Santa Barbara County Sheriff Bill Brown said authorities had received a tip on April 30 concerning Elliot Rodger, who took his own life after Friday's killing spree in the town of Isla Vista, outside of the University of California at Santa Barbara.
A local mental health department official requested law enforcement carry out a welfare check on Rodger following the tip-off, and sheriff's deputies visited the troubled man, Brown told CNN today.
"He explained to deputies that it was a misunderstanding ... He was able to convince them that he was not at that point a danger to himself or anyone else."
Looking back, "we certainly, you know, wish that we could turn the clock back and maybe change some things," Brown said in a separate interview on CBS's "Face the Nation."
But at the time, there were no grounds for placing Rodger on an involuntary hold, an order which allows authorities to commit individuals to a mental health facility for further observation, Brown said.
Questions about how Rodger was free to carry out his bloody assault have swirled after it emerged he left several manifestos in print and videos posted online explaining his motives, some of which were posted weeks before Friday's rampage.
Rodger, who had been diagnosed with Asperger syndrome, wrote about his meeting with police in a 140-page manifesto-autobiography titled "My Twisted World."
Rodger, son of Hollywood director Peter Rodger, wrote that he feared the police would discover the cache of weapons and bullets hidden in his room and arrest him.
"If they had demanded to search my room... That would have ended everything," he wrote.
"When they left, the biggest wave of relief swept over me. It was so scary.
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