AP Photo/Ted S. Warren
Police and King Co. (Wash.) Medical Examiners Office workers remove a body from a house where a gunman opened fire in Seattle early Saturday, March 25, 2006, killing six before committing suicide when confronted by police. The house was a rental home occupied by 20 young partygoers at the time, police said.
AP Photo/Ted S. Warren
A Seattle Police crime scene investigator photographs a beer can and other items on the porch of a house where a gunman opened fire in Seattle Saturday morning, March 25, 2006, killing six before committing suicide when confronted by police.
AP Photo/Ted S. Warren
Police and medical examiners office workers bring a stretcher for body removal to a house where a gunman opened fire in Seattle early Saturday, March 25, 2006, killing six before committing suicide when confronted by police.
AP Photo/Ted S. Warren
An official with the King County (Wash.) Medical Examiner's Office looks toward a house where a gunman opened fire in Seattle early Saturday morning, March 25, 2006, killing six before committing suicide when confronted by police. The house was a rental home occupied by 20 young partygoers at the time, police said.
AP Photo/Ted S. Warren
A King Co. (Wash.) Medical Examiners Office worker gets a stretcher ready for the removal of bodies from a house where a gunman opened fire in Seattle early Saturday, March 25, 2006, killing six before committing suicide when confronted by police. The house was a rental home occupied by 20 young partygoers at the time, police said.
AP Photo/Ted S. Warren
A Seattle Police crime scene investigator unfolds a biological hazard bag in front of the house where a gunman opened fire in Seattle early Saturday, March 25, 2006, killing six before committing suicide when confronted by police.
AP Photo/Ted S. Warren
A Seattle Police officer escorts a young man wrapped in a blanket away from the scene where a gunman opened fire in Seattle early Saturday, March 25, 2006, killing six before committing suicide when confronted by police. The house was a rental home occupied by 20 young partygoers at the time, police said.
AP Photo/Kevin P.Casey
Friends of the victims hug Sunday, March 26, 2006, outside the Seattle home where Aaron Kyle Huff is suspected of killing six people at a party before killing himself Saturday.
AP Photo/Ted S. Warren
K.C. Bosq cries as she stands down the block from a house in Seattle where a gunman opened fire early Saturday, March 25, 2006, killing six before committing suicide. Down the street was a car she said belonged to her boyfriend, who was at a party at the house where the gunman opened fire. Bosq said she had not yet heard from her boyfriend on Saturday.
AP Photo/Ted S. Warren
Mourners, including Amy Karwoski, 14, upper left, and Rachel Roderick, 15, lower left, light candles Saturday, March 25, 2006 about a half-block from where a gunman opened fire at a house in Seattle earlier, killing six before committing suicide. Among the dead were members of the Seattle-area techno and rave scene, and young people began to gather to show their support for the lives that were lost.
AP Photo/Ted S. Warren
Three people who declined to give their names stand Sunday, March 26, 2006 at the scene where a gunman killed six people attending a party in Seattle before killing himself Saturday. The woman in the center of this photo was allowed by police to retrieve an item of clothing from a truck parked in front of the house where the killings took place.
AP Photo/Kevin P.Casey
Yoshi Byrd, left, 17, lights a candle as Joshua Cox, 19, middle, and a girl who did not want to be identified crouch near a makeshift memorial Sunday, March 26, 2006 at the scene where Aaron Kyle Huff is suspected of killing six people at a party before killing himself in Seattle.
CBS
Thor Godjonsson, 21, of Seattle, ties black ribbons with "R.I.P." written on them to the branches of a tree Sunday, March 26, 2006, in front of house where a gunman killed six people before killing himself Saturday. Godjonsson said he did not know the victims, and he learned of the killings when his mother, who lives in Iceland, sent him a message to check on his safety after she heard news reports of the shootings.
AP
This November 2000 booking photo released by the Flathead County Sheriff's Office in Montana on Sunday March 26, 2006 shows Aaron Kyle Huff. Authorities identified Aaron Kyle Huff, 28, as the man suspected of killing six young people at a house party before he turned the gun on himself Saturday morning.
AP Photo/Ted S. Warren
A table at Seattle Police headquarters displays weapons and ammunition Monday, March 27, 2006, recovered by police from the truck and body of Aaron Kyle Huff after he killed six people and then committed suicide at a party early Saturday. All of the items, except for the shotgun at center right, which is not the actual weapon, but is the same model and size as shotgun seized from Huff, were seized after the killings.
AP Photo/Ted S. Warren
Seattle Police Chief Gil Kerlikowske, left, points down 22nd Ave. East in Seattle to indicate how a gunman, who killed six people and then himself inside the blue house behind Kerlikowske, approached the scene early Saturday morning March 25, 2006 in Seattle as Seattle Mayor Greg Nickels, center, looks on.