Daily Press

Walmart shooting suspect pleads guilty to federal charges

- By Morgan Lee and Paul J. Weber

EL PASO, Texas — A Texas man pleaded guilty Wednesday to federal charges accusing him of killing nearly two dozen people in a racist attack at an El Paso Walmart, changing his plea weeks after the U.S. government said it wouldn’t seek the death penalty for the hate crimes and firearms violations.

Patrick Crusius still faces a potential death sentence if he’s convicted on a state capital murder charge in the 2019 shooting that killed 23 people. He pleaded not guilty in the state case, but his lawyers said last month that he would enter a guilty plea to the federal charges.

Handcuffed and wearing a dark blue jumpsuit, Crusius appeared in the El Paso federal courtroom facing 90 federal charges in total following one of the deadliest mass shootings in U.S. history. “I plead guilty,” he said. Crusius, 24, surrendere­d to police after the massacre, saying, “I’m the shooter,” and that he was targeting Mexicans, according to court records. Prosecutor­s have said he drove more than 10 hours from his hometown near Dallas to the largely Latino border city and published a document online shortly before the shooting that said it was “in response to the Hispanic invasion of Texas.”

His alleged statements echoed both the anti-immigratio­n rhetoric of American politics and racist screeds put out by other mass shooters in the U.S. and abroad.

The Aug. 3, 2019, shooting happened on a busy weekend at a Walmart that is typically popular with shoppers from Mexico and the U.S. In addition to those killed, more than two dozen were injured and hundreds more scarred by being present or having a loved one hurt.

Many of the dead and wounded were citizens of

Mexico.

A database of mass killings in the U.S. since 2006 compiled by Associated Press, USA Today and Northeaste­rn University shows that the number of deadly mass shootings linked to hate crimes has increased in recent years. Among 13 prominent instances, the 2019 Walmart shooting was the deadliest. The database tracks every mass killing — defined as four dead, not including the offender — in the U.S. since 2006.

 ?? ANDRES LEIGHTON/AP ?? A stone honors victims of the 2019 shooting Wednesday at a memorial site in El Paso, Texas.
ANDRES LEIGHTON/AP A stone honors victims of the 2019 shooting Wednesday at a memorial site in El Paso, Texas.

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