FBI finds hollow-point bullets in Annapolis home of suspected Holocaust museum shooter
Search warrant records from the FBI show that agents found a 100 rounds of hollow-point bullets and many other items in the Annapolis apartment used by James von Brunn, who has been charged with killing a security officer at Washington's Holocaust Museum.
The white supremacist had, among other things, checks from his son, the ammunition, notes from various bank accounts, a handwritten will (the records do not disclose its contents), a calendar and Veterans Affairs letter, an unopened envelope addressed to him from the Ronald Reagan Library, three books (stuffed with five letters) and a painting of what appears to be Hitler and Jesus.
The list begs more questions than it answers, but it provides some additional insight into the suspect's character. What it doesn't answer is the underlying motive, beyond hate, that compelled him to allegedly take such drastic action.







