MOSCOW (Sputnik) — The Munich shooter had been planning the attack on a mall for about a year but his victims were chosen randomly, Bavaria's police chief Robert Heimberger said Sunday.
"The perpetrator had been engaged with his attack for about a year, had been planning it since the last summer," Heimberger told journalists at the press conference.
The Munich shooter wrote his own "Manifesto" and did not copy the one Norwegian far-right mass murderer Anders Breivik wrote, Heimberger said.
"That is not true," Heimberger said answering the question if Breivik's "Manifesto" had been discovered during the search at the gunman apartment.
Majority of Munich Mall Shooting Victims Not German Citizens
The majority of Munich shooting victims did not have German citizenship, Heimberger said.
"Victims had following nationalities: Hungarian, German, Turkish, German, Turkish, Kosovo, Greek, Stateless," he told journalists at the press conference, adding that only two of the victims had German passports.
German Police Rule Out Political Motive Behind Munich Attack
German police continue to believe that there was no political motive behind the Munich mall shooting, while it has been confirmed that the suspect was under psychiatric supervision, Munich Prosecutor’s Office spokesman Thomas Steinkraus-Koch said Sunday.
"The statement that the crime was not politically motivated is still relevant," Steinkraus-Koch said at the press conference broadcast by the N-24 television channel.
He reminded that there had been claims of the attack suspect suffering a mental disorder.
"This has been confirmed. During a search of his home, we found medical records that indicate to anxiety disorder, depression," the spokesman said.
Medication drugs have also been found during the searches, Steinkraus-Koch said. According to the spokesman, the attacker had spent two months in a hospital in 2015, after which he had been on outpatient examination. He added that the attacker had been both on stationary and outpatient examination with regard to his illness.
"The mental disorder which I mentioned was social phobias, it means that the suspect was afraid to communicate with other people. It fits in the picture that his parents were able to paint for us… This is what has led to depression," Steinkraus-Koch said.
On Friday, the 18-year-old German-Iranian man opened fire in a crowded Munich shopping mall and a nearby McDonald's restaurant, killing nine and injuring 27 others before committing a suicide..