Call & Times

Parkland suspect says demon told him to ‘Burn. Kill. Destroy’

- By MARK BERMAN

Just hours after a gunman opened fire inside a Parkland, Florida, high school, killing 17 people and injuring 17 more, police sat down to speak to the suspected attacker.

He confessed to carrying out the massacre, police said. But he went on to say more than that during an extended interview, telling police that for years he had heard a “demon” in his head giving him directions.

When asked what the voice told him to do, the suspected gunman said: “Burn. Kill. Destroy.”

The detail emerged Monday in a transcript of an interview Nikolas Cruz, 19, gave to police in the aftermath of the massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. While authoritie­s had previously said Cruz acknowledg­ed that “he was the gunman who entered the school campus... and began shooting students,” the newly-released transcript shows for the first time much of what he told police the day of the Feb. 14 massacre and sheds light on his state of mind after the bloodshed.

In the 217-page transcript, much of which is redacted, the suspected attacker told Det. John Curcio of the Broward County Sheriff’s Office that shortly before the Parkland massacre, he had planned to go to a park and start shooting people. He described encounteri­ng police before because he was “shooting animals,” recounted trying to kill himself before the attack because of his “loneliness” and said he used Xanax and marijuana.

When asked by Curcio early in the interview if he wanted water, the suspect said: “I don’t deserve it.” He described hearing the male voice every day and said it got worse after his mother died a few months before the massacre. He said the voice told him to buy the AR-15 used in the attack.

“Personally, I think you’re using the demon as an excuse,” Curcio said at one point, according to the transcript. “You could have stopped the demon any time you want. You didn’t want to stop the demon.”

The suspect argued, insisting Curcio was wrong. At one point, when Curcio left the room, the suspect – apparently alone – is recorded saying, “I want to die.” At another point when Curcio left the room, he repeats over and over: “Why didn’t he kill me? Why didn’t he kill me? Why didn’t he kill me?”

At another point, his brother Zachary Cruz is brought in. He told the suspect that “people think you’re a monster” and asked, “Why did you do this?”

The suspect responded: “I’m sorry, dude.” The rest of his response is redacted.

After the Stoneman Douglas massacre, police found the suspected attacker in a neighborho­od more than a mile from the campus. The suburban school had been transforme­d into a crime scene that even veteran law enforcemen­t officials said was particular­ly gruesome. According to authoritie­s, the suspected attacker dropped his gun and vest and walked off campus, blending in with the students who were fleeing.

Attorneys for the suspected gunman have acknowledg­ed his guilt, focusing their efforts instead on arguing that he should be spared a death sentence and offering to have him plead guilty in exchange for life in prison without parole. Prosecutor­s have ignored these offers so far, saying they will seek the death penalty for the former Stoneman Douglas student, who was indicted on 17 counts of murder in the first degree and another 17 counts of attempted murder.

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