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.


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'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.


Mother of victim expresses shock at verdict

April Schentrup wrote that she hoped the trial and verdict would provide "some level of accountability" for the murder of her daughter, 16-year-old Carmen Schentrup. But that was not the case, she wrote, in a statement read by Tamika Collins in court.

"Although one death sentence does not even come close to the 17 homicides and 17 attempted homicides he committed, I am still shocked at how members of this jury could decide a life sentence for someone whose life goal was to harm and kill others," she wrote.

She stated that the verdict sends the message to "potential mass shooters" that their lives might be spared.

"It is clear a few members of this jury value Carmen's life and the lives of 16 others less than the shooter's," she wrote. "It is also clear that they do not value the lives of future victims that will come about because of their decision."

Carmen's father, Philip Schentrup, remembered his "amazing," "funny" and "selfless" daughter in a statement read by Juan Vicente in court.

"Carmen was bursting forth from her cocoon," he wrote. "The only thing that could stop Carmen were bullets fired from the rifle of a pathetic and vile coward."

His daughter was failed by "every institution in our country," including the legal system, he wrote.

"There is no justice for Carmen, and the 16 other murdered victims," he wrote.


Victim describes life after surviving shooting

Samantha Fuentes, a former classmate of Cruz, spoke of her life after the tragedy and the trauma of being a survivor of the mass school shooting.

"I always have PTSD, depression, anxiety, suicidal ideations," she said in court.

She said she lives in "constant fear" of someone like Cruz.

She said she was angry with the verdict, though, unlike Cruz, "I'll never take my anger, pain and suffering out on others because I am stronger than you."


Verdict brings no accountability or closure, family of Alyssa Alhadeff says

The mother of Alyssa Alhadeff remembered her daughter's "beautiful smile and contagious laugh."

But she also remembered seeing her 14-year-old daughter in the medical examiner's office after she was killed in the Parkland shooting.

"All I wanted to do was to bring Alyssa back to life. But I couldn't protect her, and I couldn't save her," Lori Alhadeff said during her statement in court.

She addressed Cruz, speaking angrily.

"My hope for you is that you are miserable for the rest of your pathetic life," she said. "My hope for you is that the pain of what you did to my family burns and traumatizes you every day."

Alyssa's father, Ilan Marc Alhadeff, said the verdict brings no accountability or closure.

"What I see is that the system values this animal's life over the 17 now dead," he said. "Worse, we sent the message to the next killer out there that the death penalty would not be applied to mass killers. This is wrong and needs to be fixed immediately."

Alyssa's uncle also addressed the court via Zoom at the start of the hearing, remembering her as being full of empathy and care.

He finished his statement with strong words for Cruz: "Rot in hell."


Joaquin Oliver's family speaks out against defense comments

Like others who addressed the court Wednesday, Andrea Ghersi said she wasn't planning to make a statement until Broward County Public Defender Gordon Weekes objected in court Tuesday to rhetoric used by victims' families and expressed concerns for the defense's children.

"I decided I would not allow any of you to make us out to be the kind of people that resort to any kind of threats, especially threats toward children," said Ghersi, whose 17-year-old brother, Joaquin Oliver, was killed in the shooting. "No one in this courtroom has had to go through what we have had to go through."

To the defense, she urged them to "learn to live with the fact that you condone the slaughter of 17 innocents."

"I promise you that one day, I don't know when, you will ask yourself, 'Did I make the right decision?'" she continued.

Oliver's father, Manuel Oliver, called the defense team's concerns over their children amid the trial "ironic and unreal."

"What about our children?" he said.