The Norwalk Hour

Jail guard describes how Florida school shooter attacked him

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FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — A jail guard testified Wednesday that Florida school shooter Nikolas Cruz attacked him with little warning nine months after Cruz murdered 17 students and staff at Parkland’s Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School four years ago and tried to wrest away his electric stun gun.

As jurors in Cruz’s death penalty trial watched a surveillan­ce video of the Nov. 13, 2018, brawl, Broward County sheriff ’s Sgt. Raymond Beltran gave a play-by-play descriptio­n. He said it began after he told Cruz to walk properly as he supervised Cruz’s recreation period.

Cruz was being jailed in isolation for the Feb. 14, 2018, massacre. The video shows Cruz in an orange jail uniform and a pair of shower slippers, walking laps around some tables as Beltran sat behind a desk a few feet away.

Suddenly, Cruz stopped and looked at Beltran. The guard testified that he told Cruz to walk properly on his slippers, fearing he would fall. Cruz, who weighs about 130 pounds, flashed both middle fingers at Beltran and then charged him, flipping the guard onto the ground. Beltran was able to flip Cruz over and then they wrestled over Beltran’s Taser, which Cruz was able to pull from its holster.

He said he feared Cruz would use it against him and then “he could do whatever he wants to me.”

The Taser discharged, but the electrical­ly charged probes missed both of them.

Beltran regained control of the Taser and used it to punch Cruz, staggering him. Cruz then got on the ground, was handcuffed and put back into his cell. Beltran suffered no serious injuries.

Cruz later pleaded guilty to the assault. Prosecutor­s are using that conviction as an aggravatin­g circumstan­ce as they argue Cruz should be sentenced to death.

Cruz, 23, pleaded guilty to 17 counts of first-degree murder in October, meaning the jury will decide only whether he is sentenced to death or life without parole. The shooting left 14 students, a teacher, the athletic director and an assistant football coach dead.

With the trial now in its second week, the sevenman, five-woman jury and its 10 alternates have seen terrifying video of the attack, and heard from traumatize­d survivors and police officers who rushed into the nightmaris­h scene inside a three-story classroom building. They have examined gruesome autopsy and crime scene photos.

They also saw video depicting Cruz’s nonchalanc­e as he walked to a sandwich shop to buy a drink and then visited a McDonald’s just minutes after he fled the school. On Monday, they saw the AR-15-style semiautoma­tic rifle Cruz fired more than 150 times.

This is the deadliest mass shooting in U.S. history to reach trial.

Nine U.S. gunmen besides Cruz who killed at least 17 people died during or immediatel­y after their shootings, either by suicide or police gunfire. The suspect in a 10th, the 2019 slaying of 23 people at a Walmart in El Paso, Texas, is awaiting trial.

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