An image that NBC News say they received from Cho
Seung-Hui, the shooter in the Virginia Tech shootings, is seen as it is
aired on the NBC Nightly News, April 18, 2007.(Xinhua/Reuters Photo)
WASHINGTON, April 18
(Xinhua) -- The gunman in Monday's shootings at Virginia Tech sent material to
NBC News between the first and second shooting incidents that together killed 33
people, including the gunman himself, police said Wednesday.
"Earlier today, NBC News in New York received
correspondence that we believe to have been from Cho Seung-Hui, the gunman
responsible for the fatal shootings in Norris Hall," Steve Flaherty,
superintendent of Virginia State Police, said at a news conference at Virginia
Tech, located in Blacksburg, in the southwest of Virginia.
NBC immediately notified authorities after it
received the material Wednesday, he said.
The material might be "a very new, critical
component" of the investigation, he said.
"We're in the process right now of attempting to
analyze and evaluate its worth," he said.
The material in the package was said to contain
digital images of the gunman holding weapons and reading a manifesto declaring
that he wanted to get even with rich people.
A total of 33 people, including the gunman, were killed in Virginia Tech Monday morning, in what had become the deadliest campus shooting incident in U.S. history, and police had identified the gunman as 23-year-old South Korean native Cho Seung-Hui, a senor majoring in English at the state university.