Convicted of theft, but Derrick Bird was allowed to own two guns - Mother 'stunned' by son's massacre (with new video)

THE mother of gunman Derrick Bird is "stunned" by her son's murder of 12 people, including his twin brother, in a rampage apparently sparked by a family feud.

Cumbria killings: Full coverage

Elderly Mary Bird kept saying she wanted to speak to her sons after learning of yesterday's massacre in Cumbria, a relative said.

Today, detectives were piecing together what turned 52-year-old taxi driver Bird into a killer as emotional tributes were paid to his victims.

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Locals suggested he might have snapped after a row with his brother over a will or following an argument on Tuesday night in which he accused other cabbies of stealing his passengers.

One of the killer's cousins, Joy Ryan, spoke today of Mrs Bird's shock at being told the horrific news.

She said: "I saw her yesterday and she was just stunned. She just couldn't make sense of it. She kept saying she wanted to talk to them, she wanted to talk to her sons."

Mrs Bird is distraught and has moved out of her home as she tries to come to terms with the deaths of her twin sons, Mrs Ryan said.

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Bird was licensed to own the shotgun and .22 rifle with telescopic sight he used in his three-hour rampage, it was revealed today.

It emerged he was convicted of theft in the 1990s, but was allowed to obtain a shotgun licence in 1995 and a firearms licence for the rifle in 2007.

Police may never know exactly why Derrick Bird launched his massacre, they admitted.

Detective Chief Superintendent Iain Goulding of Cumbria Police, said he and his officers were "absolutely determined" to get to the bottom of why the tragedy happened.

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But he conceded: "However, it may not be possible to establish all the answers because we cannot speak to Derrick Bird."

The detective said it appeared that the taxi driver selected some of his victims deliberately and others randomly.

He said: "A key part of the 'why' in this investigation is trying to establish whether those tragically killed were chosen because of a motive, because of a grudge or were simply random killings.

"Our initial assessment is we have a combination of both. But I'm not speculating further at this time."

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Mr Goulding said Bird had never been to prison and police had found no record of any mental health problems, contact with mental health agencies, or medication.

But he refused to comment on the killer's motives for the shootings and ignored questions from journalists about whether he left a suicide note.

He said: "We are aware there is much speculation about the motive behind this crime. We hear rumours of finance and domestic.

"We are aware of those things and they are all proper lines of investigation for us, but we will not be speculating."

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Critics questioned whether police could have kept the death toll lower by stopping Bird sooner.

Meanwhile, survivors spoke of their terror at coming face-to-face with the cold-eyed gunman as he calmly shot passers-by before driving on.

Bird was seen in his car outside the home of family solicitor Kevin Commons, 60, in the village of Frizington at about 5.30am yesterday.

Former schoolmate Iris Carruthers, 49, who was walking her dogs, said she recognised him and said hello, but he did not reply.

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She said: "He passed me and went down to the bottom of the main road, turned, and he came back up.

"Slowly he drove alongside me and I said 'hiya lad, you all right?'. He didn't speak, he was in a world of his own, and I just kept on walking.

"He was stationed at the gate on the way up to the tip road (to the recycling facility). I just left him there.

"I thought he was just normal, I didn't think there was anything untoward. I just thought he had been to the farm and dropped somebody off because he was in his taxi. I never thought any more of it."

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It is not clear when Mr Commons was killed, but he was found dead from shotgun wounds on the driveway of his home yesterday afternoon.

Later in the morning Bird is thought to have left his home in the village of Rowrah and driven to nearby Lamplugh, where he shot dead his twin brother David.

He then continued to the town of Whitehaven, where he shot at least three fellow taxi drivers, killing Darren Rewcastle.

A second cabbie, former soldier Don Reed, was shot in the back, but managed to crawl away on his hands and knees.

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Bird, a former Sellafield worker who recently became a grandfather, then drove through the picturesque Cumbrian countryside blasting people he encountered along the way.

His other victims were: young estate agent Jamie Clark, rugby league player and farmer Garry Purdham, retired couple Jennifer and James Jackson, part-time mole-catcher Isaac Dixon, shopper Susan Hughes, unmarried pensioner Jane Robinson, former Sellafield worker Kenneth Fishburn and retired Michael Pike.

Another 11 adults were wounded, some of them very seriously. Six remained in hospital today.

Five of the survivors were shot in the face, two in the back, one in the back and arms and another in the chest, doctors said.

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Charles Brett, clinical director of West Cumberland Hospital in Whitehaven, said: "It appears this gentleman was firing out of a car window at head height. It is clear that he was directing at the face and head."

Britain's worst mass shooting since the 1996 Dunblane tragedy ended after three hours with the discovery of the gunman's body 20 miles from Whitehaven in woods near the hamlet of Boot.

Home Secretary Theresa May said police had confirmed Bird's gun licences covered the two weapons seized by officers after yesterday's massacre.

She welcomed debate about Britain's gun laws but said it would be wrong to act until the full facts of the tragedy were known.

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"When there are lessons to be learned, we will learn them, and when there are changes to be made, we will make them," she told the Commons.

Mrs May and Prime Minister David Cameron will visit Cumbria tomorrow to meet senior police officers.

Bird knew some of his victims - his twin brother, a solicitor and taxi driver colleagues - but many of them appeared to have been picked at random.

Even though he once worked at Sellafield, the killer had no previous acquaintance with Mr Jackson, who is also believed to have worked at the plant.

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A spokeswoman for Sellafield said Bird resigned from his job as a joiner in 1990. She said there was no record of him ever working with Mr Jackson.

Those who survived encounters with Bird spoke of their lucky escapes today.

Taxi driver Mr Reed described seeing Bird killing Mr Rewcastle in Whitehaven and then being shot himself.

He told the BBC: "I just took a flying dive and he caught me in the back. I went on the floor and then I crawled along the taxi rank. I was going to apply first aid to Darren, but when I saw Darren, he was gone."

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And cyclist Barrie Moss described how he dramatically looked the killer in the face seconds after he had used his rifle to murder Ms Hughes in the town of Egremont.

Mr Moss, 43, said his encounter with Bird was "like something out of a James Bond movie".

He said: "He stared at me, probably not for very long, but seems longer now. He scurried into the car and drove down the hill. It was only when he had driven off that I saw a body slumped on the pavement."

Those who knew Bird - known to friends as "Birdy" - tried to find explanations for his actions today.

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A taxi firm owner who used to work with him suggested the stresses of the job had come to a head with him shooting other taxi drivers he believed had taken custom from him.

He said he understood those shot - including Mr Rewcastle - had been accused by Bird of taking his customers.

All the cab drivers targeted by Bird were his friends and some went on holiday to Thailand with him.

It also emerged Bird had been left "nervous and anxious" after an attack by one of his taxi passengers three years ago.

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Questions were asked today about why police did not stop the killer more quickly.

Among messages of condolence left on the website of local paper the Whitehaven News were angry condemnations of Cumbria Police's handling of the tragedy.

Bob Lunn wrote: "I feel sorry for the people who have died, and the family and friends that they left behind.

"But how was this guy not stopped sooner? I can understand the inevitable two or three people getting shot, but 12 dead?

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"The police should have been all over it as soon as there was a reported shooting ... The police have a lot to answer for in my opinion."

A Cumbria Police spokeswoman said the force could not comment on the criticism.

The Independent Police Complaints Commission said Cumbria Police would decide whether it needed to refer any matters to the watchdog "in due course".

The Prince of Wales said today he was "utterly horrified" to learn about the shootings.

Last night the Queen said she was "deeply shocked" by the tragedy and shared the nation's "grief and horror".

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