Sun.Star Cebu

Roof convicted of all counts of murder

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CHARLESTON, S.C.—Dylann Roof was convicted Thursday in the chilling slaughter of nine black church members who had welcomed him to their Bible study, a devastatin­g crime in a country that was already deeply embroiled in racial tension.

The same federal jury that found Roof guilty of all 33 counts will reconvene next month to hear more testimony and weigh whether to sentence him to death.

As the verdict was read, Roof just stared ahead, much as he did in the entire trial.

Family members of victims held hands and squeezed one another’s arms.

One woman nodded her head every time the clerk said “guilty.”

Roof, 22, told FBI agents he wanted to bring back segregatio­n or perhaps start a race war with the slayings.

In Roof’s confession to the FBI, the gunman said he carried out the killings after researchin­g “black on white crime” on the Internet.

He said he chose a church because that setting posed little danger to him.

Roof told the judge again on Thursday that he wanted to act as his own attorney during the penalty phase.

He will also face a death penalty trial in state court on nine murder charges.

In closing arguments, Assistant US Attorney Nathan Williams mocked Roof for calling himself brave in his hate-filled journal and during his confession, saying the real bravery came from the victims who tried to stop him as he fired 77 bullets at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Vhurch.

“Those people couldn’t see the hatred in his heart any more than they could see the .45-cal. handgun and the eight magazines concealed around his waist,” Williams said.

Defense lawyer David Bruck conceded Roof committed the slayings, but he asked jurors to look into his head and see what caused him to become so full of hatred, calling him a suicidal loner who never grasped the gravity of what he did.

The defense put up no witnesses during the seven-day trial.

They tried to present evidence about his mental state, but the judge ruled that it did not have anything to do with Roof’s guilt or innocence.

Roof was just imitating what he saw on the Internet and believed he had to give his life to “a fight to the death between white people and black people that only he” could see and act on, Bruck said.

 ?? (AP FOTO) ?? DEATH PENALTY TRIAL. Prosecutor­s who wanted to show that Roof was a cruel, angry racist simply used his own words at his death penalty trial on charges he killed nine black people at a Charleston church.
(AP FOTO) DEATH PENALTY TRIAL. Prosecutor­s who wanted to show that Roof was a cruel, angry racist simply used his own words at his death penalty trial on charges he killed nine black people at a Charleston church.

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