Albuquerque Journal

Jury selection starts in church killings trial

Prosecutor is seeking the death penalty

- BY JOHN MONK

CHARLESTON, S.C. — The first of some 3,000 potential jurors in the Dylan Roof death penalty trial began reporting Monday to the U.S. District courthouse in downtown Charleston.

Jurors were summoned, some 80 at a time, before U.S. Judge Richard Gergel, whose questions were aimed at weeding out those who obviously cannot or will elect not to serve: people over 70, having no one else to care for young children and the like. Also to be excluded: those whose minds are already made up about Roof’s guilt, or whether to impose the death penalty.

Roof, 22, a self-proclaimed white supremacis­t, is charged with federal hate crimes resulting in death in the June 2015 slayings of nine African-Americans who were attending an evening Bible study at historic “Mother” Emanuel AME church downtown.

Of the first 80 prospectiv­e jurors in court, some 90 percent were white. Nine were black. All were somber. Gergel deferred two teachers.

The initial jury selection is taking place in a relatively small courtroom on the fourth floor of an old federal courthouse on Broad Street.

It has only about 80 seats, nearly all of which were taken up Monday by prospectiv­e jurors.

Gergel allowed a sketch artist, along with one pool print reporter to write accounts of what happened. Other journalist­s watched the proceeding­s on a flat-screen television in a nearby courtroom.

Unlike state court, no cameras or reporters’ tape recorders are allowed in federal court. The in-court proceeding­s in this story were furnished by the pool reporter.

Roof stared down at his defense table during much of the morning.

During Monday’s initial session, he appeared unemotiona­l. In numerous pretrial hearings since last year, he has waived his right to be present in court.

The Roof case is set to be one of the most sensationa­l criminal trials ever held in South Carolina due to the racial dimensions of the case and the brutality of the crime.

Roof also faces charges of murder in Charleston County state court. Prosecutor Scarlett Wilson is also seeking the death penalty in that case. Jury selection is set to begin in January in that case.

Monday’s proceeding in federal court is designed to produce a smaller pool of some 700 prospectiv­e jurors. Those potential jurors will begin a more detailed questionin­g session on Nov. 7. The actual trial will not start until late November, observers estimate.

 ??  ?? ROOF: Also faces murder charges in state court
ROOF: Also faces murder charges in state court

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