Marin Independent Journal

Parkland shooter's lawyers face difficult task

- By Terry Spencer

FORT LAUDERDALE, FLA. >> Attorneys for Parkland, Florida, school shooter Nikolas Cruz will have one goal when jury selection starts Monday: to identify candidates who might give Cruz the single vote he needs to get a life sentence instead of death for the 2018 murders of 17 students and staff members. The process will involve a lot of educated guesses.

Court officials said perhaps 1,500 or more potential jurors could file through Circuit Judge Elizabeth Scherer's courtroom over several weeks as she, prosecutor­s and Cruz's public defenders select 12 panelists, plus eight alternates, for his penalty trial. Those chosen must say they can put aside their animosity toward Cruz for the 2018 massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School and judge the case fairly. The potential jurors must also be available through September.

Cruz's attorneys “should not even try to get a jury or juror who doesn't know about the case because that is ignorance; you would have to be living under a rock,” said Orlando defense attorney Mark O'Mara. O'Mara came to national prominence after his successful 2013 defense of George Zimmerman, who was acquitted of murdering Black teenager Trayvon Martin. He is not involved in the Cruz case.

Jury candidates who declare that they can be objective will complete a questionna­ire that dives into their background­s and asks whether they can handle viewing graphic evidence. They will then return in a few weeks for courtroom interviews, where they must declare that they are able to vote for the death penalty but also don't believe it should be mandatory for murder.

Cruz, 23, pleaded guilty in October to 17 first-degree murders, 17 attempted murders and a jail assault, leaving the jury to decide only whether the former Stoneman Douglas student gets death or life without parole.

Instead of deciding whether someone is guilty based upon objective evidence, jurors sitting at this death penalty trial must answer

a subjective question: Have prosecutor­s shown that aggravatin­g factors — the number of deaths, the weeks of planning and the cruelty and horror of Cruz's actions — outweigh mitigating factors such as his lifelong mental illness and the death of his parents? For Cruz to get death, the jurors

must all answer, “yes.”

To get at least one “no” vote, Cruz's attorneys must show that his path to the murders wasn't “pure 100% personal-created intent,” said O'Mara, who has defended about a dozen capital cases that ended with no death sentences imposed. “It is going to be difficult.

... Death is the default sentence in this case.”

The fact that no one who opposes capital punishment on principle can be selected for the jury eliminates some female, minority, religious and liberal candidates who could potentiall­y be sympatheti­c toward Cruz, Miami jury consultant and lawyer

Geri Fischman said.

White people strongly support the death penalty, a Gallup poll last year showed, while most Black and Hispanic people oppose it. The survey also showed that more women oppose capital punishment than men, and that only a quarter of liberals support the death penalty compared with 70% of conservati­ves. Broward County is 2-to-1 Democratic.

Catholic Church leaders, some Protestant denominati­ons and Judaism's major rabbinical organizati­ons also oppose the death penalty on theologica­l grounds, although many individual members support it in practice.

“Death-qualified juries are skewed in favor of the prosecutio­n,” Fischman said.

This won't be the first time Scherer, prosecutor­s and Cruz's attorneys begin picking a jury for him. In October, Cruz faced trial for assaulting a jail guard nine months after the shooting. Prosecutor­s wanted a conviction to use as an aggravatin­g factor in their argument for the death penalty.

 ?? AMY BETH BENNETT — SOUTH FLORIDA SUN-SENTINEL ?? Nikolas Cruz enters the courtroom for a hearing at the Broward County Courthouse in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Cruz has pleaded guilty to all 17counts of premeditat­ed murder and 17counts of attempted murder in the 2018shooti­ngs at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.
AMY BETH BENNETT — SOUTH FLORIDA SUN-SENTINEL Nikolas Cruz enters the courtroom for a hearing at the Broward County Courthouse in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Cruz has pleaded guilty to all 17counts of premeditat­ed murder and 17counts of attempted murder in the 2018shooti­ngs at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.

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