Accused
Colorado clinic shooter intends to plead guilty, expects execution:
report
Send a link to a friend
[January 14, 2016]
By Keith Coffman
DENVER (Reuters) - The man accused of
fatally shooting three people at a Planned Parenthood clinic in Colorado
last year told a Denver television station that he wants to plead guilty
and expects to be executed, the CBS affiliate reported on Wednesday.
|
In a phone call from the El Paso County jail where he is being
held without bond, Robert Lewis Dear told a reporter with KCNC-TV
that he wants to act as his own lawyer and is willing to pay for his
crimes.
“Well, I’m just an honest man and I believe I’m guilty so I am just
going to plead guilty,” he said. “I’d say that they are going to
execute me.”
Dear, 57, stands accused of 179 felony counts, including charges of
first-degree murder, attempted murder and assault stemming from the
Nov. 27 attack on the Planned Parenthood clinic in Colorado Springs
that also wounded nine.
Police said Dear opened fire with a rifle outside the clinic and
then stormed inside, ultimately surrendering after a five-hour
standoff.
El Paso County District Attorney Dan May said after a court hearing
last month that he has not decided if his office will seek the death
penalty.
Dear said in the interview that he believed the FBI had been
following him for decades, and on the day of the rampage 10 agents
were tailing him. He then chose to make his “last stand” at the
Planned Parenthood clinic because “it’s murdering little babies," he
told the station.
“They (FBI agents) slither off like snakes and they get the local
cops to do their dirty work, so that’s why the shootout was there,”
he said.
Among the three people killed was a police officer from a nearby
university who responded to the scene.
[to top of second column] |
At an earlier hearing, Dear said he was “a warrior for the babies,”
and did not want his court-appointed lawyers to represent him.
El Paso County District Court Judge Gilbert Martinez ordered Dear to
undergo a mental examination to determine if he is competent to fire
his lawyers and defend himself.
Dear told the judge that he would not cooperate with the evaluators,
which he repeated in the television interview.
“I’m just letting you know I am sane, I am coherent... I have a
college degree,” he said on the phone call.
A spokeswoman for the FBI’s field office in Denver could not be
immediately reached for comment.
A status hearing on the case is set for Feb. 24.
(Editing by Victoria Cavaliere)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|