Jurors see shooter’s online posts about wanting to kill kids
Parkland mass killer Nikolas Cruz promised online he would become a “professional school shooter” and scoured the internet for information about some of the nation’s deadliest mass killings, jurors heard on Wednesday.
Cruz’s online history is a key point for prosecutors seeking to prove Cruz acted in a premeditated and calculated fashion in storming Marjory Stoneman Douglas High in February 2018, using an AR-15 rifle to fatally shoot 14 students and three staff members. The alarming comments on YouTube pages promising bloodshed and the dozens of online searches came in the months leading up to the massacre.
The YouTube comments, posted in 2017 and early 2018, displayed Cruz’s seething rage and self-pity, professing “my life sucks,” “I hate everyone” and wanting to kill “a ton of people and murder children.”
“Im going to be a professional school shooter,” he wrote on Sept. 24,
2017, five months before the Parkland massacre.
Broward Sheriff’s Office
Detective Nicholas Masters also told jurors about Cruz’s searches on Google and YouTube, looking for pages about ammunition, AR-15s and mass shootings in Aurora, Colorado; Columbine, Colorado; Las Vegas; and at Virginia Tech University, among others.
He also searched out information on Elliot Rodger, the 22-year-old spree killer who murdered six people in Isla Vista, California, in 2014. Rodger made a disturbing hatefilled video posted shortly before killing himself and has become idolized among online extreme misogynists.
On the day of the Parkland massacre, Cruz also searched the name of his former school.
Among other searches on YouTube: “How to shoot at 500 yards,” “killing people,” “how to become evil in society,” “top ten murders caught on tape,” “how massacure works” and “shooting at girls.”
The jurors saw the evidence on the eighth day of testimony in the sentencing trial for Cruz, 23, who has already pleaded guilty to 17 counts each of firstdegree murder and 17 counts of attempted murder. The jury will decide if Cruz is sent to Florida
Death Row to be executed or gets a sentence of life in prison.
Also on Wednesday, jurors saw a video-surveillance clip of Cruz’s attack on a Broward County Sheriff’s detention deputy nine months after his arrest for the mass shooting. Cruz pleaded guilty to the battery, and that conviction can be considered by the jury as an “aggravating factor” in meting out the death penalty.
Sgt. Raymond Beltran told jurors that on Nov. 13, 2018, he was supervising Cruz’s exercise time in a common area outside his cell — Cruz was walking in circles around a couple of tables. Because Cruz’s
jail-issued flip-flops had broken, Beltran ordered him back to his cell so he could have a new pair brought to him.
“He stopped talking, flipped me off twice and then he attacks me,” Beltran told jurors.
The video shows Cruz and Beltran grappling on the ground, struggling over the deputy’s Taser stun gun. “He actually has my Taser in his hand,” Beltran told jurors.
The weapon discharged, hitting the floor. Beltran was able to get up, and Cruz laid down on the ground and was cuffed.
Jurors also heard from former Broward Chief Medical Examiner Craig Mallak, who performed
the autopsy on Cara Loughran, 14. He testified that Cara was shot three times, including one bullet that entered the side of her chest and caused “severe damage to the heart.”
The trial is not in session Thursday or Friday. Assistant State Attorney
Mike Satz told the court prosecutors will conclude their case in chief next week.