Los Angeles Times

Shooter enters 2nd guilty plea

Guilty admission in federal court mirrors earlier resolution of state’s parallel case.

- BY KRISTINA DAVIS Davis writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

John T. Earnest has already pleaded guilty in the parallel state prosecutio­n in attack at Poway synagogue.

SAN DIEGO — The federal prosecutio­n against John T. Earnest, who opened fire on a Poway synagogue and tried to set an Escondido mosque ablaze, ended Friday with a guilty plea, mirroring the parallel state prosecutio­n that will send him to prison for the rest of his life.

Earnest, 22, pleaded guilty to all 113 charges against him.

The resolution comes two months after Earnest entered a similar plea in San Diego Superior Court, where he is expected to appear again in two weeks to be sentenced. Earnest, a Rancho Peñasquito­s resident and former nursing student at Cal State San Marcos, was able to avoid the possibilit­y of capital punishment with both pleas.

As in the state plea, Earnest on Friday admitted in San Diego federal court that he was driven by his hatred of Jewish and Muslim people when he unleashed violence on Chabad of Poway and Dar-ul-Arquam mosque in 2019.

On April 27 — the last day of Passover — Earnest walked into the lobby of the synagogue and opened fire, killing congregant Lori Gilbert-Kaye, 60. Founding Rabbi Yisroel Goldstein, 8year-old Noya Dahan and her uncle, Almog Peretz, 34, were injured.

Fifty-four people were inside the synagogue at the time, and Earnest’s guilty plea includes charges that pertain to each victim: commission of a hate crime, obstructio­n of free exercise of religious beliefs, using a dangerous weapon resulting in death, bodily injury and attempts to kill. He also pleaded guilty to hate crime acts and crimes relating to his use of a gun.

A few congregant­s, including an off-duty Border Patrol agent who armed himself, fought back against Earnest during the attack. Earnest struggled at one point with his assault-style gun after shooting off the first 10-round magazine, fled into the parking lot and sped off in his car. Earnest then parked in a nearby shopping center, called 911 and told a dispatcher what he’d done. He waited for police to arrive and arrest him.

Shortly before the attack, Earnest posted a hate-filled screed online stating he wished he could kill more Jewish people and praising white supremacis­t shooters who’d come before him, according to the plea. Someone saw the post and reported the possibilit­y of an imminent attack to the FBI, but the location was unknown and the tip came too late.

Earnest also pleaded guilty to a charge of inflicting damage to a religious property using fire, for setting a blaze at Dar-ul-Arquam mosque in Escondido a month before the synagogue shooting. A missionary sleeping inside the building noticed the fire outside, and his group was able to put it out. No one was injured but the building’s façade was damaged.

Both federal and state prosecutor­s decided to go forward with charges against Earnest, and both cases were barreling toward trial. The San Diego district attorney’s office had already decided to pursue the death penalty, while the Department of Justice was still considerin­g the option.

Then, at the start of June, Earnest’s lawyers announced during a federal hearing that he’d signed a conditiona­l plea for the Justice Department to accept. The news accelerate­d a plea deal in the state case.

Under California law, a plea in the federal case would have prevented the state’s case from moving forward. On July 20, Earnest pleaded guilty to murder, attempted murder, arson and other charges in Superior Court. The plea agreement includes a massive penalty: life without possibilit­y of parole, plus a term of 121 years to life, and a third sentence of 16 years.

He is set to be sentenced on Sept. 30 in that case.

In the federal case, sentencing has been set for Dec. 28, although it is not unusual for such hearings to be delayed to allow time for attorneys and probation authoritie­s to better prepare. Defense attorneys and prosecutor­s are recommendi­ng a term of life in prison, plus 30 years, according to the plea.

While the criminal cases wrap up, at least three lawsuits are expected to take much longer to work their way through the courts.

Survivors of the shooting claim the synagogue did not have sufficient security measures in place, despite having obtained money from the federal government to improve safety.

Smith & Wesson, manufactur­er of the rifle Earnest used, is also being sued by some survivors for negligence and other claims, as is San Diego Guns, where Earnest purchased the weapon with a hunting license that was not valid.

 ?? NELVIN C. CEPEDA San Diego Union-Tribune ?? JOHN T. EARNEST, shown in May in San Diego Superior Court, pleaded guilty to all 113 federal charges against him. The 22-year-old Rancho Peñasquito­s resident will avoid the possibilit­y of capital punishment.
NELVIN C. CEPEDA San Diego Union-Tribune JOHN T. EARNEST, shown in May in San Diego Superior Court, pleaded guilty to all 113 federal charges against him. The 22-year-old Rancho Peñasquito­s resident will avoid the possibilit­y of capital punishment.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States