Details Surrounding Joel Osteen Church Shooting

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Police were well aware of Genesse Ivonne Moreno’s violent schizophrenic history, her mother-in-law relates. The shooting at Joel Osteen’s mega-church in Lakewood, Texas, could and should have been prevented. Moreno wasn’t just confused about her gender, the deceased terrorist was locked into a custody battle over her 7-year-old son. The boy is battling for his life after being shot in the head. It’s still not clear who shot him.

He never should have been there and she shouldn’t have been allowed access to firearms. It seems that nobody would take responsibility for locking her safely off the streets in some sort of custody. Likewise, the state refused to take the toddler away for his own safety.

History of mental illness

Walli Carranza, the mother-in-law of 36-year-old Genesse Ivonne Moreno, says the police knew all about her violent history. The church shooting was a “completely preventable horror.

The somewhat gender confused killer was “a very sweet and loving woman” as long as she was on her medication. It seems she’s missed a few doses. Police knew Moreno “had a notable mental illness” yet allowed her to buy weapons.

Mental illness is real illness,” Carranza explains. “When family members seek emergency protections they’re not doing so for their own sake but for the sake of the person who is ill.” And for the safety of the general public.

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Despite a lengthy history of violent offenses, she managed to get both an AR-15 and a handgun. Not willing to pin the crime down to a public murder suicide, “investigators are still trying to determine why Moreno opened fire.

The Free Palestine slogans and stickers combined with her antisemitic history aren’t enough to declare the act of domestic terror as a “hate crime.

But, because it was a Hispanic oriented service about to get underway, it is, indeed an actual hate crime. That’s what officials have been saying after kicking it around.

Order for ’emotional detention’

Back in 2016, shortly after the birth of her critically injured son, “Moreno had been put under an order for emotional detention.” Christopher Hassig, commander of the homicide division, confirms “she had a mental health history documented by Houston police.

The mother-in-law also “had unsuccessfully petitioned to be declared conservator of Moreno’s son Sam in 2022.

The fault lies in a child protective services of Montgomery County and Harris County,” Carranza asserts. They “refused to remove custody from a woman with known mental illness that was not being treated.

The whole family was concerned her unstable history was about to repeat itself but nobody took them seriously enough to actually do anything about it.

Child Protective Services is investigating the shooting at Lakewood Church alongside law enforcement. At this time, DFPS cannot provide additional information because specific details of investigations are confidential according to law,” their spokesperson Melissa Lanford notes for the record.

When Carranza heard the news she knew who the shooter was based on Moreno’s history. “She had a particular kind of schizophrenia that caused her to become violent. She threatened her husband, my own son, and we still couldn’t get intervention.

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