The Palm Beach Post

Airport shooter will serve life sentence

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FORT LAUDERDALE — An Alaska man will not face the death penalty on charges of killing five people and wounding six in a shooting rampage at a South Florida airport, authoritie­s announced Tuesday.

Instead, Esteban Santiago agreed to plead guilty, serve a life sentence and give up all appeals rights under a plea deal between his attorneys and federal prosecutor­s that was announced in court. His actual guilty plea and sentencing would occur at a later date.

Santiago, 28, of Anchorage, Alaska, is charged in a 22-count indictment in the January 2017 shooting in a baggage claim area at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood Internatio­nal Airport. Trial had been set to begin June 11.

U.S. District Judge Beth Bloom asked Santiago, dressed in a tan jail outfit and in chains, if he understood the agreement he was making.

“Yes, your honor,” he replied.

According to the indictment, Santiago flew on a one-way ticket from Alaska to Fort Lauderdale with a 9 mm handgun in a box he put in checked luggage. After landing, he retrieved the weapon, loaded it in a bathroom and came out firing randomly until he exhausted his ammunition.

Since his arrest, Santiago has been treated at a Miami jail for schizophre­nia, but his lawyers said he is mentally fit for trial. He complained of mental problems before the shooting but was not barred from possessing a gun.

Bloom said she wanted a mental evaluation done before accepting the plea deal because of the rights Santiago would be giving up. She set a mental competency hearing for May 23.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Rick Del Toro said the agreement was approved by senior Justice Department officials and in consultati­on with families of the slain victims. In the federal system, all prosecutio­ns in which the death penalty is a possibilit­y must be approved by the attorney general.

“The attorney general has given us the authority not to seek the death penalty,” Del Toro said.

After the shooting, the FBI said, Santiago told agents in a confession that he acted under government mind control, then claimed inspiratio­n by Islamic State extremists. No terrorism links have been found.

The FBI said numerous airport security cameras recorded the shooting on video and there are dozens of witnesses who can identify Santiago as the shooter.

“My dad is still healing physically from his injuries,” Sheri Brante said.

Brante’s father, Steve Timmons, was shot in the head, but survived. Her mother, Shirley Timmons, did not survive the shooting.

Brante and others want those they lost remembered and honored. Some are still deciding whether to take an active part in the South Florida court proceeding­s to come.

“I just don’t want any more to do with it,” Ralph Woltering said. “My wife is not coming back, so whatever they do, let them do.”

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