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Alleged FSU shooter grew up involved in overseas custody battle with birth mother

Phoenix Ikner was kidnapped by his birth mom when he was a child, court records reveal
Phoenix Ikner
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Court documents reveal Phoenix Ikner, the 20-year-old alleged shooter behind a deadly daytime shooting rampage at Florida State University, grew up with years of family drama that included a custody battle, which took him more than 4,500 miles away from his home in Tallahassee when he was just a child.

According to a probable cause affidavit in Leon County courts, in 2015 Ikner, who went by Christian when he was a kid, was illegally taken to Norway by his biological mother, Anne Mari Eriksen. Both had Norwegian and U.S. citizenship.

WATCH: Custody battles, mental health concerns plagued alleged FSU shooter’s childhood

Custody battles, mental health concerns plagued alleged FSU shooter’s childhood

At the time, his birth mom told his father, they were “traveling to South Florida for spring break,” according to the affidavit.

But instead, she “fled the country” with Ikner, which was in violation of the parents’ custody agreement, according to records available on the Leon County Clerk of Courts website.

Court records also reveal dad learned his son had been taken overseas during a phone call with him a few days later.

Despite claiming she would bring him back at the end of spring break, his birth mom didn’t and “had no intention of returning Christian to Tallahassee,” according to court records, which also revealed mom had “mentioned possibly moving to Miami at some point.”

According to the affidavit, when dad reported the kidnapping, he told authorities his son has “developmental delays and special needs which he feared would not be taken care of without access to his doctors here in the United States.”

Florida State Shooter

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His said his son was on medication for “several health and mental issues,” including “a growth hormone disorder and ADHD.”

A few months later, mom was arrested at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport when she returned to the U.S.

She was ultimately found guilty and served 200 days in county jail.

Also in 2015, Eriksen was accused of violating a temporary injunction by contacting her son’s school and “constantly contacting” his pediatrician. That case was dismissed.

Court records also show in October 2015, Ikner’s birth mom filed a lawsuit against the boy’s dad, Christopher Ikner; Ikner’s wife, Jessica Ikner, who’s a deputy sheriff in Leon County; and a few other relatives. Eriksen accused them of harassment and slander over years of litigation in family court.

In her complaint, Eriksen alleged “the emotional and psychological harm done to the minor child will be evident for years.”

Seven months later, her lawsuit was dismissed.

WATCH: FSU students in 'disbelief' as memorial grows for victims

FSU students in 'disbelief' as memorial grows for victims

Lucas Luzietti took a national government class with Ikner at Tallahassee State College two years ago and said Ikner was very political and extreme.

“He had very radical views,” Luzietti recalled. “He would joke about the deaths of minorities. He said Rosa Parks was in the wrong and then he also said that Joe Biden was an illegitimate president, which we actually got into an argument about in class,” said Luzietti.

Investigators now say Phoenix Ikner was the lone gunman who, on a sunny morning before Easter weekend, pulled the trigger in the middle of FSU’s campus, injuring five, killing two and devastating countless more.

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