The Mercury News

Parkland school shooter's jury selection begins

- By Terry Spencer

FORT LAUDERDALE, FLA. >> The first day of jury selection in the worst U.S. mass shooting to go to trial was slow, methodical and painstakin­g — a process that is expected to drag on for two months.

More than 120 of the first 160 prospectiv­e jurors who filed through Circuit Judge Elizabeth Scherer's courtroom on Monday were dismissed. Most said it would be impossible for them to serve from June through September. That's the amount of time it is expected to take for lawyers to present their cases in a trial that will end with a jury deciding whether Nikolas Cruz gets life in prison or a sentence of death for murdering 17 at Parkland's Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in 2018.

A few were dismissed because of health issues, because they don't speak English fluently or because they had already paid for extensive vacations.

A woman was dismissed when she began crying upon seeing Cruz — not a new occurrence; that also happened to three women at an October hearing. Another prospectiv­e juror had a personal connection to Scherer, having taught her how to roller-skate as a child. One woman was excused after saying she couldn't serve on a jury because she needed to meet up with her “sugar daddy” every day.

Cruz, 23, sat between his attorneys, wearing a gray sweater and an anti-viral face mask, four sheriff's deputies sitting nearby. He spoke only briefly at the start of the hearing, waiving his right to participat­e directly in the screening process. He pleaded guilty in October, meaning the jury will only decide if he gets death or life without parole.

Eight parents and other family members of some victims sat together in the courtroom. They declined to comment as they left.

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