Crime & Safety

Teen 'Infatuated With Columbine' Died Before Manhunt: Report

A Florida teen who sparked a manhunt that closed schools in Colorado was likely dead before the FBI warned of threats, a coroner report said

Sol Pais, 18,  had already died by suicide when a manhunt closed schools, the coroner said.
Sol Pais, 18, had already died by suicide when a manhunt closed schools, the coroner said. (FBI)

DENVER, CO— Sol Pais, the troubled Florida teenager obsessed with the Columbine school shooting had already died by suicide by the time law enforcement agencies warned schools that she could be a threat, a coroner's report said Wednesday.

Authorities launched a manhunt for Pais, 18, and Denver-area schools canceled classes for Wednesday, April 17 due to the threat after the FBI was alerted that she had traveled to Colorado just days before the 20th anniversary of the massacre.

An autopsy summary by the Clear Creek County coroner estimated that Pais likely died on April 15 — the day authorities said she flew to Denver from Miami. The FBI's Denver office said it learned of Pais' travel the following morning. Agents also learned the day after she died that Pais had called several Denver-area gun stores from Florida before choosing Colorado Gun Broker in Littleton to purchase a pump-action shotgun and multiple boxes of ammunition.

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Pais was already dead of a self-inflicted gunshot wound by the time agents began retracing her steps, according to the coroner's initial autopsy findings.

Chief Deputy Coroner Harriet Hamilton said Wednesday that the office is awaiting test results before producing a final autopsy report, the AP reported.

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The gun purchase and other warning signs, including Pais' past conversations about the 1999 Columbine shooting, led the FBI and local law enforcement to consider the young woman a potential threat to schools and issue a public warning about her, authorities have said.
Columbine and other schools tightened security the afternoon of April 16 and closed entirely on April 17 when authorities still had not located Pais. She never threatened a specific school, authorities said.

Her body was found on April 17 in the foothills west of Denver. Authorities knew Pais was last seen in the area on April 15 but it was unclear when she killed herself until the coroner's report Wednesday.

"Based on the information we had at the time, local, state, and federal law enforcement agencies, in conjunction with school districts in the Denver Metro area, took the necessary steps to ensure our communities, and particularly our students, stayed safe until there was no longer a threat," Jefferson County Sheriff Jeff Shrader said in a statement.

An FBI spokeswoman declined comment Wednesday.

The search for Pais came amid preparations for memorial events marking the Columbine shooting. Two teenage gunmen killed 12 classmates and a teacher at the high school in Denver's suburbs before killing themselves.

Related: Denver-Area Parents Will Be Talking to Kids About School Violence

Related: Colorado's Quick Response to School Threat Was Well-Rehearsed

Reporting from the Associated Press was used in this story.

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