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Parkland school shooter sentenced to life in prison without parole after emotional victims’ statements

Nikolas Cruz, 24, fatally shot 17 people at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Florida in 2018.
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A Florida judge formally sentenced Parkland school shooter Nikolas Cruz to life in prison without parole Wednesday for the 2018 campus massacre that killed 14 students and three staff members.

Circuit Judge Elizabeth Scherer followed the jury’s recommendation to spare Cruz, 24, the death penalty, instead sentencing him to a lifetime behind bars.

Last month, in a 9-3 vote, a jury leaned toward sending Cruz to death row, but Florida law dictates that anything less than a unanimous vote automatically shifts the sentence to life without parole.

Prosecutors had sought the death penalty, while the defense had asked for life in prison. The jury’s decision on Oct. 13 shook family members of victims, who were visibly distraught by the verdict.

A family hugs during the trial of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooter Nikolas Cruz
A family hugs during the trial of Nikolas Cruz in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., on Oct. 13.Amy Beth Bennett / Pool/South Florida Sun-Sentinel via AP file

'They will not be forgotten'

On Wednesday, Scherer told victims and their loved ones she admired their strength before she sentenced Cruz on 34 total counts of murder or attempted murder.

"Thank you, family members, for the privilege of learning about each and every one of your loved ones. I can tell you they will not be forgotten," Scherer said. "If I could take the pain away or carry it for you for just five minutes so that you could breathe ... I would."

As Scherer read the sentencing on each of the nearly three dozen charges, most of the victims or their family members were stoic, while some shed tears. Cruz remained expressionless.

During the three-month penalty phase of the trial, the defense argued that Cruz is mentally ill and that his condition led him to the rampage on Valentine’s Day 2018, when he wielded a semi-automatic rifle at his former school, Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. 

Cruz pleaded guilty in October 2021 to 17 counts of murder.

'You gave me and many others a lifetime of trauma, pain and suffering'

Ilan Alhadeff, the father of Alyssa Alhadeff, 14, who was killed, said Wednesday in his victim impact statement that Cruz’s inevitable life sentence brings him little satisfaction. He deserved death, Alhadeff said.

“Let me show how angry and frustrated I am with the judicial system. After 4 ½ grueling years, a failed judicial system did not hand down a death sentence to the murderer of my daughter and 16 others,” he said. “Do I see this as accountability? Absolutely not. Do we now have closure? Let me be clear: absolutely not. What I see is that the system values this animal’s life over the 17 now dead. Worse, we sent a message to the next killer out there that the death penalty would not be applied to mass killing. This is wrong and needs to be fixed immediately.”

Sam Fuentes was shot in the leg and struck in the face with shrapnel during the massacre. She said in court Wednesday that she watched Cruz kill two of her friends.

“You shot me in the leg. If you looked me in the face, like I’m looking at you right now, you would see the scars on it from the hot shrapnel that was lodged into it. Do you remember after you sprayed my classroom with bullets, standing in the door, peering in to see the work you’ve done? Do you remember my little battered, bloody face looking back at you? I could have sworn we locked eyes,” she said.

“I’ll have to live with the aftermath of this for the rest of my life. I’ll always have PTSD, depression, anxiety, suicidal ideations.”

Fuentes continued: “You gave me and many others a lifetime of trauma, pain and suffering, long after you committed this crime, and for what? You’re nobody now. You’re not special. You have no power anymore. You’ll step away from this, and you’ll have the most unremarkable, pathetic existence, one that I only pray that you suffer.”

Cruz wore a mask for the first part of the hearing, until Jennifer Guttenberg, the mother of victim Jaime Guttenberg, admonished him during her victim impact statement.

“You shouldn’t be sitting there with a mask on your face. It’s disrespectful to be hiding your expressions under your mask when we as the families are sitting here talking to you,” she told him.

Cruz was not wearing a mask the next time the camera panned to his face. It’s unclear who removed it.

Victoria Gonzalez spoke in court Wednesday about the death of her boyfriend, Joaquin Oliver, 17.

Gonzalez said that after the mass shooting, she lost not only her best friend, but also her ability to love. She now is lonely and struggles to build real friendships because she's always looking behind her back.

Gonzalez wore Oliver's shirt as she told Cruz he nearly blew Oliver's head off.

"I wish that you met Joaquin, because he would have been your friend," Gonzalez said. "He would have extended a hand to you. He would have loved you."

She added, "I'm sorry that you never saw the love the world is capable of giving."

Linda Beigel Schulman, the mother of Scott Beigel, who taught geography at the school and coached cross-country, said her son saved students' lives before the gunman took his.

Beigel Schulman said Wednesday that Cruz has "prison justice" ahead of him.

"You will spend the rest of your miserable life having to look over your shoulder worried about every single minute of your day, of your life, and scared out of your mind, fearful for someone to take you out."

'You don't know me, but you tried to kill me'

On Tuesday, other survivors and victims’ loved ones had the chance to deliver impact statements.

Stacey Lippel, a teacher who was shot and survived, told Cruz: “You don’t know me, but you tried to kill me.”

“I will have a scar on my arm and the memory of you pointing your gun at me ingrained in my brain forever,” she said before the court, looking Cruz in the eyes.

She said she is left with feelings of horror and guilt — “horror at the memories of what you left behind in your wake and the guilt that I am left with because I wish I could’ve done more to save my co-workers and students who you killed.”

Debbi Hixon, the widow of Chris Hixon, a teacher who ran into the school to try to stop the shooter, told the gunman: “I hope that your name and existence are erased from society.”

The parents of Ben Wikander, a student who survived being shot in the back, abdomen and arm, spoke of his agonizing pain and long road to recovery — saying he still has a ways to go.

“Whatever pain you experience in prison will unfortunately be a fraction of what Ben endured,” said his father, Eric Wikander.

Max Schachter, the father of victim Alex Schachter, 14, argued that Cruz had received a good deal of mental health help and called out the defense lawyers for claiming he had fallen through the cracks. 

“There’s so many people in this country who suffer mental illness," he said. "They’re not going out torturing and murdering innocent people."