
WHITEHAVEN, England — Derrick Bird killed his twin brother and the family lawyer, then traveled the roads he had worked as a taxi driver, shooting people — apparently aiming for their faces — killing 12 in all and wounding nearly a dozen before committing suicide.
Detectives on Thursday were trying to answer the elusive question: What drove the 52-year-old cabbie to commit the deadliest mass shooting in Britain since 1996?
“There are 23 families out there who want to know why these events happened,” said Detective Chief Superintendent Iain Goulding. “Our communities want to know why this has happened. My officers and I are absolutely determined to get to the bottom of why this happened. However, it may not be possible to establish all the answers because we cannot speak to Derrick Bird.”
Goulding said detectives would investigate rumors that Bird had financial or domestic troubles. Goulding refused to speculate on what caused Bird to shoot people he knew, including his brother, David, and lawyer Kevin Commons, as well as others he apparently did not.
In the traumatized town of Whitehaven, people described Bird as quiet and friendly. Known to some as “Birdy,” he was a divorced dad who had reportedly just become a grandfather for the first time.
He held licenses for both of the weapons — a shotgun and a .22-caliber rifle with a telescopic sight — that were recovered beside his body.
Goulding said Bird had minor convictions for theft stretching back to 1990, but he had never been to prison. Bird had no known mental health problems and was not on any medication.
A neighbor, Alan Fleming, said that the family had lived in the area for two generations and that Bird “never had so much as an argument” in his home village of Rowrah, east of Whitehaven.
“There was no sign of what was to come. He worked hard,” Fleming said. “. . . Most people are shocked it was him.”



