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Munich gunman planned shooting for a year, chose victims randomly

"He had been preparing (the shooting) for a year," Bavarian police chief Robert Heimberger told a news conference.
Picture taken on July 24, 2016 shows a memorial of candles and flowers laid down in front of the Olympia Einkaufszentrum shopping centre in Munich, southern Germany, where an 18-year-old German-Iranian student run amok. Europe reacted in shock to the third attack on the continent in just over a week, after David Ali Sonboly went on a shooting spree at a shopping centre on July 22, 2016 in what appears to have been a premeditated attack, before turning the gun on himself. Karl-Josef Hildenbrand / dpa / AFP

Picture taken on July 24, 2016 shows a memorial of candles and flowers laid down in front of the Olympia Einkaufszentrum shopping centre in Munich, southern Germany, where an 18-year-old German-Iranian student run amok. Europe reacted in shock to the third attack on the continent in just over a week, after David Ali Sonboly went on a shooting spree at a shopping centre on July 22, 2016 in what appears to have been a premeditated attack, before turning the gun on himself.<br />Karl-Josef Hildenbrand / dpa / AFP

The 18-year-old gunman who killed nine people in a shooting spree in Munich had been planning his crime for a year but chose his victims at random, officials said on Sunday.

“He had been preparing (the shooting) for a year,” Bavarian police chief Robert Heimberger told a news conference.

Chief prosecutor Thomas Steinkraus-Koch added that he did not specifically choose his victims.

“It is not the case that he deliberately selected” the people who he shot, he said.

Europe reacted in shock to the third attack on the continent in just over a week, after David Ali Sonboly went on a shooting spree at a shopping centre on Friday before turning the gun on himself.

Officials said Saturday that Sonboly, a German-Iranian student, had a history of mental illness.

Investigators said they saw an “obvious link” between the killings and white supremacist Anders Breivik’s massacre of 77 people in Norway exactly five years earlier.

Chancellor Angela Merkel said Munich had suffered a “night of horror”.

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