Baltimore Sun

Families on hold after Capital trial delay

- By Alex Mann and Jessica Anderson

Beth Rittenour received regular updates from prosecutor­s on the case, and Monday brought good news. The man who shot her oldest daughter and four others during the deadly attack in the Capital Gazette office was finally admitting to the killings.

But Wednesday, she and the other surviving relatives learned their ordeal is still far from over.

“It’s a nightmare,” Rittenour said from her Ohio home. “Another date, another date.”

Her daughter, Rebecca Smith, along with Gerald Fischman, Rob Hiaasen, John McNamara and Wendi Winters were shot and killed by Jarrod Ramos, who blasted his way into the Annapolis office last year. His guilty plea was supposed to be followed two days later by jury selection for a trial on whether he was criminally responsibl­e — Maryland’s version of the insanity defense.

That meant survivors would likely be spared the public airing of the brutal attack and medical examiner testimony and, in just a few weeks, might never again have to see the man who killed

their loved ones and colleagues.

Instead, Ramos’ attorneys on Wednesday were given more time to review mental health records, likely pushing the proceeding­s into next year. At issue is whether the gunman was sane during the murders — which will determine whether he heads to prison for life or winds up in a psychiatri­c hospital, where it’s up to doctors to evaluate if he’s ever fully rehabilita­ted.

“We knew he was guilty,” said Summerleig­h Geimer, Winters’ daughter. “It’s what happens after that that matters the most to us.”

The delayed proceeding­s have left many witnesses and family members in a legal purgatory, where some say it’s difficult to move on with their lives until the process is complete.

“It kind of feels like a seesaw,” Geimer said. “It felt like we were moving towards the end, towards a point where we don’t have to worry about what might happen with trial and now — the longer you sit without resolution, the more you get doubts in your mind about if justice will be served.”

Capital Gazette is owned by Baltimore Sun Media.

‘The trauma builds’

Now, families of the fallen and the survivors have to prepare for the next phase of trial, where it can feel like reliving the event all over, said Pauline Mandel, director of legal services at the Maryland Crime Victims Resource Center.

“When you know that there’s going to be a hearing or a trial, the trauma builds,” Mandel said. “When we get closer and closer to court, it actually feels like you’re reliving the whole thing again.”

It’s important, she said, that victims are ready to face the trauma and try not to react in court, as defense attorneys could argue an emotional outburst prejudices the jury against their client.

“You definitely want to jump across the courtroom,” said Russel Barnes, whose 16-year-old daughter Phylicia Barnes was killed in Baltimore in 2010. “But you just have to keep your composure. It’s an everyday process.”

Barnes is well versed in the emotional roller coaster that is an extended court case — the man suspected in his daughter’s killing had been tried three times, at first convicted, only later to have a judge throw the case out.

He said he managed through the process because he had a good support system. Barnes also found purpose in speaking up for his daughter, as he pushed for the enactment of “Phylicia’s law,” which now requires state officials to publish a list of missing children and annual statistics.

“That was my relief. I put my anger into that,” he said. “You have to stay focused on your loved ones. You are speaking for them.”

Since the Capital Gazette attack, three of the mourners have channeled their pain in their advocacy for stricter gun laws: Geimer; Andrea Chamblee, McNamara’s widow; and Maria Hiaasen, Rob’s widow.

Rachael Pacella, a Capital Gazette reporter who survived the attack, diligently took notes during Monday’s hearing; her notebook, she said, provided “a little shield between me and the defendant. I think it’s important to be there.”

Pacella said she has found comfort in pottery and has found a local studio where she can process what has happened through art.

Right now, though, it feels as though everything remains on hold.

“You don’t feel like you can ever commit to anything,” she said.

Meanwhile, Rittenour said she is struggling to process her daughter’s death.

“I haven’t had a chance to properly grieve my daughter,” she said, recalling a family beach trip in August and how her daughter loved the ocean.

“There are no words to describe how it

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