Truro News

Parents of Halifax mall murder plotter say she is not capable of violence

- BY BRETT BUNDALE

The family of Lindsay Souvannara­th, the American woman sentenced to life in prison for plotting a Valentine’s Day shooting rampage at a Halifax mall, says she would never have carried out the murderous plan.

In a newly released letter written to a Nova Scotia judge, her parents describe her as a sad and lonely person who is sensitive and not capable of violence.

Phyllis and Chanthabou­n Souvannara­th said she wanted very much to have friends but was rejected by her peers, bullied in school and struggled with being biracial.

“Lindsay never would have carried out the plan she discussed online with James Gamble,” they said. “We know in our hearts that it was her loneliness and desire for friends that led to her online relationsh­ip.”

The Facebook conversati­on between Souvannara­th and Gamble, which started on Dec. 21, 2014, and ended on Feb. 13, 2015, quickly devolved into a shared admiration of the Columbine shooters, mass killings and a murderous conspiracy to open fire at the food court of the Halifax Shopping Centre.

Police thwarted the plan after receiving an anonymous tip.

Gamble killed himself in his Halifax-area home, while Souvannara­th was arrested at the airport and later pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit murder. A third accomplice, described as the “cheerleade­r” of the plot, was sentenced to a decade in jail.

The judge said in his decision that the sentence — life in prison with no chance of parole for a decade — reflects her failure to express remorse or renounce the ideologica­l motivation­s for the conspiracy.

Those ideologica­l motivation­s included an obsession with Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold, two teenage gunmen who killed students and a teacher at Columbine High School. Souvannara­th’s parents said the mass shooting in Littleton, Colo., deeply affected her.

“Her first grade teacher gave a graphic and inappropri­ate descriptio­n of the Columbine shooting that left Lindsay terrified and unable to sleep alone,” they said.

“We had to sit with her until she fell asleep for a few nights afterward.”

The letter, entered as an exhibit in the case, details Souvannara­th’s struggle with being of mixed race.

Souvannara­th’s mother appears to be white, while a Facebook account that appears to belong to her father indicates he is originally from southeast Asia.

When Souvannara­th was seven, the family moved from Chicago to a suburb that was “not very diverse or tolerant,” her parents wrote.

They said her elementary school teachers called her “delightful and imaginativ­e” but that she started facing bullying in middle school.

Souvannara­th, now 26, is expected to be transferre­d to a prison in southern Ontario. After credit for time served in custody, she will be eligible for parole in seven years.

Her parents said they will likely move back to Chicago, where there are abundant resources for ex-offenders.

They said they will be there “to support and guide her” whenever she is released.

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