Jury reaches verdict in Nikolas Cruz death penalty trial
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Parkland school shooter Nikolas Cruz will be sentenced to life in prison for the 2018 shooting Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida where 17 people were killed, including 14 students and three staff members. 

Cruz, 24, removed his glasses and looked pale as he kept his eyes down on the defense table while the verdict was read. 

Jurors returned the verdict recommending life in prison without parole after just a day of deliberations. A hearing for the sentencing will be held in November. 

Under Florida law, a death sentence could only have been handed down if jurors had unanimously recommended he be executed. The only other option was life in prison. 

Reuters initially reported that the jury recommended the death penalty for Cruz, but issued a correction shortly after.

Nikolas Cruz, now 24, pictured in the courtroom on Thursday, as he waits to learn his fate for the 17 murders at Parkland's Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in 2018

Nikolas Cruz, now 24, pictured in the courtroom on Thursday, as he waits to learn his fate for the 17 murders at Parkland's Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in 2018

Nikolas Cruz, now 24, pictured in the courtroom on Thursday, as he waits to learn his fate for the 17 murders at Parkland’s Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in 2018

Top Row L-R: Jaime Guttenberg, Nicholas Dworet, Martin Duque, Meadow Pollack, Cara Loughran Second Row L-R: Alyssa Alhadeff, Luke Hoyer, Joaquin Oliver, Gina Montalto Third Row L-R: Alaina Petty, Carmen Schentrup, Peter Wang, Alex Schachter Fourth Row L-R: Helena Ramsey, Scott Beigel, Aaron Feis, Chris Hixon

Top Row L-R: Jaime Guttenberg, Nicholas Dworet, Martin Duque, Meadow Pollack, Cara Loughran Second Row L-R: Alyssa Alhadeff, Luke Hoyer, Joaquin Oliver, Gina Montalto Third Row L-R: Alaina Petty, Carmen Schentrup, Peter Wang, Alex Schachter Fourth Row L-R: Helena Ramsey, Scott Beigel, Aaron Feis, Chris Hixon

Top Row L-R: Jaime Guttenberg, Nicholas Dworet, Martin Duque, Meadow Pollack, Cara Loughran Second Row L-R: Alyssa Alhadeff, Luke Hoyer, Joaquin Oliver, Gina Montalto Third Row L-R: Alaina Petty, Carmen Schentrup, Peter Wang, Alex Schachter Fourth Row L-R: Helena Ramsey, Scott Beigel, Aaron Feis, Chris Hixon

The prosecution during the three-month sentencing trial had argued Cruz’s crime was both premeditated as well as heinous and cruel, which are among the criteria that Florida law establishes for deciding on a death sentence.

Cruz’s defense team had acknowledged the severity of his crimes, but asked jurors to consider mitigating factors including lifelong mental health disorders resulting from his biological mother’s substance abuse during pregnancy.

Families and friends of the victims were visibly emotional in the courtroom as the judge read through all 17 names in the order they were shot by Cruz and the sentence recommended. 

Gina Montalto’s parents began clutching each other’s hands before the reading began, and they started crying through the reading. Luke Hoyer’s mother was also crying.

Jaime Guttenberg’s father and Alaina Petty’s mother were holding their heads in their hands.

The verdict comes after the trial concluded earlier this week with the prosecution portraying Cruz as a calculating and brutal murderer, while his defense attorney argued that he is actually just a broken, brain-damaged’ kid who was doomed in the womb by his birth mother’s drinking and drug use during pregnancy.

Families of the Parkland school shooting victims react to the verdict on Thursday

Families of the Parkland school shooting victims react to the verdict on Thursday

Families of the Parkland school shooting victims react to the verdict on Thursday

As the verdict was read on Thursday, family and friends of the victims could be seen shaking their heads and wiping tears as they sat in the gallery

As the verdict was read on Thursday, family and friends of the victims could be seen shaking their heads and wiping tears as they sat in the gallery

As the verdict was read on Thursday, family and friends of the victims could be seen shaking their heads and wiping tears as they sat in the gallery

During their six hours of deliberation on Wednesday, jurors first asked for a readback of two testimonies and then just before court adjourned for the day, requested to see the AR-15 that Cruz used in the shootings. 

There was objection from the Broward Sheriff’s Office on providing the jury with the gun, for ‘security reasons,’ but just before day two of deliberations began on Thursday, it was decided the gun would be shown without the firing pen. 

The gun, which Cruz purchased legally in 2017, was previously shown to the jury during witness testimony back in July. 

Broward sheriff’s Sgt. Gloria Crespo previously testified that Cruz, then 19, had five gun magazines remaining in the vest, containing 160 total bullets. He had fired more than 100 shots as he stalked the three-story building for seven minutes, firing down hallways and into classrooms.

The jurors also were shown photos Crespo took of the bodies of five students and a teacher who died on the third-floor, all with multiple wounds from being shot at close range.

Jurors deliberated for about six hours Wednesday, including asking to have read back to them the prosecution’s cross-examination of a defense psychologist who says Cruz suffers from fetal alcohol spectrum disorder.

At the end of the day, they requested to once again view the AR-15. 

Broward Circuit Judge Elizabeth Scherer said Broward Sheriff’s Office deputies told her they couldn’t provide it to the jury for ‘security reasons,’ so this was ‘above’ her ‘pay grade,’ and she was going to stay on her lane.

Lead prosecutor Michael Satz objected, saying he had seen this done in many previous cases, even calling the situation ‘ridiculous’ and ‘preposterous.’ 

It was decided early Thursday that the jury would be shown the weapon without the firing pen. 

Cruz’s massacre is the deadliest mass shooting that has ever gone to trial in the U.S. Nine other people in the U.S. who fatally shot at least 17 people died during or immediately after their attacks by suicide or police gunfire.

Nikolas Cruz, who will soon learn if he'll receive a death sentence or be sent to prison for life, is seen on security footage inside the school in 2018 when he carried out his rampage. Now, on the second day of deliberations, jurors have asked to view the AR-15 he used in the shootings

Nikolas Cruz, who will soon learn if he'll receive a death sentence or be sent to prison for life, is seen on security footage inside the school in 2018 when he carried out his rampage. Now, on the second day of deliberations, jurors have asked to view the AR-15 he used in the shootings

Nikolas Cruz, who will soon learn if he’ll receive a death sentence or be sent to prison for life, is seen on security footage inside the school in 2018 when he carried out his rampage. Now, on the second day of deliberations, jurors have asked to view the AR-15 he used in the shootings

Back in July during witness testimony, Assistant State Attorney Mike Satz showed the jury and the court the AR-15, which was purchased legally in 2017, that was used in the tragic massacre

Back in July during witness testimony, Assistant State Attorney Mike Satz showed the jury and the court the AR-15, which was purchased legally in 2017, that was used in the tragic massacre

Back in July during witness testimony, Assistant State Attorney Mike Satz showed the jury and the court the AR-15, which was purchased legally in 2017, that was used in the tragic massacre

Surveillance video shows Cruz inside the school in 2018. Jurors retraced the path Cruz followed on February 14, 2018, as he methodically moved from floor to floor, firing down hallways and into classrooms

Surveillance video shows Cruz inside the school in 2018. Jurors retraced the path Cruz followed on February 14, 2018, as he methodically moved from floor to floor, firing down hallways and into classrooms

Surveillance video shows Cruz inside the school in 2018. Jurors retraced Cruz’s path on as he methodically moved from floor to floor, firing down hallways and into classrooms

Closing arguments from both sides concluded earlier this week with the prosecution – which is calling for the death penalty – portraying Cruz as a calculating and brutal murderer. Meanwhile, Cruz’s defense attorney pleaded for mercy and the only other option – life in prison.

Cruz, by his own admission, said he began thinking about committing a school shooting while in middle school, about five years before he carried out the Valentine’s Day tragedy. He said he picked Valentine’s Day to make sure it would never be celebrated at the school again.

Almost exactly a year before the rampage, he purchased his AR-15-style semi-automatic rifle and his planning became serious about seven months in advance as he researched previous mass shooters, saying he tried to learn from their experience.

During closing arguments on Tuesday, attorneys for both sides wrapped up three months of testimony in one last push for either a death sentence or life in prison.

The prosecution and defense that his 2018 attack that killed 17 people was horrible, but disagreed in their closing arguments on whether it was an act of evil worthy of execution or one of a broken person who should be imprisoned for life.

People are brought out of the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School after the shooting

Lead prosecutor Mike Satz and his defense counterpart, Melisa McNeill, painted for the 12 jurors competing pictures of what drove Cruz’s attack at Parkland’s Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School on Valentine’s Day 2018.’

Under Florida law, a jury must be unanimous in its decision to recommend that a judge sentence Cruz to be executed.

The penalty trial began in July and has included testimony from survivors of the shooting as well as cell phone videos in which terrified students cried for help or spoke in hushed whispers as they hid.

The defense called witnesses who testified about Cruz’s mental health disorders resulting from his biological mother’s substance abuse during pregnancy.

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