The Guardian (USA)

Truck driver convicted of killing 11 in Pittsburgh synagogue shooting

- Edward Helmore in New York and agency

A truck driver who expressed hatred of Jews has been convicted of barging into a Pittsburgh synagogue on the Jewish Sabbath and fatally shooting 11 congregant­s in an act of antisemiti­c terror for which he could be sentenced to die.

The guilty verdict on Friday against Robert Bowers was a foregone conclusion. Bowers’s lawyers conceded at the trial’s outset that he attacked and killed worshipper­s at the Tree of Life synagogue on 27 October 2018, in the deadliest attack on Jews in the US in American history.

“I am grateful to God for getting us to this day,” Rabbi Jeffrey Myers, who survived the attack, said in a statement reported by the Pittsburgh Gazette. “And I am thankful for the law enforcemen­t who ran into danger to rescue me, and the US attorney who stood up in court to defend my right to pray.“In the face of the horror [that] our community has experience­d, I can think of no better response than practicing my Jewish faith and leading worship,” Rabbi Myers added.

Jurors must now decide whether the 50-year-old should be sent to death row or sentenced to life in prison without parole as the federal trial shifts to a penalty phase expected to last several weeks. Jurors will be asked to decide first if Bowers is eligible for the death penalty, and then to decide if it is warranted.

That decision may turn on whether Bowers was acting, as the government contends, with a conscious intent to obstruct the exercise of religious worship or, as his defense attorneys argued at trial, Bowers was acting out of an “irrational” belief that HIAS, a Jewish resettleme­nt agency, was leading to a “genocide” of white people.

“In his mind he needed to kill Jews who supported HIAS because they were bringing in immigrants who were committing genocide against children,” the federal public defender Elisa Long said in closing arguments. “None of this makes any sense, none of this is true, but it is what Mr Bowers believed to be real and true.”

Bowers’s “disturbing and ugly” social media postings, Long added, “give us some insight into Mr. Bowers sense of reality no matter how distorted it may be”.

Bowers was tried on 63 criminal counts, including hate crimes resulting in death and obstructio­n of the free exercise of religion resulting in death. His attorneys had offered a guilty plea in return for a life sentence, but prosecutor­s refused, opting instead to take the case to trial and pursue the death penalty. Most of the victims’ families expressed support for the decision.

Bowers turned a sacred house of worship into a “hunting ground”, targeting his victims because of their religion, a prosecutor told jurors on Thursday. Reading the names of each of the 11 victims he killed, the prosecutor Mary Hahn asked the jury to “hold this defendant accountabl­e … and hold him accountabl­e for those who cannot testify”.

Bowers, who was armed with an AR-15 rifle and other weapons, also shot and wounded seven, including five responding police officers.

Prosecutor­s presented evidence of his deep-seated animosity toward Jews and immigrants. Over 11 days of testimony, jurors learned that Bowers had extensivel­y posted, shared or liked antisemiti­c and white supremacis­t content on Gab, a social media platform popular with the far right, and praised Hitler and the Holocaust. Bowers told police that “all these Jews need to die,” Hahn said.

Survivors testified about the terror they felt that day, including a woman who recounted how she was shot in the arm and then realized her 97-year-oldmother had been shot and killed right next to her. Andrea Wedner, the trial’s last witness, told jurors she touched her mother’s lifeless body and cried out, “Mommy”, before Swat officers led her to safety.

Bower’s attorneys had never disputed that their client was the shooter. “He shot every person he saw,” lead defense attorney Judy Clarke said in opening statements.In the closing phase of

the trial, Bowers’s attorney Elisa Long echoed those comments, and acknowledg­ed “the devastatio­n, the loss and the unbearable grief” caused by Bowers for which there was “no excuse, no justificat­ion”.

With Bowers’s guilt establishe­d, survivors and family members of the deceased victims are expected to tell the jury about the devastatin­g impact of his crimes. The penalty phase is scheduled to start next week.

 ?? ?? A menorah is placed outside the Tree of Life Synagogue in preparatio­n for a celebratio­n service on 2 2018 in the Squirrel Hill neighborho­od of Pittsburgh. Photograph: Gene J Puskar/ AP
A menorah is placed outside the Tree of Life Synagogue in preparatio­n for a celebratio­n service on 2 2018 in the Squirrel Hill neighborho­od of Pittsburgh. Photograph: Gene J Puskar/ AP
 ?? Robert Bowers. Photograph: AP ??
Robert Bowers. Photograph: AP

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