The Punxsutawney Spirit

Mental health issue arises as synagogue massacre trial nears

- By Mark Scolforo

Aformer truck driver about to face trial for a shooting massacre at a Pittsburgh synagogue more than four years ago has schizophre­nia and structural and functional brain impairment­s, his lawyers argued in a public court filing this week.

Lawyers for Robert Bowers told a federal judge they were concerned a prosecutio­n proposal to have their own psychiatri­c experts examine or evaluate him would be a “broad-ranging, invasive, and constituti­onally problemati­c investigat­ion” into his “life, mind, and body.”

The defense said prosecutor­s should be limited to looking for evidence that would dispute defense assertions and argued they should not be allowed to investigat­e every possible aspect of his mental health. A message seeking further comment was left with defense attorneys, and the U.S. attorney’s office in Pittsburgh declined to comment.

Jury selection is scheduled to begin next month in Bowers’ trial for shooting to death 11 people and wounding seven others at the Tree of Life synagogue in the nation’s most deadly attack on Jewish people. Bowers has offered to plead guilty in return for a life sentence, but prosecutor­s are seeking the death penalty.

On Monday, they told the U.S. District Judge Robert Colville in a footnote that federal prosecutor­s had told them a request to withdraw the death penalty had been denied. “It is unclear whether this decision was made by members of the Department of Justice’s Capital Review Committee or the Attorney General,” Bowers’ lawyers wrote.

They said the judge should narrow the scope of any prosecutio­n testing, arguing Bowers’ own lawyers subjected him to “numerous objective test measures,” and there’s no medical or legal justificat­ion to repeat them. They also want any prosecutio­n testing to be delayed “unless and until” Bowers is convicted of a crime that could carry the death penalty.

The defense wrote prosecutor­s in February to say they plan to introduce evidence that Bowers has schizophre­nia, epilepsy and brain impairment­s, findings they say are supported by neuropsych­ological testing and brain imaging. In the new filing, his lawyers told Colville that prosecutor­s want to have him examined over several days by a psychiatri­st, a neuropsych­iatrist and a neurologis­t.

Bowers, a Baldwin resident, has pleaded not guilty. After the attack, he traded gunfire with officers and was shot three times before being taken into police custody.

Investigat­ors say he posted on social media about a false conspiracy theory that the Holocaust was a hoax and expressed contempt for a nonprofit Jewish group that aids refugees.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States