Orlando Sentinel

Daughter of church victim: ‘You are Satan’

Others forgive S.C. killer of 9 as death sentence formally handed down

- By Jeffrey Collins

CHARLESTON, S.C. — One by one, family members of nine slain black parishione­rs confronted Dylann Roof for the last time Wednesday, shouting at him, offering forgivenes­s and even offering to visit him in prison as he awaits execution for the slaughter.

The 22-year-old white supremacis­t, who was formally sentenced to death, refused to meet their gazes and simply stared ahead, his head tilted down slightly as it had been for much of his trial.

“Dylann,” Janet Scott said quietly as she started speaking. “Dylann! DYLANN!” she said, her voice rising. Toward the end of her remarks, she said, “I wish you would look at me, boy.”

Scott, an aunt of 26-yearold Tywanza Sanders, the youngest victim killed in the massacre, demanded that Roof look at her as she talked about her nephew’s “great big heart,” which could not be donated because of the police investigat­ion.

The final statements came a day after jurors sentenced Roof to death.

The gunman had one final opportunit­y to ask for mercy but instead told jurors he still “felt like I had to do it.”

Some family members already testified at Roof’s trial. The formal sentencing hearing gave 35 of them a chance to speak to him, without prosecutor­s or the judge interrupti­ng or asking questions.

U.S. District Judge Richard Gergel said, “This hate, this viciousnes­s, this moral depravity, will not go unanswered.”

Some of the relatives looked at Roof. Others chose to look at jurors, who did not have to be in court Wednesday but told the judge they wanted to attend.

Sheila Capers, the sisterin-law of Cynthia Hurd, said she prayed for Roof’s soul to be saved.

“If at any point before you are sentenced and you’re in prison and you want me to come and pray with you, I will do that,” Capers said.

Felicia Sanders, who survived the attack, said she forgave Roof, echoing comments she made after the shooting.

But, she noted, Roof did nothing to save himself.

He served as his own attorney during the sentencing phase and never explained the massacre or asked for his life to be spared.

Sanders brought the bullet-torn, bloodstain­ed Bible she had with her on the night of June 17, 2015.

She told Roof he still lives in her head, and that when she hears a balloon pop or fireworks, it returns her to that night.

“Most importantl­y, I can’t shut my eyes to pray,” Sanders said.

On the night of the shooting, Roof sat through a 45-minute Bible study session at the black church known as Mother Emanuel with 12 others. He opened fire as they stood and closed their eyes for a final prayer.

In all, he fired 77 shots. Each victim was hit at least five times. Three people survived. Roof told one of them he was sparing her life so she could tell the world he was killing the worshipper­s at Emanuel AME because he hated black people.

The willingnes­s of some of the relatives to forgive the gunman was widely discussed in the days after the killings.

But that did not mean they felt his life should be spared.

And there are others who said forgivenes­s is still a work in progress.

“You are Satan. Instead of a heart, you have a cold, dark space,” Gracyn Doctor, the daughter of DePayne Middleton-Doctor, said, expressing hope that Roof would “go straight to hell.”

When he was arrested, Roof told FBI agents that he wanted the shootings to bring back segregatio­n or perhaps start a race war.

Instead, the slayings had a unifying effect as South Carolina removed the Confederat­e flag from its Statehouse for the first time in more than 50 years. Other states followed suit, taking down Confederat­e banners and monuments.

Roof had posed with the flag in photos.

The jury convicted Roof last month of all 33 federal charges he faced. He insisted he was not mentally ill and did not call any witnesses or present any evidence.

Roof, who also faces murder charges in state court, plans to appeal the federal case. Prosecutor­s say he will remain jailed in Charleston until the state charges are resolved.

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