The night before, Harris had killed his former
supervisor, Carol Ott, with a three-foot samurai sword, and shot her fiancé,
Cornelius Kasten, in their home. After a four-hour standoff with police at the
post office, Harris was arrested. His violent outburst was one of several
high-profile attacks by postal workers that resulted in the addition of the
phrase "going postal" to the American lexicon. Harris, who was born
in prison and had a lifetime of psychiatric problems, was fired from his job in
April 1990. Harboring a grudge against his ex-employer, he began to stockpile
automatic weapons, grenades, and ninja swords. Two years later, he learned that
he had lost as much as $10,000 by investing it with broker Roy Edwards. Dressed
in a black ninja costume, Harris entered Edwards' Montville, New Jersey, home
and handcuffed the family. After sexually assaulting Edwards' wife and two
daughters, he shot Edwards to death. Since hundreds of investors had lost money
while dealing with Edwards, police never even considered Harris a suspect in
his death until after the post office rampage. Arguing that he was insane,
Harris' lawyers said that he had told psychiatrists that he was driven by the
"ninja spirit" to commit the crimes. In 1992, Harris was convicted of
both the Montville and Ridgewood attacks and was sent to death row. But in
September 1996, two days before a New Jersey State Supreme Court battle to
overturn its death-penalty law was to start, he died of natural causes. From
1983 to 1993, there were 11 murderous rampages in U.S. post offices. On August
20, 1986, the worst of these incidents took place in Edmond, Oklahoma. Pat
Sherrill, who was about to be fired, killed 14 mail workers, wounded five, and
then shot himself to death as the SWAT team arrived.
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