Ahmad Al Aliwi Alissa was identified by authorities Tuesday as the gunman who opened fire at a King Soopers grocery store in Colorado, killing 10 people, including a Boulder police officer.
The name of the 21-year-old suspect, who is in custody, was released at a news conference by Boulder Police Chief Maris Herold, who did not disclose a possible motive for Monday's bloodshed.
A search of the suspect's suburban Denver home turned up other weapons, a senior law enforcement source said Tuesday. The weapon used in the attack was an AR-15-style pistol modified with an arm brace, according to the source.
Authorities believe Alissa was the only person involved and that there was no additional threat to the community.
The shooter has been charged with 10 counts of first-degree murder and one charge of attempted murder, according to his arrest warrant.
The warrant described Alissa as being armed with either an assault rifle or "black AR-15" and wearing a "tactical" or "armoured" vest.
The suspect had "removed all of his clothing and was dressed only in shorts" when he was taken into custody, the affidavit said. Outside the store, the document said, Alissa wouldn't tell police whether there were other suspects, but he did ask to speak to his mother.
Using law enforcement databases, the affidavit said, investigators determined Alissa had purchased a Ruger AR556 pistol on March 16.
Michael Dougherty, Boulder County district attorney, said Alissa is a resident of Arvada, between Boulder and Denver, who has "lived most of his life in the United States."
Brother says he believes suspect was 'paranoid'
Alissa, whose family emigrated from Syria, may have been suffering from mental illness, according to his 34-year-old brother, Ali Aliwi Alissa.
The brother told CNN on Tuesday that in high school bullies made fun of Alissa's name and for being Muslim and that may have contributed to him becoming "anti-social."
Alissa had become increasingly "paranoid" around 2014, believing he was being followed and chased, according to his brother. At one point, the young man covered the camera on his computer with duct tape so he could not be seen, said the brother, who lives with Alissa.
"He always suspected someone was behind him, someone was chasing him," Ali Alissa said.
"We kept a close eye on him when he was in high school. He would say, 'Someone is chasing me, someone is investigating me.' And we're like, 'Come on man. There's nothing.' ... He was just closing into himself," the brother added.
Alissa's Facebook page, the authenticity of which was confirmed by his brother and a high school classmate, shows posts saying he believed his former high school had been hacking into his phone.
"Just curious what are the laws about phone privacy because I believe my old school (a west) was hacking my phone," Alissa wrote in a March 18, 2019, Facebook post.
He made a second post on July 5, 2019, also claiming that people were hacking his phone, saying, "let me have a normal life I probably could."
When his Facebook friends questioned how he knew the school was hacking his phone, Alissa said: "I believe part racism for sure. But I also believe someone spread rumors about me which are false and maybe that set it off."
The profile claims Alissa attended Arvada West High School. Cameron Bell, Jefferson County Public Schools spokesperson, confirmed Alissa was a student there from March 2015 until he graduated in May 2018.
Alissa was not very political or particularly religious, according to his brother, who said he never heard the young man threaten to use violence.
"The entire thing surprised me," Ali Alissa said of the Monday's shootings. "I never ever would have thought he would do such a thing. I never thought he would kill. I still can't believe it. I am really sad for the lives that he wasted, and I feel sorry for all those families. ... We lost a brother even if he is the killer."
Aside from a knife he used for cooking, Ali Alissa said he did not know his brother to carry any weapon, including a firearm.
Sister-in-law says she saw suspect playing with a gun
According to the arrest warrant, a woman identified as the shooter's sister-in-law "stated that (Ahmad Al Aliwi) Alissa was seen playing with a gun she thought looked like a 'machine gun' about 2 days ago. She did not believe the gun looked like the rifles she has seen in old Western movies. . . . Alissa had been talking about having a bullet stuck in the gun and was playing with the gun."
The woman's name was redacted from the document.
Ali Alissa said he doesn't know why his brother went to King Soopers on Monday. Police interrogated him and another brother, according to Ali Alissa, who said authorities searched their home in the predawn hours Tuesday.
"They searched every corner," he said, "every piece of clothing."
The family emigrated from Syria in 2002, the brother said. They have lived in the Arvada area since 2014.
Facebook has shut down Facebook and Instagram accounts belonging to the suspect, a company spokesperson said Tuesday.
Alissa was sentenced to probation and community service after being found guilty of third-degree assault in 2018 for an incident that occurred in November 2017, according to the Colorado Bureau of Investigation's database. No other details were immediately available.
The mass shooting suspect has made statements to investigators, Dougherty said.
"We're collecting those statements now and we'll be providing those in the weeks ahead," Dougherty said.
Herold said the suspect was wounded in the leg during "an exchange of gunfire."
The gunman was taken into custody about 3:30 p.m. Monday and transported to a hospital, where he was in stable condition.
He was booked into Boulder County Jail early Tuesday afternoon, according to the jail's records.
The massacre at the King Soopers store occurred less than a week after shootings at three spas in the Atlanta area left eight people dead. In the past week in the US, there have been at least seven shootings in which at least four people were injured or killed.
The slain Boulder officer, 51-year-old Eric Talley, was the first to respond to the scene, according to Herold. Talley had joined the force in 2010, she said.
The victims were ordinary Coloradans going about their daily lives -- picking up groceries, waiting in line for a coronavirus vaccine. They ranged from 20 to 65 years old.