Parkland school shooter Nikolas Cruz pleads guilty to killing 17 in high school massacre

‘U.S. 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

Nikolas Cruz entered guilty pleas to 17 counts of murder and 17 counts of attempted murder at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School this morning Now 23, Cruz was a 19-year-old expelled student with a history of mental health and behavioral issues at the time of the ‘cold, calculated and premeditated’ killings At the hearing Cruz said he was experiencing ‘anxiety’ but understood the nature of the proceedings At his sentencing Cruz addressed the victims and their families. ‘I am very sorry for what I did and I have to live with it everyday,’ he said‘I hate drugs and I believe this country would do better if everyone would stop smoking marijuana… I’m trying my best to maintain my composure,’ he addedCruz previously admitted to using a lot of marijuana and had taken a lot of the prescription tranquilizer XanaxCruz’s change of plea from not guilty would open the penalty phase in which a jury would decide whether he should be sentenced to life in prison or death On February 14, 2018 Cruz ordered an Uber to drop him off at the high school, where he had been expelled for the 2016-17 school yearHe activated the fire alarm and then opened fire for a total of six minutes He told cops that a menacing voice – which he called Demon – instructed him to execute the massacre, which he admitted to planning a week before



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Nikolas Cruz has pleaded guilty to killing 14 students and three staff in a mass shooting at a high school in Parkland, Florida, in 2018 – the deadliest attack ever at a U.S. high school.  

Cruz entered guilty pleas to 17 counts of murder and 17 counts of attempted murder in the Valentine’s Day massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in court Wednesday morning.

Now 23, Cruz was a 19-year-old expelled student with a history of mental health and behavioral issues at the time of the ‘cold, calculated and premeditated’ killings, the Broward State’s Attorney Office said in court documents.

The gun violence on February 14, 2018, left 14 students and three staff dead and 17 others injured.

At the hearing this morning Cruz told the judge he was experiencing ‘anxiety,’ which she then said was ‘normal under the circumstances.’

Nikolas Cruz entered guilty pleas to 17 counts of murder and 17 counts of attempted murder in the Valentine’s Day massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in a Florida court this morning (pictured in court today)

At his sentencing Cruz addressed the victims and their families. ‘May I take off my mask?’ he asked the judge before saying: ‘I am very sorry for what I did and I have to live with it everyday’

‘I know that you don’t believe me,’ Cruz said to the court as he stared down at the podium, adding that he now ‘gets nightmares sometimes and can’t even watch TV anymore’

He told Broward Circuit Judge Elizabeth Scherer that he understood that he would, in the best case scenario, spend life in prison or be sentenced to death, and would not be allowed to appeal his sentence.

At his sentencing Cruz asked whether he could address the victims and their families.

‘May I take off my mask?’ he asked before saying: ‘I am very sorry for what I did and I have to live with it everyday.

If I were to get a second chance I would do everything in my power to help others.’ 

‘I do not care if you don’t believe me,’ he said to the court, adding that he now gets ‘nightmares sometimes…and can’t even watch TV anymore’.

Cruz said as he held back tears: ‘I hate drugs and I believe this country would do better if everyone would stop smoking marijuana… I’m trying my best to maintain my composure and I just want you to know that I’m really sorry.’

Back in 2018 the killer admitted to cops that he used a lot of marijuana and Xanax after being diagnosed as developmentally delayed at age three, according to government documents.

Cruz also revealed that on more than one occasion, he used substances to try to intentionally overdose.

Cruz told Broward Circuit Judge Elizabeth Scherer (pictured) that he understood that he would, in the best case scenario, spend life in prison or be sentenced to death, and would not be allowed to appeal his sentence

After making his statement Cruz was seen being handcuffed (left) as an officer took his fingerprints (right)

Parents of victims of the mass school shooting got emotional in court as Cruz pleaded guilty to all 34 charges

Cruz hung his head at the court hearing on Wednesday morning

He stared down at the podium throughout the entirety of his statement. 

‘I know it’s your decision to decide whether I live or die,’ he said to the judge. 

‘What I meant was that I believe that they should have the right to choose – the victims – whether I take life or death,’ Cruz added, although he clarified to the judge that he understands the law, which says a jury will decide Cruz’s fate. 

After making his statement Cruz was seen being handcuffed as an officer took his fingerprints. 

Because prosecutors have vowed to seek the death penalty, his change of plea from not guilty would open the penalty phase in which a jury would decide whether he should be sentenced to life in prison or death.

In Florida juries determine whether to impose a death sentence. But if prosecutors are not willing to drop the potential death penalty as part of any plea deal that may be struck with Cruz, then a jury would decide.

During last week’s hearing, Cruz pleaded guilty to assault and battery of a law enforcement officer in a separate case in which he was accused of kicking, hitting and punching a sheriff’s deputy as well as attempting to remove his taser in a November 2018 jail attack.

Before accepting his plea, Scherer asked him if he understood the impact the assault case could have in the penalty phase of the murder case.

‘Sir, I need to advise you that the state is going to be using this conviction in this case as evidence of an aggravating factor for purposes of arguing in favor of the death penalty. Do you understand that?’ Scherer asked Cruz.

‘Yes, ma’am,’ Cruz responded.

Surveillance video captured Cruz, now 23, stalking the hallways of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, on February 14, 2018, aged 19

Cruz activated the fire alarm and then opened fire for a total of six minutes, killing 17 – 14 students and three teachers – and wounding 17 others (Pictured: Students were evacuated from Marjorie Stoneman Douglas High School by police during the mass shooting)

Cruz fled the scene but was later arrested without incident in nearby Coral Springs later that afternoon. He reportedly identified himself to police as the gunman responsible 

Some of the teenagers who survived the deadly rampage formed ‘March for Our Lives,’ an organization that called for gun control legislation such as a ban on assault-style rifles.

In March 2018, the group held a nationally televised march in Washington that sparked hundreds of similar rallies worldwide. 

Cruz was just 18 when he legally purchased the semiautomatic AR-15 rifle – used in the shooting – from a licensed gun dealer.

He was not a student at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High at the time, having been expelled during the 2016-17 school year. But on Wednesday, February 14, 2018, Cruz ordered an Uber to drop him off at the school.

He entered the building with the AR-15 and multiple magazines, just before classes ended for the day. He activated the fire alarm and then opened fire for a total of six minutes, killing 17 – 14 students and three teachers – and wounding 17 others. 

He fled the scene but was arrested later that afternoon without incident in nearby Coral Springs and reportedly identified himself to police as the gunman responsible.

In a confession later that afternoon Cruz claimed that a voice in his head told him to do violent things, including buying guns, building fire pits and killing birds. 

Judge Scherer has told Cruz’s attorneys to disclose soon whether they intend to pursue an insanity defense. Defense lawyers said all but one of their mental health experts have examined Cruz but no announcement was made on the insanity issue. 

Cruz has a well-documented history of mental problems prior to the shooting. School and government records showed that the killer was diagnosed as developmentally delayed at age three.

He told cops that he often used a lot of marijuana and took a lot of Xanax, a prescription tranquilizer. 

He said during the confession that this menacing voice – which he described as a male around his age and called Demon – instructed him to order an Uber a day of the massacre, which he admitted to planning for up to a week before. 

The video also revealed that Cruz attempted to kill himself in an intentional overdose two months before the shooting but failed. It wasn’t his first attempt at suicide but he provided no other details beyond the word ‘alcohol’.

Cruz (pictured at pre-trial hearing in January 2020) has a well-documented history of mental problems prior to the shooting. School and government records showed that the killer was diagnosed as developmentally delayed at age three

Further chilling information would later emerge, including a cellphone video in which Cruz is heard bragging about his fatal plans.

Taken within days of the massacre, Cruz is heard in one clip saying: ‘When you see me on the news you’ll know who I am. You’re all going to die. Pew pew pew. I can’t wait.’ 

In the confession video – which was 10 hours and 22 minutes long – Cruz also said that Demon distrusted the man interviewing him, Broward County Sheriff’s Detective John Curcio, for being ‘too nice’. 

Curcio said: ‘Personally, I think you’re using the demon as an excuse’ but Cruz insisted: ‘I’m not.’ 

Then, when left alone in the interview room, Cruz was heard saying that he wanted to die.  

Accusations also emerged that he had been abusive to an ex-girlfriend, stalked another girl, was banned from carrying a backpack at school and had previously brought in bullets and knives, hidden in a lunchbox. 

On Tuesday, Scherer rejected a motion by defendant Cruz’s lawyers claiming that intense media coverage jeopardizes his right to a fair trial.

Scherer did not elaborate on her reasons for denial, saying she would detail them in a written order later.

Cruz’s lawyers contended that open hearings might publicly reveal inadmissible evidence that will never be heard at trial and that news coverage could otherwise create bias among jurors.

The Florida Supreme Court ruled in 1982 that pretrial hearings are presumed to be open in most circumstances and can be closed only when there are no alternatives available except moving the trial elsewhere in the state. Prosecutors insist the trial must take place in Broward County.

How were at least 16 warning signs missed for Nikolas Cruz?

1. ‘I’m going to be a professional school shooter’

Nikolas Cruz left a comment on a YouTube video back in September using his own name that simply read: ‘I’m going to be a professional school shooter’ 

2. FBI was warned about the comment but couldn’t identify him

Vlogger Ben Bennight alerted the FBI to the comment shared by Cruz. The FBI was quick to respond, arriving at his office the next day but only after Bennight called a local field agent, revealing his initial attempts to send in a screengrab of the comment failed when the email address he found listed on the agency’s website came back with a domain error saying it did not exist. The FBI was unable to identify the person who posted the comment.

3. Bought an AR-15 age 18

After Cruz’s mother died, he eventually moved in the the family of a former classmate, where he brought his AR-15 which was kept in a locked cabinet that he had the key to. He was able to purchase the rifle in the past year and passed a required background check. Federal law allowed people 18 and over to legally purchase long guns. At 21, people can legally buy handguns from a license dealer. Cruz was also studying marksmanship in the Army Junior Reserve Officers’ Training Corps.

4. Troubling Instagram page 

Cruz’s Instagram page is filled with disturbing posts of what appears to be himself showing off with weapons with his face covered, asking for advice on buying firearms, and making racist comments about Muslims.

5. Was a member of a white nationalist group and came to training exercises

Jordan Jereb claims that Cruz was a member of the Republic of Florida, which aims to make Florida its own white-entho state. Jereb claimed Cruz, who was adopted, was brought up in the organization by another member and he reportedly carpooled to at least two training exercises held by the group.

6. Boasted about hurting animals

Students who say they knew Cruz claimed he liked to kill animals.

‘He was crazy because he liked to kill small things, like little animals – frogs and other animals like that and he just had a crazy mind,’ one told 10ABC news. 

Another classmate claims he would tell him he shot rats with a BB gun. 

7. Took knives and bullets to school

Former classmate Joshua Charo, 16, said all he ‘would talk about is guns, knives and hunting’. 

Another student said he started selling knives out of a lunchbox when he started high school, while he was also found to be carrying bullet casings in his bag.

8. Was banned from carrying a backpack

Jim Gard, a math teacher, who had Cruz in his class last year, said he believes the school sent out an email warning teachers he shouldn’t be allowed on campus with a backpack.

‘There were problems with him last year threatening students and I guess he was asked to leave campus’. 

9. Expelled for fighting

The deeply troubled ‘loner’ was expelled last year for ‘fighting over his ex-girlfriend’ with her new boyfriend.

10. Abusive to his ex-girlfriend

Students claim the gunman was abusive to his girlfriend 

11. Stalked another girl

Mr Gard also claimed that he was taken with another student ‘to the point of stalking her’, while another student who claims to have been friends with Cruz said he had to cut him off because he started ‘going after’ and ‘threatening’ a female friend of his. 

12. Peeping Tom

Neighbor Christine Rosburgh said she, and all the other neighbors, were terrified of the teen who would bang his head against a cement wall if his legal guardians tried to send him to school.

She also claims she caught him peeking in her window and when she confronted him, he said he was looking for golf balls.

‘I said, “This isn’t the golf course”. 

13. Stopped his mental health treatment

Cruz had been getting treatment at a mental health clinic, but stopped about a year ago and dropped off the radar. He was showing signs of depression. 

Broward County Mayor Beam Furr said: ‘It wasn’t like there wasn’t concern for him. We try to keep out eyes out on those kids who aren’t connected… In this case, we didn’t find a way to connect with this kid.’ 

14. Possible fetal alcohol syndrome

Natalie Brassard, a program director at the non-profit FASCETS, which works with FASD children, said some of Cruz’s characteristics ‘suggest that he might have been living with an invisible brain-based condition – it could have been FASD or many others.’

Conditions of FASD can range from mild to severe but can include learning disabilities, intellectual disability or low IQ, poor reasoning and judgment and a host of other issues. 

15. Orphaned 

Cruz’s adoptive mother, Lynda Cruz, 68, died of pneumonia in November last year. She was one of the only people that was remotely close to Cruz. His adoptive father Roger Cruz died of a heart attack several years ago. 

After his mother died, he and his brother were left in the care of family friend Barbara Kumbatovich, of Long Island, New York. 

He is believed to have lived for a few weeks at the Lantana Cascade mobile-home neighborhood with a different family friend before moving in with a former classmate’s family in Parkland around Thanksgiving. 

16. Disturbing posts on Snapchat 

Cruz was investigated by state authorities in 2016 after he filmed himself cutting his own arms on Snapchat and saying he wanted to buy a gun.

He posted the video on the social media app in September 2016, 17 months before he allegedly committed the school shooting.

He posted the Snapchat clip just days after turning 18 year of age and shortly after he broke up with his girlfriend ‘who was cheating on him,’ his mother told investigators.  

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Victims of the Valentine’s Day massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School

On February 14, 2018, when then-19-year-old Nikolas Cruz opened fire at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High, 17 people were killed, including three teachers. Another 17 were injured. 

Alyssa Alhadeff, 14 

Alyssa was a soccer player for Parkland Travel Soccer

Scott Beigel, 35

Biegel was a geography teacher who was killed as he tried to direct students back to his classroom when the shooting broke out

Martin Duque Anguiano, 14

Martin’s brother Miguel wrote on a GoFundMe page for his brother’s funeral expenses: ‘He was a very funny kid, outgoing, and sometimes really quiet’

Nicholas Dworet, 17 

Nicholas was a senior when he was killed. He had already been recruited onto the swim team at the University of Indianapolis 

Aaron Feis, 37 

Feis was shot and killed after throwing himself in front of students to protect them from bullets. He died from his gunshot wounds after being rushed to the hospital and undergoing emergency surgery 

Jamie Guttenberg, 14

Jamie’s father confirmed her death in a Facebook post that read: ‘My heart is broken. Yesterday, Jennifer Bloom Guttenberg and I lost our baby girl to a violent shooting at her school…I write this trying to figure out how my family gets through this’

Chris Hixon, 49 

Hixon was the school’s athletic director and his wife told CNN that he was ‘an awesome husband, father and American’. Hixon was a Naval reservist and did a tour in Iraq in 2007

Luke Hoyer, 15 

Luke’s cousin told the local news station that he was ‘an amazing individual. Always happy, always smiling. His smile was contagious, and so was his laugh’

Cara Loughran, 14 

Cara was an Irish dancer at a local dance studio, which posted on Facebook: ‘Cara was a beautiful soul and always had a smile on her face’

Gina Montalto, 14 

Gina was a member of the school’s marching band as a winter guard. Her instructor said she ‘was the sweetest soul ever’ 

Joaquin Oliver, 17

Joaquin was born in Venezuela and moved to the US when he was three. He became a natural citizen one year before the shooting 

Alaina Petty, 14

Alaina was part of the school’s junior ROTC program – a leadership program taught by Army veterans

Meadow Pollack, 18

Meadow was a senior and had been accepted to Lynn University in Boca Raton, Florida, at the time of her death 

Helena Ramsay, 17

Helena was planning to attend college in 2019. Her cousin wrote in a tribute: ‘We miss you dearly and are so incredibly sorry that your life was cut short’

Alex Schachter, 14 

Alex was a member of the high school’s marching band and orchestra where he played baritone and trombone. After his death his family set up a GoFundMe page to act as a scholarship fund in his memory

Carmen Schentrup, 16 

Carmen was a National Merit Scholar semifinalist, which only 10 students had qualified for in 2018  

Peter Wang, 15 

Peter was a member of the school’s junior ROTC program and was reportedly looking forward to the Chinese New Year, which was two days after the massacre 

(L-R) Carmen Schentrup, 16; Peter Wang, 15

 

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