Imperial Valley Press

Man who fatally shot 3 at Kansas Jewish sites dies in prison

- By MARGARET STAFFORD

An avowed antisemite who testified that he wanted to kill Jews and was sentenced to death after he shot and killed three people at Jewish sites in suburban Kansas City in 2014 has died in prison, the Kansas Department of Correction­s said Tuesday.

Frazier Glenn Miller Jr., 80, died Monday at the El Dorado Correction­al Facility, where he was serving a sentence for capital murder, attempted murder, assault and firearms conviction­s.

An autopsy will be performed to determine a cause of death, but preliminar­y indication­s were that Miller died of natural causes, Carol Pitts, a spokeswoma­n for the correction­s department, said in a news release. She declined to comment further on Miller’s death or medical condition.

The correction­s department initially said it and the Kansas Bureau of Investigat­ion would investigat­e Miller’s death, which is routine after an inmate dies. The KBI later said it would not investigat­e the death because Miller “was receiving regular medical care and his death was expected.”

In March, Miller’s attorneys argued before the Kansas Supreme Court that his death sentence should be overturned, in part because they said he should not have been allowed to represent himself in a complex death penalty case.

Miller drove from his home in Aurora, Missouri, determined to kill Jews. On April 13, 2014, he ambushed William Corporon, 69; and his 14-year-old grandson, Reat Underwood, at the Jewish Community Center in Overland Park, Kansas. He then drove to the nearby Village Shalom care center and killed Terri LaManno. Two of the victims were Methodist and the other was Catholic.

Relatives of Corporon and his grandson said in a statement they were neither happy or sad when notified of the death.

“He stole so much from our family, but he didn’t steal our hearts or our dignity,” they said in a statement, without naming Miller. “He did not steal our memories, the love that sustains us or the ability to offer forgivenes­s and kindness in the face of such tragedy.”

The Corporon family created the Faith Always Wins Foundation after the killings, in an effort to promote forgivenes­s, kindness, faith and healing, rather than hate and retributio­n.

They said the murderer was “rotten to his core” and never asked for the family’s forgivenes­s or expressed regret. But they said he was taught by his father to hate, which drove him to murder.

“This is heartbreak­ing,” the family said. “We are sad. We miss our family, Bill (aka Popeye) and Reat. But we don’t carry the weight of hate in our hearts.”

Miller, also known as Frazier Glenn Cross Jr., testified at trial that he wanted to kill Jewish people before he died. He said he didn’t expect to live long because he had chronic emphysema.

During his trial and at his sentencing, Miller frequently interrupte­d the proceeding­s to give rambling statements about his belief that Jewish people were running the government, media and the Federal Reserve. During his closing arguments at trial, Miller said he had been “floating on a cloud” since the killings. When he was convicted and when he was sentenced to death, Miller raised his arm in the Nazi salute.

Miller was a Vietnam War veteran who founded the Carolina Knights of the Ku Klux Klan in his native North Carolina and later the White Patriot Party. He also ran on a white power platform during campaigns for the U.S. House in 2006 and the U.S. Senate in 2010 in Missouri.

In his death sentence appeal in March, Miller’s attorneys argued that he was incapable of understand­ing the legal intricacie­s of a complicate­d death penalty case and should not have been allowed to represent himself, even though he insisted on being his own attorney.

Attorney Reid Nelson said Miller’s standby attorneys should have been allowed to intervene during the penalty phase.

 ?? Joe Ledford/The Kansas City Star via AP, Pool, File ?? In this 2015 file photo, Frazier Glenn Miller Jr., convicted of capital murder, attempted murder and other charges, gestures as Johnson County deputies remove Miller from the courtroom during the sentencing phase of his trial at the Johnson County District Court in Olathe, Kan.
Joe Ledford/The Kansas City Star via AP, Pool, File In this 2015 file photo, Frazier Glenn Miller Jr., convicted of capital murder, attempted murder and other charges, gestures as Johnson County deputies remove Miller from the courtroom during the sentencing phase of his trial at the Johnson County District Court in Olathe, Kan.

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