Jury Recommends Life Without Parole for Parkland School Shooter
On Thursday, a jury in Florida recommended that Parkland school shooter Nikolas Jacob Cruz be sentenced to life in prison. Sentencing will be issued at a later date. The prosecution noted that victims have a right under the Florida constitution to express themselves as to the crime committed.
Cruz, now 23, entered Marjory Stonemason Douglass High School on February 14, 2018, killing 14 students and three staff members with a semiautomatic rifle and hundreds of rounds of ammunition.
The prosecution said at the end of the sentencing hearing that the victims have a right to voice their testimony on the matter, with the judge setting that date for November 1. Cruz will remain in custody until that time.
According to USA Today, lead prosecutor Michael Satz described Cruz as a cold-blooded murderer who had meticulously planned his attack.
Satz said that Cruz was “hunting his victims,” and had returned to kill students like Peter Yang and Joaquin Oliver, who were not killed initially.
He also argued that Cruz has antisocial personality disorder, not fetal alcohol syndrome as defense attorneys claimed.
Assistant Public Defender Melisa McNeill asked the jury to consider not just the crime committed, but Cruz’s personal history, saying Cruz is a “broken, brain-damaged, mentally ill young man” who was “poisoned” in the womb by his mother’s drug and alcohol usage.
McNeill reportedly focused much of her arguments on Cruz’s childhood, recounting testimony from witnesses that described Cruz’s mother’s actions during pregnancy, and calling to the stand two expert witnesses who testified that Cruz suffered severe brain damage as a result of his mother’s alcohol abuse.
The sentencing brings to an end a three-month trial that included graphic photos and videos from the massacre, testimony from the victims’ family members, as well as a tour of the building, which still contains the blood of those injured or killed, according to Fox 13.
Cruz faced either life in prison or a death sentence, with jurors being required to come to a unanimous decision in order to receive the death sentence.
This is a breaking story and will be updated.
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