Parkland sentencing: Nikolas Cruz sentenced to life in prison

Many victims' parents are outraged that the gunman was spared the death penalty.

Nikolas Cruz was sentenced to life in prison on Wednesday, following two days of victim impact statements from survivors and family members of the 17 students and staff killed in the Parkland high school massacre.

Last month, a Florida jury rejected prosecutors' appeals for the death penalty, reaching a verdict on life in prison for the 2018 mass shooting Cruz committed at age 19 at South Florida's Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.

Many victims' parents were outraged by the verdict, arguing that sparing Cruz the death penalty may send a bad message to future school shooters.

The jury's decision needed to be unanimous to sentence Cruz to death.


0

'How much worse would the crime have to be to warrant death penalty?'

Annika Dworet, whose son Nicholas Dworet was killed, expressed disappointment at the jury's decision not to recommend the death penalty.

"We sat in this courtroom every day during this trial. We listened to every witness. We saw every piece of evidence," she said. "It is heartbreaking how any person who heard and saw all this did not give this killer the worst punishment possible."

"How much worse would the crime have to be to warrant death penalty?" she asked.

She said she also was offended by the behavior of the defense team during the trial, including "holding, touching and giggling with this cold-blooded murder."


'He shouldn’t live while my sister rots in a grave'

Anthony Montalto, whose older sister, 14-year-old Gina, was killed, recalled his parents coming home the night of Feb. 14, 2018, with tears in their eyes, telling him his only sibling was dead.

He said he wishes he said goodbye to her that morning.

“I will never be able to watch TV with her, talk about books with her. Every day I walk by her room and see that it’s empty. … Every day I wake up and I remember that she will not be there,” Montalto said.

He called Nikolas Cruz a “murdering bastard” and said Cruz should’ve been sentenced to death.

“He shouldn’t live while my sister rots in a grave,” Montalto said.

Montalto said he hopes the jurors who voted for a life sentence regret their decision after hearing his testimony.

Gina Montalto’s father, Tony Montalto, added in court, “If the jury took in the evidence presented, there is only logical and fact-based outcome. Sadly, the jury ignored the facts and went with emotion. They worried how they’d feel ... [if Cruz] was put to death.”

“Did they consider what kind of message their verdict sent to our nation’s students and teachers?” he continued. “Did they consider how they would explain their verdict to the siblings of the victims, as my wife and I struggled to do?”

"I don't believe the case was fair to the victims. The court allowed the defense to show every aspect" of Cruz's life before the massacre, he said, yet victims' families could not bring photos of their loved ones to court or wear pins to honor them.

"The court did everything it could to dehumanize our beautiful Gina, her classmates and her teachers," he said. "My family and the others had to sit like church mice in the courtroom for fear of influencing the jury."

"This injustice must be fixed. The victims' rights must be recognized," he stressed.


Fred Guttenberg on why he’s not giving another statement in court

Fred Guttenberg, whose 14-year-old daughter, Jaime, was killed, chose not to deliver a new statement in court on Tuesday.

He tweeted, “My life is no longer dependent on the outcome of this trial and delivering another impact statement will not make me feel better.”

Guttenberg said the statement he gave earlier during the trial “had to meet legal requirements" and couldn't refer to the crime or "refer to the murderer as a murderer or a killer."

“During the sentencing today, we will be given a chance to make another statement and to say anything that we want. But will it make me feel better? We can say whatever we want to the murderer who committed the crime,” he continued. “I could talk about sitting with the State Attorney last week and finally watching the actual video of Jaime getting shot and how I felt with the way … she made it to within one second of safety, only for him to kill her with a single AR 15 shot.”

"We can say whatever we want to the jurors who made the wrong decision” and “whatever we want to the defense team that gave up its humanity to defend the monster,” Guttenberg wrote.

But with Nikolas Cruz’s fate already decided, “I have no need to think about him or to address him,” Guttenberg said.

“I will think about him only two more times. The first time will be when I sit and watch the formal sentencing. The second time will be when I read news reporting of the prison justice that he will eventually receive,” he said. “Going forward, I plan to focus more on those I love.”


Survivor recalls 'accepting my death' on classroom floor

Ellen Mayor read a statement in court on behalf of her daughter, Samantha Mayor, who was shot through the knee and survived.

Samantha Mayor in her statement called the shooting the “most fearful day of my life, when I was laying on the floor unable to move and terrified to speak. I remember accepting my death at that moment and reminding myself that my friends and family know that I love them."

She said she’s afraid of tight spaces, always searches for exits and is startled by noises. Samantha Mayor also said she’s fearful of when she’ll eventually send her own children to school.

“I’ve learned that the beginning of every year brings a lot of heartache for me … for the anniversary of when I saw death before my eyes. Carmen, I think about you every day and it never hurts less,” she said, referring to Carmen Schentrup, 16, who was killed.

She said she’s “devastated” by the life sentence.

“Now we all have to breathe the same air of someone who wanted us to never take another breath,” she said.


'I wish you had more love in your heart'

Parkland shooting survivor Victoria Gonzalez gave a statement regarding her boyfriend, 17-year-old Joaquin Oliver, who was killed in the massacre.

She was wearing a yellow shirt with the words "Tu con balas, yo con bolas." It was the same shirt, she told Cruz, that Oliver was wearing "the night before you killed him."

The saying means, "You with bullets, I with balls," in Spanish.

"Crazy enough, he knew what was coming," she said of Oliver.

As a classmate of Cruz, she said that she was rooting for him.

"I felt like you needed someone or you needed something, and I could feel that," she said. "I felt how alone you might have felt, maybe."

Now, she said, she feels alone.

"I'm very isolated and I can't make friends and I can't build relationships because I'm looking over my shoulder, even emotionally," she said.

"I wish you had more love in your heart," she said.