Accused Florida school shooter set to plead guilty in 2018 Parkland
massacre
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[October 20, 2021]
(Reuters) - Accused shooter Nikolas
Cruz is expected to appear in a Florida courtroom on Wednesday to plead
guilty to killing 17 students and faculty in Parkland, Florida, a 2018
attack that was the deadliest ever at a U.S. high school.
Cruz will enter guilty pleas to 17 counts of murder and 17 counts of
attempted murder in the Valentine's Day massacre at Marjory Stoneman
Douglas High School, his lawyer David Wheeler, Broward County's chief
assistant public defender, told the judge at a hearing last week.
Now 23, Cruz was a 19-year-old expelled student with a history of mental
health and behavioral issues at the time of the "cold, calculated and
premeditated" killings, the Broward State's Attorney Office said in
court documents.
The gun violence on Feb. 14, 2018, left 14 students and three staff dead
and 17 others injured.
Because prosecutors have vowed to seek the death penalty, his change of
plea from not guilty would open the penalty phase in which a jury would
decide whether he should be sentenced to life in prison or death.
In Florida, juries determine whether to impose a death sentence. If
prosecutors are not willing to drop the potential death penalty as part
of any plea deal that may be struck with Cruz, then a jury would decide.
During last week's hearing, Cruz pleaded guilty to assault and battery
of a law enforcement officer in a separate case in which he was accused
of kicking, hitting and punching a sheriff's deputy as well as
attempting to remove his Taser in a Nov. 2018 jail attack.
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Parkland school shooter Nikolas Cruz looks on before pleading guilty
on all four criminal counts stemming from his alleged attack on a
Broward County jail guard in November 2018, in Fort Lauderdale,
Florida, U.S. October 15, 2021. Amy Beth Bennett/Pool via REUTERS
Before accepting his plea, Broward Circuit Judge
Elizabeth Scherer asked him if he understood the impact the assault
case could have in the penalty phase of the murder case.
"Sir, I need to advise you that the state is going to be using this
conviction in this case as evidence of an aggravating factor for
purposes of arguing in favor of the death penalty. Do you understand
that?" Scherer asked Cruz.
"Yes, Ma'am," Cruz responded.
Some of the teenagers who survived the deadly rampage formed "March
for Our Lives", an organization that called for gun control
legislation such as a ban on assault-style rifles.
In March 2018, the group held a nationally televised march in
Washington that sparked hundreds of similar rallies worldwide. Cruz
was 18 when he legally purchased the AR-15 rifle used in the
shooting from a licensed gun dealer.
(Reporting by Barbara Goldberg in New York; Editing by Bill Berkrot)
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