AKRON, Ohio — Since the Dec. 14 massacre of 20 children at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., mental health experts, the media, bereavement counselors, grieving parents and others have wondered what wickedness lurked in the mind of Adam Lanza.
One of the issues at the forefront is whether violent video games, which the 20-year-old was reportedly addicted to, could be the problem. But could the games alone have caused Lanza to become so out of control that they made him kill those children and seven adults, including his mother, before turning the gun on himself? Or was it something much more sinister?
“When someone goes and shoots like that, there’s mental illness, and then there’s evil,” offered Kathy Royer, clinical nurse specialist at 4KidHelp Center for Child & Adolescent Psychiatry in North Canton, Ohio. “When it comes to video games, there is some research that says kids playing video games can lead to aggressive behaviors.”
But assigning blame solely to video games is a mistake, Royer said.
“Based on my own research, some of the information is more conclusive that it’s family issues — and I hold to that,” she continued. “Nothing ever is just one thing. It’s always a combination of things.”