(CNN) -- Some police reports and e-mails -- among the thousands of pages of documents released this week by the Arizona community college where Jared Loughner was enrolled -- show the professed Tucson shooter repeatedly accusing his college of "scamming" him and claiming his freedom of speech was being stolen.
Pima Community College released more than 8,500 pages in obedience with an order published by the Pima County Superior Court on Monday, after the court decided the documents were not defended by the Family Educational Rights and Privacy.
The unlock brings to almost 19,000 the total pages released in answer to dozens of public records requests from local and citizen media in the wake of the January shooting in Tucson namely left six die and 13 wounded, including U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, D-Arizona, the community campus said in a statement.
Loughner is being held in a federal mental hospital later a tribunal ruling found him incompetent to stand trial. On Tuesday, a federal pleas tribunal ruled that he tin refuse anti-psychotic medications meantime he appeals the treatment, which was prescribed by jail physicians.
Loughner was suspended from the college on September 30, a little more than three months before the shootings. A week ahead his suspension, Internet postings attributed to him were discovered phoning Pima Community College a "genocide educate" and claiming students were being tortured.
A memo to Loughner from the school's vice president of student evolution, dated October 7, accepts his decision to retreat preferably than contest allegations that he had violated the school's code of behaviour.
Notable amid the documents released this week were reports about four campus police reports from February to September 2010. In them, officers gave accounts -- some of them used -- of bizarre behavior and intimidating outbursts over what seem to be relatively inferior issues, such as receiving a "B" in a Pilates class and disagreeing with one instructor about a number on a math problem.
On February 5, 2010, a dean at the college reported strange behavior in response to poem read by a fellow student, according to a police incident report. The officer said "there was nought to indicate he might have a trend of misbehavior of this type, that we actually didn't have anything to react to in a law enforcement mode at this time."
The officer went ashore to mention in the report that Loughner had "some prior drug involvement but no warrants or everything of momentary concern."
"For immediately, this report documents the faculty's concerns but does not in my attitude justify making contact with Loughner by police."
In a report dated May 17, 2010, a Pilates instructor at the college said Loughner became "quite hostile" while he base out he was receiving a 'B.' The instructor said Loughner "threw his work down and said the grade was 'unacceptable,'" according to the report. She told police that when she spoke with him outdoor the schoolroom, she "felt favor it might chance physical."
He was referred to his instructor's supervisor, who "too felt 'intimidated.'"
Again, whereas, police said they did not believe contact with Loughner was essential "at this time."
On June 1, 2010, Loughner rent a math class "when he made reference to a problem that the instructor was trying to annotate and discussed with the instructor on the number accustomed," according to police report dated June 3, 2010.
Afterward, the officer says in his report that he didn't "have whichever charges to document on this student. A beyond inquiry is needed to be able to make the decision on this student's ability to stay in class or be with other students. (The dean) has warned that the instructor and students in the class are uneasy with Loughner inside their class and are scared of any repercussions that could exist from Loughner being erratic in his deeds."
Included in the records was an e-mail to faculty members from the counselor who met with Loughner after the math class incident:
"As we waded out of the class he asked me if I was a cop, I told him, "No, but there could be an whether we could not ascertain a access to encounter a merry media. ... He questioned why he had to leave the class when he was only exercising his freedom of speech."
The e-mail refers to repeated examples during the chat in which Loughner said he was worried that his emancipation of lecture was creature violated by his not being skillful to inquire answers in math class.
Police did make contact with Loughner on September 23, after an adjunct biology teacher complained Loughner became disruptive in her class after she told him he would only obtain half-credit on an delegation he'd brought in late.
According to the police report, the "apparently upset" educator said Loughner was ranting that it "was a violation of his right to freedom of speech."
When the officer spoke with him, the report stated, Loughner "could not verbalize what the problem was and kept referring behind to the freedom of speech. I placarded during my questioning that Loughner's pate was often tilted to the left and his eyes were jittery and looking up and to the left."
After dissimilar officer arrived, the dispute about rights and behavior persisted.
"Loughner was unable to process why the police were contained in the incident," the report said.
Loughner was taken to the bureau of a campus superintendent, who spoke privately with him for about 25 minutes.
The officers told the administrator they trusted Loughner had "a mental health concern," according to the incident report.
On September 29, campus police investigated a "suspicious movie" posted about a week before on YouTube, titled "Pima Community College School-Genocide/Scam-Free Education-Broken United States Constitution," in which the narrator said entities such as "We are examining the torture of students," and "This is my genocide school," and complained that he was "working to be homeless because of this school."
That night, campus police went to Loughner's home to serve him with his notice of suspension from the community college. The officer read the letter to him, the report said, and spent an hour on the "relation of Jared's actions that brought him to his present predicament," after which the officer said Loughner "left his muffle and spoke out saying, 'I fulfil as long asthis is all a scam.'"