential violence. It is very difficult to predict when what someone perceives as stalking is stalking, and then how it might translate into violence later. In general that's a very difficult thing to predict," Dr. Chris Flynn, director of the school's Cook Counseling Center, said at a news conference Wednesday. "Clearly if anyone had any warning about a violent incident, people would have stepped in and acted.:
Roy said she tried to get Cho to go to counseling voluntarily, but he resisted. News reports said that Cho may have been taking medication for depression.
"It was very strange. If you were to say something to him, it would take him about 10 to 20 seconds to say anything back, so there would be a long, long pause. And then when he did speak, he spoke only in a whisper, so you'd have to lean in to hear what he was saying," Roy added.
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