An armed man whom police have identified as Robert R. Card II points a gun Wednesday night while entering Just-In-Time Recreation in Lewiston. Androscoggin County Sheriff’s Office photo, via AP

BOWDOIN — Robert R. Card II is reportedly a skilled marksman who was among the best shooters in his Army Reserve unit.

On Wednesday night, the 40-year-old Bowdoin man gunned down dozens of people at two Lewiston businesses, killing 18 and wounding 13, according to officials.

The deadly shootings at the Just-In-Time Recreation bowling alley and Schemengees Bar & Grille do not appear to be random. Several months ago at Schemengees, Card actively competed in a cornhole club there. In a photograph provided to the news media, he has a slight smile as he poses after competing in a tournament to raise money for breast cancer treatment.

Lewiston shooting suspect Robert R. Card II after competing last year in a cornhole tournament to raise money for breast cancer treatment. Photo courtesy of Nick Wilson

But at Schemengees and the bowling alley, known better by its former name of Sparetime Recreation, Card was hearing voices, according to a police bulletin sent to law enforcement and an interview with his sister-in-law.

In an interview Thursday with The Daily Beast, Card’s sister-in-law said he has had acute mental health struggles over the past year. Card started wearing powerful hearing aids, but began hearing things like people “bashing” him, including at the bowling alley and Schemengees, and he would “get mad” when he was told the voices were just in his head, according to the interview.

Card graduated from Mount Ararat High School in Topsham in 2001. He studied engineering at the University of Maine from 2001 to 2004 but did not graduate.

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He was licensed as an electrician’s helper from 2004 to 2006, with no disciplinary action on his record. It appears his father, Robert R. Card of Bowdoin, was a master electrician, licensed from 1998 to 2024.

A spokesman for the U.S. Army on Thursday confirmed Card’s military status. Bryce Dubee said Card’s rank in the Army Reserve is sergeant first class, and he is a petroleum supply specialist who enlisted in December 2002 and has not been deployed to combat zones.

Dubee said Card has received awards for his service, including the Army Achievement Medal, Army Reserve Component Achievement Medal, Humanitarian Service Medal, National Defense Service Medal, and Army Service Ribbon.

A former Army Reserve colleague of Card’s told CNN that Card is a skilled marksman and outdoorsman who was among the best shooters in his Army Reserve unit.

Robert R. Card II is accused of killing at least 18 people and injuring at least 13 in a mass shooting Wednesday night in Lewiston. Above, is a photograph of Card from the Mount Ararat High School class of 2001 yearbook. Courtesy photo

Military commanders in the Army Reserve’s 3rd Battalion, 304th Infantry Regiment, said they observed Card acting erratically while the unit was training at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point in New York. Card was taken to the Keller Army Community Hospital there.

Card was taken by police to be evaluated following erratic behavior in July, according to The Associated Press, which spoke to a U.S. official who asked to remain anonymous.

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The police bulletin sent to law enforcement after Wednesday night’s shootings in Lewiston noted Card had been at a mental health facility for two weeks this summer, and he had reported “hearing voices and threats to shoot up” the military base. No information was provided about Card’s treatment or diagnosis.

Sagadahoc County court documents indicate Card has an 18-year-old son with a woman he divorced in 2007, with the couple having shared parental responsibilities and rights. The divorce was granted on the grounds of irreconcilable differences. At the time, Card’s address was 941 Meadow Road in Bowdoin, where there was a heavy police presence Thursday.

Paperwork filed in 2010 as part of an amendment to the divorce judgment indicated Card had sought and received a continuance of the divorce amendment case for a week in March 2010 so he could report for five days of annual duty at Fort Devens in Massachusetts.

An additional amendment to the divorce judgment in 2013 ordered “all weapons in either party’s home shall be under lock and key at all times during which they are not being used.”

Card’s criminal record in Maine shows one prior offense: A misdemeanor-level charge of operating under the influence in Topsham in 2007. He pleaded guilty, was sentenced to 48 hours in jail, and fined $500, which he paid.

While some family and friends said in interviews Thursday that Card was generally a nice man who did not exhibit concerning behavior before this past year, at least one former acquaintance said he was worried about Card and his family many years ago.

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Rick Goddard, who lives across the street from the Cards, described them as a hard-working farm family. Goddard said he had not seen Robert Card II for 20 years, until last year, when hunting on their property. Two weeks ago, Goddard said, he saw the younger Card helping his father hay the field across from Goddard’s house.

“We’ve never seen anything like this here,” Goddard said.

In an interview Thursday with NBC News, Liam Kent said he grew up about a half-mile from the Card family’s “compound” in Bowdoin. Kent said the family and Robert Card II “are all gun fanatics and are very much associated with right-wing militias.”

“It’s known in the town to stay away from them, to not approach them,” Kent said. “If you see them, you just turn around and walk away. They would shoot guns all the time. You could hear a gun every day after school. It was like clockwork.”

The Portland Police Department Special Reaction Team searches Thursday in Monmouth for Robert R. Card II, 40, of Bowdoin. Anna Chadwick/Morning Sentinel

At the corner of West Road and Wood Schoolhouse Road in Bowdoin, police from several different agencies were on the scene Thursday morning, directing traffic away from the area and sending people back in the direction from which they had come.

Public records indicate at least one of the nearby properties belongs to Card or his parents.

At about 11 a.m. Thursday, police could be heard over a bullhorn ordering people out of a home several times.

Along West Road, where homes sit on large, heavily wooded lots, residents said they knew of Robert Card II but did not know him well. They declined to be quoted for publication.

Kennebec Journal staff writers Jessica Lowell and Keith Edwards, and Portland Press Herald staff writers Emily Allen, Drew Bonifant, and John Terhune contributed to this report.

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