Police
responded to a report about 2:50 a.m. Saturday of a man sleeping in his
car outside an apartment building, police spokesman Darin Snapp said
Tuesday. When police approached the car, Belcher got out of the vehicle
and was cooperative, Snapp said.
“We ask him, ‘Why are you sleeping here?’, and he says he’s there to visit his girlfriend but she’s not home,” Snapp said. When
police determined Belcher didn’t have any outstanding warrants, Snapp
said, Belcher, 25, made a phone call and a short time later a woman let
Belcher into her building. Police did not question the woman and don’t
know who she is, he said.
“When he was sleeping she may have come
home and he didn’t realize,” Snapp said. “He was very cooperative and
thanked the officers.” Snapp said that was the last contact police had with Belcher “until his name came up” with the shooting at his home.
Witnesses have since told police that Belcher stayed at that apartment until 6:30 a.m., Snapp said. At
about 7:50 a.m., police were called to Belcher’s home after he shot and
killed Perkins, whose body was found on the floor of the master
bathroom with multiple gunshot wounds, according to a police incident
report.
Belcher then drove about five miles to Arrowhead Stadium,
where he was met by general manager Scott Pioli and coach Romeo Crennel,
whom Belcher thanked for all they had done for him. When police
arrived, Belcher moved behind a vehicle, out of clear view of officers,
Snapp said. He said Belcher then knelt down and shot himself once in the
head.
Snapp said Belcher used two separate, legally registered, handguns in the shootings. Friends
have said the relationship between Belcher and Perkins was strained.
The couple briefly lived apart recently before getting back together by
Thanksgiving, friend Brianne York told The Associated Press.
Kansas
City Chiefs spokesman Ted Crews said Tuesday he wasn’t aware of what
counseling efforts the team may have made for Belcher and Perkins.
Belcher
played college football at the University of Maine, where he repeatedly
was the subject of university police reports. A University of Maine
spokeswoman provided the reports to the AP.
In April 2006, Belcher punched his fist through a dorm window after becoming upset over a woman, documents said. And,
in February 2007, a noise complaint was lodged after “a discussion
outside of his room” between Belcher and a woman. The report says “both
stated that she was to contact him by 23:00 hours and did not. He became
worried and when she did show up he told her that he did not want to
see her until the morning.”
Also Tuesday, police posted a brief audio
recording of some of Saturday morning’s dispatch traffic. In the
1-minute 41-second audio compilation, a dispatcher is relaying
information about the shooting at Belcher’s home.
In one segment, the dispatcher says a 22-year-old woman had been shot at the Belcher address, “possibly by her son.”
In
another segment, the dispatcher says someone is at Arrowhead with an
unknown weapon and later that an “unknown party at the [Chiefs] practice
field confronted the staff and they don’t know what he’s armed with.”
Snapp said that was the only audio police planned to release regarding the shootings. Associated Press writers Heather Hollingsworth, Dave Skretta and Chris Clark in Kansas City, Mo., contributed to this report.