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Texas Church Gunman Claimed He Bought Animals On Craiglist For Target Practice

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SAN ANTONIO (CBSMiami/CNN) - A woman who worked with Texas church shooter Devin Kelley said he claimed on social media the bought animals on Craigslist to use as target practice.

Jessika Edwards worked with Kelley at Holloman Air Force Base in New Mexico from 2010 to 2012. She said the morbid admission came in Facebook messages starting in 2014 after the two reconnected in civilian life. Though Edwards can't say whether Kelley was telling the truth, the odd behavior was enough for her to stop communicating with him.

Edwards said Kelley also displayed a fascination with mass murders while he was enlisted in the Air Force.

"He would make jokes about wanting to kill somebody," Edwards recalled. "And we would say, 'wait, that's not funny.'"

The obsession was so pronounced, Edwards said, that when Kelley was disciplined for poor performance she told her bosses to "back off or he would shoot the place up."

A law enforcement source close to the Texas shooting investigation confirmed to CNN that FBI agents interviewed Edwards about her interactions with the gunman.

'Problem after problem'

"He was always getting into trouble," Edwards said of Kelley. "It was problem after problem."

In 2012, Kelley was court-martialed and convicted for assaulting his wife and stepson. Edwards said those domestic problems boiled over on the job and Kelley would come in depressed and unfocused.

"He threatened to kill himself one time if I didn't let him go see a chaplain," Edwards said. As a staff sergeant, Edwards says she supervised Kelley.

The US Air Force confirmed to CNN that Edwards was at Holloman Air Force Base at the same time as Kelley, but did not confirm whether she worked with him.

Edwards said that "everything that could be done was done" for Kelley. In addition to regular sessions with a chaplain, she says Air Force officials referred him to the mental health office.

In the days since Kelley's shooting massacre, the Air Force has been criticized for failing to notify federal law enforcement officials of Kelley's conviction. Had federal authorities been aware, Kelley should have been barred from legally purchasing the weapon he used in the Sutherland Springs, Texas, attack.

Kelley praised Dylann Roof

After Kelley served jail time for the assault and was discharged from the Air Force, Edwards said he reached out to her on Facebook to be a job reference.

"I wanted to help him, and I really wanted him to succeed," said Edwards, who by that time was also out of the military.

But their conversations made Edwards increasingly uncomfortable. At one point, Edwards said, Kelley praised Dylann Roof, the man who entered a South Carolina church and killed nine people during a bible study.

"He would say 'isn't it cool? Did you watch the news?'" Edwards said. "He would say he wished he had the nerve to do it, but all he would be able to do is kill animals."

Kelley was accused in 2014 of punching a dog in Colorado. He initially pleaded guilty to animal cruelty, but the case was dismissed after he paid fines, court documents show.

'You feel like we failed'

After Sunday's shooting in Texas, Edwards got a text from a friend: "Jessika—it was Kelley. The shooter."

"I dropped a glass and started crying," Edwards said.

While she feels she did what she could for Kelley -- he once thanked her for "having his back" -- she says she's been thinking about those Facebook messages.

After cutting off communication with Kelley, Edwards deleted their conversations and wrote the experience off as Kelley "talking weird like he always did."

"In a sane person's mind, when people say something like that you don't think it's something they're going to do," she said.

After the shooting, Edwards told the FBI about the messages in hopes they can be recovered from Kelley's Facebook account.

Before blocking Kelley from Facebook for good, Edwards said she gave him her phone number and said if he "found himself in a state of mind that he was going to hurt himself or someone else, to call me."

"I told him that," she explained, "because at one point he told me that I was one of the only people... he could talk to that made him feel calm."

Her phone never rang.

"It's upsetting because you feel like we failed," Edwards said. "But in reality we did everything we possibly could do."

(© Copyright 2017 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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