Lethbridge Herald

Woman appeals sentence in Halifax murder-plot case

- Brett Bundale

An American woman who plotted to go on a Valentine’s Day shooting spree at a Halifax mall is appealing her sentence of life in prison, calling it “manifestly harsh and excessive.”

Lindsay Souvannara­th was sentenced in April after pleading guilty to conspiracy to commit murder in a plan that would have seen two shooters open fire at the Halifax Shopping Centre food court in 2015.

A motion to set a date for the appeal hearing is expected to be considered next week by Justice David Farrar of the Nova Scotia Court of Appeal.

In her notice of appeal, Souvannara­th argues that her sentence of life imprisonme­nt with no chance of parole for 10 years should be revised to a fixed sentence of 12 to 14 years.

The Chicago-area woman provides five grounds for appeal, including suggesting that the presiding judge committed an error by imposing a burden on her to prove she was remorseful and had “renounced antisocial beliefs.”

She also argues that Supreme Court Justice Peter Rosinski was wrong to compare the conspiracy to a terrorism offence and conclude it was equivalent in “moral blameworth­iness, gravity and danger” to the public.

The 26-year-old woman added that the judge offended the principle of parity by imposing a dramatical­ly lengthier sentence on her than on coconspira­tor Randall Shepherd.

Souvannara­th pleaded guilty last year, several months after Shepherd — a Halifax man described in court as the “cheerleade­r” of the foiled shooting plot — was sentenced to a decade in jail.

A third alleged conspirato­r, 19year-old James Gamble, was found dead in his Halifax-area home a day before the planned attack.

The conspiracy can be traced back to December 2014, when Souvannara­th and Gamble began an online relationsh­ip, exchanging explicit intimate photograph­s and a fascinatio­n with mass shootings.

Thousands of Facebook messages between the two provide details of the conspiracy and Souvannara­th’s obsession with Nazism, the 1999 Columbine shooting and a plot she nicknamed “Der Untergang” — a Valentine’s Day shooting rampage at a Halifax mall.

The massacre was to end with their own suicides.

Souvannara­th left her home in Geneva, Ill., on Feb 13, 2015, and flew to Halifax on a one-way ticket, allegedly carrying her “death outfit” and books on serial killers in her luggage.

But the plan began to fall apart before she landed in Nova Scotia.

Acting on a tip, police surrounded Gamble’s home outside Halifax. He agreed over the phone to come outside, but instead shot himself in the head.

Meanwhile, Shepherd went to the airport on a city bus to meet Souvannara­th, but was arrested while waiting.

Officers also sent online photos of Souvannara­th to border agents at the Halifax airport, instructin­g them to detain anyone matching her descriptio­n arriving on a flight from Chicago via New York.

When Souvannara­th arrived, she was detained by the Canada Border Services Agency.

The arrests made internatio­nal headlines and shocked Nova Scotians. The spectre of shooters opening fire in the food court of a popular mall threatened thousands of shoppers and workers and unsettled the city for months.

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