Vancouver Sun

Widow starts trial over role in Orlando shooting

- Tamara LusH

ORLANDO, FLA. •Thegunman who killed 49 people in the Pulse nightclub attack was shot and killed hours afterward. Now, nearly two years later, his widow is being held accountabl­e, charged with helping her husband plan the attack.

The trial of Noor Salman, widow of shooter Omar Mateen, opened Thursday with jury selection that is expected to be lengthy, owing to the difficulty of finding jurors in the Orlando area capable of being fair and impartial given the high profile of the massacre — at the time, it was the worst mass shooting in modern U.S. history.

Prosecutor­s have said Salman accompanie­d her husband when he cased locations for potential terrorist attacks, knew ahead of time that he was planning the attack and misled FBI agents about what she knew about her husband’s plans.

The defence plans to argue that Salman was abused by her husband and afraid to defy him.

U.S. District Judge Paul Byron questioned jurors one by one about their knowledge of the Pulse nightclub shooting and whether they knew anyone connected to the incident or the case. It took a half-hour Thursday morning to question the first potential juror; each person called had previously filled out a lengthy questionna­ire about their background­s, opinions, and knowledge of the case.

Salman, 31, is charged with aiding and abetting her husband, Omar Mateen, in planning the June 16, 2016 attack. She’s also been charged with obstructio­n of justice and faces life in prison if convicted. She has pleaded not guilty.

Thursday morning, a man stood across the street from the courthouse holding a sign that read, “‘FRY’ HER TILL SHE HAS NO ‘PULSE.’ ” There were no other visible demonstrat­ors, but security in the federal courthouse was tight. Some Pulse victims’ families are in attendance.

Orange County Mayor Teresa Jacobs said the trial may bring difficult emotions to the surface those still grieving. Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer said it is “incomprehe­nsible” that the incident took place at an LGBT nightclub in the city.

Today, the nightclub property is surrounded by green fencing and signs explaining that an interim memorial will be built there and is under constructi­on until April 2018. Banners on the fencing have been signed by community members. One person wrote in pen: “Not a day goes by where I don’t think of you. Missed forever, remembered always.”

Mateen, who had pledged allegiance to the Islamic State, was killed by police in the hours after the shooting.

Salman was arrested in California in 2017, where she was staying with family, and has been in jail since.

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