Accused L.A. airport gunman to be spared
death penalty in plea deal
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[September 02, 2016]
By Alex Dobuzinskis
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - The man accused of
killing a security screener and wounding three others in a 2013 shooting
at Los Angeles International Airport has agreed to plead guilty in a
deal with prosecutors that would spare him the death penalty, according
to court documents filed on Thursday.
Murder of a federal officer, the most serious offense among the 11
criminal counts to which Paul Anthony Ciancia, 26, has agreed to plead
guilty, carries a mandatory minimum sentence of life in prison without
parole.
He has also agreed to plead guilty to attempted murder of a federal
officer, violence at an airport, discharge of a firearm during a crime
of violence causing death and discharge of a firearm during a crime of
violence, according to the plea agreement filed in the U.S. District
Court in Los Angeles.
Ciancia, who has been in custody since he was critically wounded in a
shootout with police during the Nov. 1, 2013, attack, is expected to
enter his guilty plea at an upcoming hearing. The court documents did
not give a date.
Federal prosecutors said last year they intended to seek the death
penalty for Ciancia if the case went to trial, citing what they said was
his substantial planning and premeditation ahead of the crime and its
impact on the victims.
However, federal prosecutors said in the agreement they would "not seek
the death penalty against defendant."
Authorities say Ciancia walked into Terminal 3 of the nation's
second-busiest airport carrying a semi-automatic rifle and opened fire,
killing Gerardo Hernandez, 53, an agent for the U.S. Transportation
Security Administration (TSA), as he stood at the entrance to a security
checkpoint.
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Paul Anthony Ciancia, 23, is questioned by U.S. Magistrate Judge
David Bristow (L) in this courtroom sketch at West Valley Detention
Center in Rancho Cucamonga, California, December 26, 2013.
REUTERS/Bill Robes/POOL
Hernandez was the first TSA officer killed in the line of duty since the
agency was created following the Sept. 11, 2001, suicide hijacking
attacks on the United States.
Federal authorities have said that Ciancia, from New Jersey, had set out
to target TSA employees.
Investigators said in a criminal complaint they found a handwritten
letter signed by Ciancia in his bag that addressed TSA officials,
writing that he wanted to "instill fear in your traitorous minds."
(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis; Editing by Steve Gorman, Leslie Adler
and Paul Tait)
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