In his garden there was, what else, but a ‘gaming chair’.
The seat sits outside and unoccupied on the North Dighton property of Jack Teixeira – a nod, perhaps, to the secrets scandal that he perpetrated through a gaming platform online.
It is upholstered aggressively in red and black, a growling accessory in a gaming world that unmutes the unheard.
Does the chair belong to him? Maybe.
And maybe its sports car-style carried an appeal to the airman, who called himself “OG” online – original gangster.
Jack Teixeira liked an audience, that much seems clear. He was prepared to risk everything – his liberty, at least – to get it.
“He was a quiet kid. He had more online friends than real friends,” Ben Rapoza told Sky News.
Ben, 18, attended the same high school as Teixeira but didn’t know him well. In North Dighton, it’s a challenge to find anyone who was familiar with its infamous son.
Until now.
Everyone in this rural Massachusetts town now knows ‘Jack Teixeira – the story.’
“It definitely puts Dighton on the map,” said Ben. “Something like this is a little crazy for Dighton, it’s usually quiet, not much usually goes on, it was definitely a shock when I found out about it.
“The fact that he got his hands on that (Pentagon documents) is a little crazy to me, too.”
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The full, crazy story of the airman who blew a hole in US national security will be told, in time.
For now, it seems to shape as a modern digital cliche – a recluse swaggering through cyberspace, high on attention and blind to the black hole ahead.
In small town America, it’s an everyday story of the internet – this one has consequences everywhere.