Charleston church shooter was headed to
Tennessee when captured: documents
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[July 27, 2016]
(Reuters) - The white man accused of
killing nine black parishioners in a racist attack at a South Carolina
church last year was heading to Tennessee when he was arrested,
according to court records filed by prosecutors to support their federal
charges.
The documents relating to the upcoming federal trial for Dylann Roof,
22, provided details about the attack during a Bible study session at
Charleston's historic Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church on June
17, 2015.
They come as Roof's defense team is trying to have the federal charges
thrown out over what they claim to be a lack of federal standing to
proceed. The government argues it has jurisdiction as the matter
pertains to interstate commerce.
U.S. prosecutors argued in filings on Monday that South Carolina did not
have hate crime laws under which Roof could be prosecuted. They also
said Roof was fleeing to Tennessee when he was arrested in North
Carolina and had purchased weapons and ammunition produced in other
states.
Attorneys for Roof could not be immediately reached for comment on
Tuesday.
The documents also said Roof used eight Glock handgun magazines and
fired about 80 rounds during the massacre. The records alleged that Roof
plotted the attack for months, calling the church from his home and
paying a web hosting company where he posted a manifesto online as early
as February 2015.
Roof faces 33 federal charges, including hate crimes, obstruction of
religion, and firearms charges. Prosecutors are seeking the death
penalty. He would plead guilty if the death penalty were dropped, his
attorneys have said in court filings.
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Dylann Roof is seen in this June 18, 2015 handout booking photo
provided by Charleston County Sheriff's Office. REUTERS/Charleston
County Sheriff's Office/Handout via Reuters
The federal trial is scheduled to begin on Nov. 7.
A state capital punishment trial is scheduled for January. State
prosecutors charged Roof with murder and attempted murder and are
also seeking the death penalty.
The slayings shook the country and intensified debate over U.S. race
relations, already roiled at the time by high-profile police
killings of unarmed black people.
Relatives of the people killed in the attack have sued the U.S.
government over an FBI clerk's mistake that allowed the purchase of
the gun used in the shooting, according to lawsuits reviewed by
Reuters.
(Reporting by Curtis Skinner in San Francisco; Editing by Peter
Cooney)
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