Texarkana Gazette

Trial over newsroom shooting set to start

- BRIAN WITTE

ANNAPOLIS, Md. — Three years after the deadliest attack on a newsroom in U.S. history, residents who were shaken by the assault on their local newspaper that killed five people are hopeful that an end to the gunman’s dragging court case is finally near.

Opening statements in the second phase of a trial are scheduled for Tuesday to determine whether Jarrod Ramos was legally sane at the time of the mass shooting.

Jury selection was completed Friday in the case against Ramos, who called 911 moments after the rampage from inside the newsroom, identified himself as the shooter and said he surrendere­d. He was later arrested lying face down under a desk.

Ramos pleaded guilty to all 23 counts against him in October 2019, but he is contending that he’s not criminally responsibl­e because of mental illness.

Ray Feldmann, who knew some of the victims as well as survivors, remembers driving out of his neighborho­od on June 28, 2018, and seeing a swarm of police and emergency vehicles converged around the newspaper’s office, blocks from his home. He says the attack lives in his memory with a magnitude comparable to his recollecti­ons of historic events.

“It’s just hard,” Feldmann said in a recent interview. “The three-year anniversar­y is coming up in a few days, and there still hasn’t been a trial. I think it does weigh on people.”

The difficulty of the case was evident during jury selection, as potential jurors described how hard it would be to view evidence, while others described connection­s they had with their local newspaper.

Juror 14 sobbed in court, as Judge Michael Wachs asked her follow-up questions after she indicated she would have trouble watching a video recording of the attack that shows victims being shot.

“I cannot handle it,” she said through a mask, choking up in court, before the judge dismissed her from the jury pool.

Juror 27 spoke of how she had met Wendi Winters, a reporter who was one of the five killed. Winters wrote a weekly column focusing on a student at a school in the community. Before being dismissed from the jury, juror 27 described how she used to take children to the newspaper for photograph­s, and had been troubled by thoughts of what it would have been like to have been at the newspaper at the time of the shooting.

John McNamara, Gerald Fischman, Rob Hiaasen and Rebecca Smith also died in the attack.

“This hurts,” said Donna Cole, a longtime journalist in Annapolis who used to write for the newspaper and knew Winters. “This hurts the community. This hurts people that didn’t know any of these people. The entire community was impacted by this mass shooting. We want to see justice served.”

The case is happening as the newspaper is going through a transition with a new owner, New York-based hedge fund Alden Global Capital. Rick Hutzell, the former editor, recently volunteere­d for a buyout and left the paper this month.

The second part of the trial was initially set for November 2019, but Ramos’ lawyers were granted a postponeme­nt. The defense contended that they had not received adequate informatio­n about what experts for prosecutor­s intended to tell the jury. The trial was delayed again in February 2020 after one of Ramos’ three public defenders left the case for medical reasons, pushing it to June 2020. The pandemic delayed it further.

Steuart Pittman, the county executive, said of the court case: “People want to be done with it.”

The judge estimated the case will last 10 days. He said during jury selection that a “vast majority” of the case will consist of testimony from mental health experts called by defense attorneys and prosecutor­s.

If Ramos, 41, is found not criminally responsibl­e, he would be committed to a maximum-security psychiatri­c hospital instead of prison. Prosecutor­s are seeking life without possibilit­y of parole.

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