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Showing posts with label Mass shooting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mass shooting. Show all posts

Monday, October 25, 2021

PARKLAND GUNMAN NIKOLAS CRUZ SHOULD BE EXECUTED

  

Florida school shooting: Victims identified by authorities, remembered by loved ones

[PHOTO SOURCE: https://www.cbsnews.com/news/florida-school-shooting-victims-identified-by-authorities/]




“I care more about how the families feel than I care about this guy being trapped or not being trapped. And if the families are telling me that the way they’re going to get closure is by him being put to the death penalty, then so be it. Because the priority, for me, is the families that had those lives stolen from them.”

– Ana Navarro said, referring to the alternative of him spending life in prison.

             Even though Ana Navarro has taken many liberal views, she concedes that the Parkland Gunman, Nikolas Cruz, deserves to be executed for his crime. We, the members of Unit 1012: The VFFDP, who have lost family members to murder agree that Parkland Gunman, Nikolas Cruz should be executed as there is no doubt about his guilt at all, he had murdered 17 people.


The past counts. The Earth does not belong only to the living. Bloodshed cries out to be avenged. Emotively, and not merely rationally, the blood of the dead victim compels us to act. Today, too, the victim’s lingering cry moves us retributivist advocates of the death penalty.

[The Death Penalty Delineated By the Old Testament by Robert Blecker, USA Today on November 2004]

[PHOTO SOURCE: https://quozio.com/quote/kkggzffcgfdb/1243/the-past-counts-the-earth-does-not-belong-only-to-the

….. https://victimsfamiliesforthedeathpenalty.blogspot.com/2015/07/robert-blecker-on-remembering-murdered.html]

Article: https://victimsfamiliesforthedeathpenalty.blogspot.com/2020/09/professor-robert-blecker-life-without.html

             Let us hear from the victims’ family members as they want him to get the ultimate punishment:

  

“There is one other consideration which I believe should never be overlooked. If the criminal law of this country is to be respected, it must be in accordance with public opinion, and public opinion must support it. That goes very nearly to the root of this question of capital punishment. I cannot believe or the public opinion (or would I rather call it the public conscience) of this country will tolerate that persons who deliberately condemn others to painful and, it may be, lingering deaths should be allow to live…”


Families of Parkland school shooting victims react to Nikolas Cruz's upcoming guilty plea

By: Peter Burke

Posted at 2:48 PM, Oct 20, 2021 and last updated 2021-10-20 17:45:54-04

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — Some parents and family members of the Parkland school shooting victims said Wednesday they were unmoved by Nikolas Cruz's apology in court and remain in favor of him being sentenced to death.

Cruz pleaded guilty Wednesday to all 17 counts of premeditated murder and 17 counts of attempted murder for the Valentine's Day 2018 massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.

By pleading guilty, Cruz now must wait for a jury to decide whether he will be executed or spend the rest of his life in prison without the possibility of parole.

Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooter Nikolas Cruz is fingerprinted after his guilty plea Wednesday, Oct. 20, 2021, at the Broward County Courthouse in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.

Relatives of the victims who sat in the courtroom and watched the hearing via Zoom broke down in tears and held hands across families.

As Cruz apologized to the families of his victims, several parents shook their heads in disgust.

Cruz explained that he thought it should be up to the families to determine whether he lives or dies.

But it seems several have already made up their minds, and his statement did little, if nothing, to change their positions.

"Today we saw a cold and calculating killer confess to the murder of my daughter, Gina, and 16 other innocent victims at their school," Tony Montalto said.

Tony Montalto wears a button bearing an image of his daughter, Gina Montalto, 14, who was killed in the 2018 Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting, during a court recess Wednesday, Oct. 20, 2021, at the Broward County Courthouse in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.

His daughter was 14 and sitting outside her classroom when Cruz shot her at close range numerous times.

"His guilty pleas are the first step in the judicial process, but there is no change for my family," Montalto said. "Our bright, beautiful and beloved daughter Gina is gone, while her killer still enjoys the blessing of life in prison."

Parents scoffed at Cruz's statement as they left the courtroom, saying it seemed self-serving and aimed at eliciting unearned sympathy.

Gena Hoyer, whose 15-year-old son, Luke, died in the shooting, saw it as part of a defense strategy "to keep a violent, evil person off death row."

Gena Hoyer shows the pendant given to her by co-workers bearing an image of her son, Luke Hoyer, 15, who was killed in the 2018 Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School massacre, as well as the cross Luke used to wear around his neck, during a court recess Wednesday, Oct. 20, 2021, at the Broward County Courthouse in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.

She said her son was "a sweet young man who had a life ahead of him and the person you saw in there today chose to take his life. He does not deserve life in prison."

Debbi Hixon, whose husband, Christopher Hixon, was among the 14 students and three faculty members killed in the massacre said the families weren't expecting to hear "part of what was said today, and I think it reiterates the fact of why we need to seek the death penalty."

Gena Hoyer, right, hugs Debbi Hixon during a court recess Wednesday, Oct. 20, 2021, at the Broward County Courthouse in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., after Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooter Nikolas Cruz's guilty plea on all 17 counts of premeditated murder and 17 counts of attempted murder in the 2018 mass shooting. Hoyer's son, Luke Hoyer, 15, and Hixon's husband, Christopher Hixon, 49, were both killed in the massacre.

Manuel Oliver, whose son, Joaquin, was killed in the shooting, spoke to reporters via Zoom after the hearing.

"At the end of the day, someone declared himself guilty for something that I always knew -- we all know -- that he was already guilty," Oliver said.

Oliver said his pain and anger are "bigger" than ever after hearing Broward County State Attorney Mike Satz recount in court how each of the victims died, including learning that Cruz shot his son, reloaded and then shot him again.

"It tells me that he was not dead," Oliver said. "So there's a lot of suffering. There's a lot of pain, I guess, and I've always wondered if Joaquin was thinking about us, his family."

Despite Cruz's apology, Montalto, who wore a picture of his daughter close to his heart, felt no sympathy for her murderer.

"There's no moving on," he said. "There's moving around the pain that we feel every day. The loss of my daughter affects my wife, myself, and our son and our entire family."

Lori Alhadeff wears her daughter's name on her wrist and her arm, in the form of a wristband and tattoo.

"So I think about Alyssa every day," she said.

  

You killed a person and you are put in prison for life? The one you killed is not in jail but he is dead." - Yoweri Museveni

Parents, family members of Parkland victims want Nikolas Cruz to die

Alhadeff, who watched the hearing from home, said she imagines that her daughter would be playing soccer -- the sport that she loved -- in college right now.

"She was a beautiful, vivacious, amazing girl," Alhadeff said.

Instead, the 14-year-old was killed by Cruz. So Alhadeff turned her grief into action, running for and winning election to the Broward County School Board.

"Seventeen people died," Alhadeff said. "Seventeen people were shot, and so it's ultimately that his life needs to be taken."

Anthony Borges, a former Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School student who was shot five times and severely wounded, told reporters after the hearing that he accepted Cruz's apology, but noted that it was not up to him to decide the confessed murderer's fate.

Royer Borges and his son, Anthony Borges, are shown in court Wednesday, Oct. 20, 2021, at the Broward County Courthouse in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., during Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooter Nikolas Cruz's guilty plea on all 17 counts of premeditated murder and 17 counts of attempted murder. Anthony Borges was critically injured in the 2018 massacre.

"He (made) a decision to shoot the school," Borges said. "That's for everybody. He (made) his decision to do it. Now he's facing it. That's not my right. Like, I'm not God to (make) the decision to kill him or not. That's not my decision. My decision is to be a better person and to change the world (for) every kid. Like, I don't want (this) to happen to (anybody) again. Like, it hurts. It hurts. It really hurts."

But Hoyer was more decisive, saying her son's killer doesn't deserve life in prison.

"Life in prison is a life, and he deserves nothing more than the death penalty," she said.

INTERNET SOURCE: https://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=2088194411331919&id=1299628893521812

https://www.wpbf.com/article/family-members-of-parkland-school-shooting-victims-react-nikolas-cruz-upcoming-guilty-plea/37977160

  

If an offender has committed murder, he must die. In this case, no possible substitute can satisfy justice. For there is no parallel between death and even the most miserable life, so that there is no equality of crime and retribution unless the perpetrator is judicially put to death. – Immanuel Kant

[PHOTO SOURCE: http://victimsfamiliesforthedeathpenalty.blogspot.com/2015/02/immanuel-kants-pro-death-penalty-quote.html]

http://victimsfamiliesforthedeathpenalty.blogspot.com/2017/02/immanuel-kant-on-punishing-criminals.html


Parkland Families Say They Want The Death Penalty

By Bobeth Yates

October 19, 2021 at 11:50 pm

MIAMI (CBSMiami) – After three years, the person, police say is responsible for mass shooting Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School will be in court to face the charges but for many of the victims and their families, the day couldn’t have come sooner.

“I believe there’s a place in hell for him and it’s waiting,” said School Board Member Debbie Hixon.

She is unapologetic when it comes to her option of Nikolas Cruz. Cruz has been charged with the deaths of 14 students and three staff members in the Parkland shooting. Hixon’s husband Chris was among them.

“This an individual who’s not able to be rehabilitated, I don’t think he’s remorseful at all and I don’t think he should suck up one more resource of our community, he’s taken enough from us, added Hixon.

ON Wednesday, Cruz is expected to plead guilty to the 17 murders and to the shootings of the 17 who were wounded and survived.

Hixon isn’t the only one who wants him to be punished to the fullest extent of the law.

“My wife and I had two children and we don’t any more we have one. That killer took this from us and I want that killer to pay for it with his life,” said Fred Guttenberg.

His daughter Jaime was among those who lost their lives in the Parkland mass shooting.

“My daughter wanted to get married by the age of 25 and I dreamt every day of walking my daughter down the aisle and because of what this murder did I now live every day knowing I won’t get to do that. My daughter was amazing and the world lost someone who was going to make a huge difference in it as she grow up,” added Guttenberg.

As the victims’ families prepare for court, some like Hixon say they’re starting to feel a sense of closure.

“I’m definitely struggling but appreciative of the fact that we are expediting something that should have happened in 2018,” added Hixon.

INTERNET SOURCE: https://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=2090492067768820&id=1299628893521812

https://miami.cbslocal.com/2021/10/19/parkland-families-say-they-want-death-penalty/

https://www.facebook.com/groups/3350621811720081/permalink/4398489863599932

 


Wife of victim speaks out ahead of Parkland shooter’s penalty phase

On Wednesday, we will learn whether the state will accept Nikolas Cruz’s guilty plea for a school shooting in Parkland. Cruz’s lawyers said last week that he would be pleading guilty to 17 counts of premeditated murder in the first degree and 17 counts of first degree attempted murder.

His lawyers’ goals are to get the death penalty off the table for Cruz.

One of the victims of the 2018 mass shooting was Chris Hixon. Hixon died trying to stop Cruz from killing more people. WINK News spoke to Hixon’s wife about what the next phase of this case means to her.

17 people died on February 14, 2018, during a mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. 17 more people were injured and survived.

Debbi Hixon’s husband was one of the people who died. She won’t say the shooter’s name and doesn’t want to see his face but she wants him to face death as well.

Debbi is Chris Hixon’s wife and is a member of the Broward County School Board. “This is an evil human being that just needs to go to hell,” Hixon said.

Her husband died while he was trying to disarm the shooter. Now, more than three and a half years later, the gunman has yet to stand trial.

  

If the death penalty was not imposed then "wrong really has finally totally triumphed over right and all civilised society, all we hold dear, is the loser." - John Stevens, Baron Stevens of Kirkwhelpington

[PHOTO SOURCE: https://quozio.com/quote/hwwv7bcchftj/1092/if-the-death-penalty-was-not-imposed-then-wrong-really-has]


Debbi says it’s still hard for her to move forward. “There’s steps in grief and anger is the first one. And I don’t think many of us have been able to move too far past that. Because there’s been no justice,” she said.

Since his arrest, Cruz, the confessed killer, has wanted to plead guilty in exchange for life in prison. The prosecution has said no every single time. So now, he plans to plead guilty once again.

This will set up a penalty phase where a jury will hear testimony and make a recommendation of life in prison or offering the death penalty.

Kyle Jeter was teaching at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School when those shots rang out. “I kind of look at things like what do the families want and I read that families are in favor of the death penalty so that works for me,” Jeter said.

“Our community has lost enough from this person. And I just don’t think that we should be continuing to provide any other resources for this evil human being,” said Hixon.

Hixon says she will be present in the courtroom when the judge decides the fate of her husband’s killer.

On Friday, Cruz entered a guilty plea related to an assault on a prison guard in 2018.

INTERNET SOURCE: https://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=2090491217768905&id=1299628893521812

https://www.winknews.com/2021/10/19/wife-of-victim-speaks-out-ahead-of-parkland-shooters-penalty-phase/

   

"In criminal law legislation, our priority is the security and well being of law-abiding citizens rather than the rights of the criminal to be protected from incriminating evidence." – Lee Kuan Yew

[PHOTO SOURCE: https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10208686221008588&set=a.1206445396945.2031621.1102965071&type=3&theater]

http://victimsfamiliesforthedeathpenalty.blogspot.com.au/2016/03/remembering-lee-kuan-yew-16-september.html


  

Twelve victims died inside the building, three died just outside the building on school premises, and two died in the hospital.

The fourteen students and three staff members killed were:

  • Alyssa Alhadeff, 14
  • Scott Beigel, 35
  • Martin Duque, 14
  • Nicholas Dworet, 17
  • Aaron Feis, 37
  • Jaime Guttenberg, 14
  • Chris Hixon, 49
  • Luke Hoyer, 15
  • Cara Loughran, 14
  • Gina Montalto, 14
  • Joaquin Oliver, 17
  • Alaina Petty, 14
  • Meadow Pollack, 18
  • Helena Ramsay, 17
  • Alex Schachter, 14
  • Carmen Schentrup, 16
  • Peter Wang, 14

[PHOTO SOURCE: https://miami.cbslocal.com/2021/10/19/parkland-families-say-they-want-death-penalty/]


RELATED LINKS:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stoneman_Douglas_High_School_shooting

Parents of Parkland Victim Say They Want Nikolas Cruz Executed As He Plans Guilty Plea

https://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=2088199614664732&id=1299628893521812

https://www.newsweek.com/parents-parkland-victim-say-they-want-nikolas-cruz-executed-he-plans-guilty-plea-1639486

NIKOLAS CRUZ VICTIMS' FAMILIES NOT BUYING APOLOGY ... Give Him Death Penalty!!!

https://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=2092053560946004&id=1299628893521812

https://www.tmz.com/2021/10/21/stoneman-douglas-shooter-nikolas-cruz-victims-families-not-buying-apology-want-death-penalty-no-second-chance-parkland-mass-shooting/

Many parents, family of Nikolas Cruz's victims favor death penalty

https://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=2092080987609928&id=1299628893521812

https://www.wptv.com/news/parkland-shooting/family-reaction-to-nikolas-cruz-guilty-plea

Archbishop: 'Why insist on the death penalty' for Nikolas Cruz?

https://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=4955459831151795&id=1062143030483514

https://www.wflx.com/2021/10/21/archbishop-why-insist-death-penalty-nikolas-cruz/

https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/view-ana-navarro-supports-death-163333163.html

The Parkland shooter may face the death penalty, here's how that process could play out

https://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=204749975074333&id=101692122046786

https://www.wlrn.org/news/2021-10-19/the-parkland-shooter-may-face-the-death-penalty-heres-how-that-process-could-play-out

'US would do better if everyone stopped smoking marijuana': 'Cold and calculated' Parkland school shooter Nikolas Cruz blames POT for 2018 massacre as he pleads guilty, apologizes to victims' families and now faces possible death sentence

https://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=205141961701801&id=101692122046786

https://www.facebook.com/DailyMailAust/posts/3413135098921536

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10111259/Accused-Florida-school-shooter-set-plead-guilty-2018-Parkland-massacre.html

POLL RESULTS: Does Parkland FL gunman Nikolas Cruz deserve the death penalty?

PHOTO: https://www.facebook.com/Surviving-Victims-of-Murderer-Promoters-1299628893521812/photos/2093624514122242

https://vk.com/wall-184585082_330

https://www.kget.com/news/local-news/poll-results-does-parkland-fl-gunman-nikolas-cruz-deserve-the-death-penalty/

OTHER LINKS:

Charleston church shooter Dylann Roof's death penalty is upheld by federal judges after lawyers tried to argue he is mentally ill and believed 'other white nationalists would free him from prison after a race war'

https://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=170012288548102&id=101692122046786

https://www.facebook.com/DailyMail/posts/7390540291005655

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9926689/Black-church-shooters-conviction-death-sentence-upheld.html

Unit 1012 USA Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/3350621811720081/posts/4230356170413303/

PHOTO: https://www.facebook.com/Samurai-Police-1109-101692122046786/photos/a.101709305378401/107131394836192

“It’s bittersweet, right,” Graham said. “I sat through the trial for well over four months ... was there when the verdict came down from the jury of death. I thought it was appropriate then, and I think it's appropriate now. We live in a society of laws and the rule of law has to come into play. It says really loud and clear that racism, bigotry and discrimination that leads to death should be met with death.” - Charlotte City Council member responds to death penalty sentence being upheld for Dylann Roof

https://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=2047303922087635&id=1299628893521812

https://www.wcnc.com/article/news/local/charleston-shooting-dylann-roof-murder-death-conviction/275-8f911993-d92e-401c-ab89-be1143ff356a

http://victimsfamiliesforthedeathpenalty.blogspot.com/2017/06/charleston-victims-brother-dylann-roof.html


Tuesday, August 3, 2021

THE WALMART SHOOTER SHOULD BE EXECUTED

Top row, from left: Javier Amir Rodriguez, Andre Anchondo, Jordan Anchondo, Juan de Dios Velazquez, Arturo Benevidez, Angelina Englisbee. Middle row, from left: Leonardo Campos, Elsa Mendoza De la Mora, David Johnson, Raul Flores, Maria Flores, Gloria Irma Marquez. Bottom row, from left: Maribel Hernandez, Margie Reckard, Maria Eugenia Legarreta Rothe, Sara Esther Regalado, Adolfo Cerros Hernandez, Jorge Calvillo Garcia.

[PHOTO SOURCE: https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/hero-grandfather-teen-army-vet-these-are-victims-el-paso-n1039331]


If the death penalty was not imposed then "wrong really has finally totally triumphed over right and all civilised society, all we hold dear, is the loser." - John Stevens, Baron Stevens of Kirkwhelpington

[PHOTO SOURCE: https://quozio.com/quote/hwwv7bcchftj/1092/if-the-death-penalty-was-not-imposed-then-wrong-really-has]


            On this date, August 3, 2019, Twenty-three people are killed and 23 injured in a shooting in El Paso, Texas. We, the members of Unit 1012: The VFFDP, agree that the Walmart shooter, Patrick Wood Crusius should be executed as there is no doubt about his guilt at all.

Should the Walmart shooter get the death penalty? El Paso is divided

René Kladzyk July 30, 2021

Texas carries out more executions than any other state — by a long shot.

More than 570 people have been executed by the state of Texas since 1976, when the Supreme Court reinstated the death penalty after briefly ruling it unconstitutional. That’s five times more than the number of executions in Virginia, the state with the next highest number.

Capital punishment remains a divisive topic in Texas and beyond. A 2021 Pew Research Center study found that 60% of Americans were in favor of the death penalty, while 80% said there was risk of innocent people being put to death. Twenty-three U.S. states and more than 70% of the countries in the world have abolished capital punishment entirely.

   

A society that is not willing to demand a life of somebody who has taken somebody else’s life is simply immoral. – Immanuel Kant

[PHOTO SOURCE: https://victimsfamiliesforthedeathpenalty.blogspot.com/2016/04/immanuel-kant-on-immoral-society-pro.html]


In El Paso, perspectives on capital punishment have a new personal significance for many after the Aug. 3, 2019, mass shooting at a Walmart. Former El Paso County District Attorney Jaime Esparza sought the death penalty of the accused shooter before he retired in 2020. His successor, Yvonne Rosales, said her office will do the same in what was the deadliest attack against Latinos in recent United States history.

“When it hits you personally it changes you,” retired Brig. Gen. Richard Behrenhausen said.

The former first commander of the Joint Task Force North at Fort Bliss, Behrenhausen is originally from Reading, Pennsylvania, but retired in El Paso. His perspective on the death penalty shifted radically after his brother was murdered in Kansas City, Missouri, in 1993.

His brother’s killer, who plea bargained down to second-degree manslaughter, will probably be released within the next couple years, Behrenhausen said.

“I would be willing to bet that there are a number of families in this town and across the bridge in Juárez who feel very strongly about the death penalty because of the Walmart shooting, and have had their mind changed about the death penalty because of the Walmart shooting,” he said.

Local members of the Texas Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty gathered in downtown El Paso in May 2021 to protest the execution of Quintin Jones. Chapter member Patricia Delgado said she’s seen a change in public opinion toward the death penalty since the Walmart shooting. “I think it brought out (the pro-death penalty) perspective more, definitely,” she said. (Photo courtesy Patricia Delgado)

Before his brother’s murder, Behrenhausen said he was conflicted about the death penalty, because of his Catholic upbringing. But his views solidified when his brother was murdered: “I feel that the death penalty should be a viable option as a penalty for certain crimes in which a culprit has been proven unquestionably, without a doubt guilty,” he said.

State Rep. Joe Moody, D-El Paso, agreed that the events of Aug. 3 had an impact on the way El Pasoans feel about the death penalty, though he holds a different perspective on capital punishment.

“I believe people started thinking about (the death penalty) in different ways,” he said. “I think it becomes very challenging in the circumstance of such an egregious crime, because there’s a lot of emotion around it.”

Moody has sought for years to reform the state’s criminal justice system, including abolishing the death penalty. His recent legislative efforts include improving juror instructions in capital punishment cases, banning the death penalty in Texas for those who are intellectually or developmentally disabled, and banning the state’s controversial “law of parties” where a person can be eligible for the death penalty who was party to a killing but did not actually kill someone. Although some of these efforts have passed in the Texas House, they have stalled in the Senate.

Moody said he often encounters El Pasoans who express support for the death penalty, but only in the most extreme cases, like that of the Walmart shooter. But he said that is not how the death penalty functions in practice.

“It’s not so often utilized for the worst of the worst, but more so (it’s) utilized for the poorest of the poor, who don’t have the opportunity for good counsel,” he said. The lengthy and complicated process of executing someone, which can stretch across decades, could also lead to repeated retraumatization of the El Paso community in the case of the Walmart shooter, Moody said.

“If we’re going to heal as a community, that healing is not served by another killing,” he said.

There are currently seven men on death row for crimes committed in El Paso County. The average length of time they have spent on death row is 18 years and eight months: none have an execution scheduled.

 

The past counts. The Earth does not belong only to the living. Bloodshed cries out to be avenged. Emotively, and not merely rationally, the blood of the dead victim compels us to act. Today, too, the victim’s lingering cry moves us retributivist advocates of the death penalty.

[The Death Penalty Delineated By the Old Testament by Robert Blecker, USA Today on November 2004]

[PHOTO SOURCE: https://quozio.com/quote/kkggzffcgfdb/1243/the-past-counts-the-earth-does-not-belong-only-to-the

….. https://victimsfamiliesforthedeathpenalty.blogspot.com/2015/07/robert-blecker-on-remembering-murdered.html]

Article: https://victimsfamiliesforthedeathpenalty.blogspot.com/2020/09/professor-robert-blecker-life-without.html


Marcia Fulton’s daughter was murdered by one of those men. Like Behrenhausen, she supports the death penalty, though laments how long it has taken for the sentence to be carried out. Her 15-year-old daughter Desiree Wheatley was killed in June 1987 by David Leonard Wood, who would come to be known as the “Desert Killer.” Wood was convicted of murdering six girls and young women in Northeast El Paso in the 1980s, and is suspected in the disappearances of three more young women.

“I’m not saying everyone needs to be having the death penalty, but there are definitely cases where it is very appropriate. And definitely this was one of them,” Fulton said.

Retired police officer Ron Stallworth also said he was concerned about extended delays in carrying out sentences in cases like Fulton’s.

“One of the problems with the death penalty is that you could be found guilty today of a capital crime, be given the death penalty, and you may not face justice legally for years. That’s wrong,” he said.

Ron Stallworth

Stallworth, an El Paso native, said his perspective on the death penalty has changed since he retired. Stallworth is known for having infiltrated the Ku Klux Klan while serving as the first African American police officer in the Colorado Springs Police Department; his experience was the basis for the Spike Lee film “BlacKkKlansman”.

“I have mixed emotions about it,” he said. “When I was an active police officer, I was full force in for the death penalty.” But Stallworth said his support of capital punishment has softened, particularly because of the disproportionate rate with which Black men are executed.

In Texas, although Black people comprise less than 13% of residents, they have made up 44.7% of death row inmates, according to data compiled by the Texas Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty.

Still, Stallworth said he believes the Walmart shooter should be executed “without a doubt.” He said he wasn’t interested in hearing religious arguments in this case, noting how frequently conversations about the ethics of the death penalty are framed around religion.

Moody recalled past conversations with relatives of Jordan and Andre Anchondo, the young couple who died in the Walmart shooting while shielding their infant son, who expressed forgiveness toward the Walmart shooter and said they did not want the death penalty in the case.

“They were coming from a place of deep faith,” Moody said of the Anchondo family. “That level of grace, after having been through something like that, is something that’s almost incomprehensible to most of us.”

 

‘Pope Francis is dead wrong about capital punishment. God has commanded government to use the death penalty to demonstrate the seriousness of murder: “Whoever sheds man’s blood, by man his blood shall be shed, for in the image of God He made man” (Genesis 9:6).’ - Pastor Robert Jeffress versus Pope Francis

[PHOTO SOURCE: https://twitter.com/williamtstew/status/1026272804201811968]

http://victimsfamiliesforthedeathpenalty.blogspot.com/2018/08/pastor-robert-jeffress-pope-is-dead.html

http://www.firstdallas.org/news/pastor-robert-jeffress-pope-is-dead-wrong-about-capital-punishment#__prclt=l4WVTEXr


The Catholic Church’s stance on the death penalty has become increasingly hardline over the past several decades, with Pope Francis calling for the international abolition of the death penalty in 2018.

Bishop Mark Seitz of the Catholic Diocese of El Paso said he has been edified by the response of the El Paso community to the shooting.

“To me it was a thing of grace to see how people responded, refusing to choose anger and vengeance in response to the shooting, but rather (to say) we will not allow this individual’s terrible actions to bring us down to his level,” he said.

Bishop Mark Seitz speaks at a Walmart memorial on Aug. 3, 2020. (Julián Aguilar/El Paso Matters)

Seitz, who conducted the funeral mass for Gilbert Anchondo, also recalled being moved by the family’s response to the shooting.

“I’m not presuming to speak for everyone in our community or all of the victims because I understand that many of them are terribly traumatized and they don’t really know how to find healing in the midst of the pain that they’re going through,” Seitz said. “But I do know that there are those among the victims that have been very clear that they realize that no solution will come from (the death penalty).”

Moody cautioned that El Pasoans should avoid misdirecting energy by focusing on the death penalty as a path toward justice with the Walmart shooting.

“If we’re going to focus on (the shooter), we’re really treating the symptom, not the disease. What caused this shooting was white supremacy, was racism, was hatred, was politically violent language. And I find myself turning towards stamping that out. That is where I think our best efforts can be focused,” he said.

INTERNET SOURCE: https://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=2025973510887343&id=1299628893521812

https://elpasomatters.org/2021/07/30/should-the-walmart-shooter-get-the-death-penalty-el-paso-is-divided/

Those who allow violent criminals the opportunity to kill, maim and rape, share the responsibility for it and the tragedy such crimes produce. More, they allow these monsters to create for all of us a world as dark and evil as their own.

[PHOTO SOURCE: https://quozio.com/quote/3wrd9cs77z9g/1269/those-who-allow-violent-criminals-the-opportunity-to-kill]

http://soldierexecutionerprolifer2008.blogspot.com/2021/05/mafia-boss-giovanni-brusca-paroled-from.html


OTHER LINKS:

On August 3, 2019, a mass shooting occurred at a Walmart store in El Paso, Texas, United States. A gunman shot and killed 23 people and injured 23 others. The Federal Bureau of Investigation is investigating the shooting as an act of domestic terrorism and a hate crime. The shooting has been described as the deadliest attack on Latinos in modern American history.

Patrick Wood Crusius, a 21-year-old from Allen, Texas, was arrested shortly after the shooting and charged with capital murder in connection with the shooting. Police believe a manifesto with white nationalist and anti-immigrant themes, posted on the online message board 8chan shortly before the attack, was written by Crusius; it cites the year's earlier Christchurch mosque shootings in New Zealand and the right-wing conspiracy theory known as the Great Replacement as inspiration for the attack.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2019_El_Paso_shooting