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Tag: Parkland School Shooting

  • Parents share emotional look inside empty bedrooms of children killed in school shootings

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    Jada Scruggs sometimes wonders what she and her husband Chad will do with the empty room left behind by her daughter, 9-year-old Hallie, who was killed in a 2023 Nashville school shooting.

    Hallie’s room remains as she left it that Monday morning. For her parents, Hallie’s bedroom is a devastating reminder of what was taken from them, and of who their daughter was. There are Legos, Tennessee football memorabilia, and the books Hallie read together with her mom at night. 

    “All these physical things are tangible ways of reminding me, like, she was real. She was here. She lived with us,” Scruggs said. “In some ways, this room kinda holds the space for her.”

    Hallie’s bedroom is one of several documented by CBS News’ correspondent Steve Hartman and photographer Lou Bopp, who spent the last seven years asking parents whose children were killed in school shootings for permission to take pictures of all the empty rooms they’ve left behind.

    “Empty Rooms”

    Hallie was killed along with two classmates, Evelyn Dieckhaus and William Kinney, in a shooting at The Covenant School in Nashville on March 27, 2023. Hallie’s father, Chad Scruggs, was drawn to his daughter’s room the day she was killed.

    “I went into her room to lay on her bed to smell. I knew that would go,” he said. 

    Jada Scruggs said she visits her daughter’s room less frequently now, but her feelings when she goes in haven’t changed. To Chag Scruggs, the room now feels like an “indication of absence.” 

    “It feels more like a relic now,” he said.

    A photo of Hallie Scruggs

    60 Minutes


    Some 2,000 miles away, in Santa Clarita, California, Gracie Muehlberger’s bedroom serves as a reminder for her parents. The 15-year-old, killed six years ago in the Saugus High School shooting, adored her brothers and her Vans sneakers. 

    Parents Cindy and Bryan Muehlberger went to her room right after they got home from the hospital. 

    “That’s where I spent, like, the next week or two. I slept in her bed,” Cindy Muehlberger said.

    Dominic Blackwell, a 14-year-old killed alongside Gracie, left behind a room filled with SpongeBob stuffed animals. A basket of his laundry still waits to be washed. 

    A toothpaste tube remains uncapped in the bathroom of 14-year-old Alyssa Alhadeff, who was killed at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, in 2018. 

    There’s a library book, 13 years overdue, in the bedroom of Charlotte Bacon, who was killed at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, in 2012. 

    Why it was important to document the rooms left behind 

    The rooms are among eight that were photographed as part of the project created by Hartman, who began covering these tragedies for CBS News 28 years ago. He first covered a shooting at a high school in Pearl, Mississippi, two years before the massacre at Columbine High School. 

    At the time, the shooting was big news, with ongoing coverage. Hartman said that’s often not the case for school shootings today. 

    “It still gets coverage, but it’s usually a day or two. And people forget about them, I’d say, by the end of the week, many times,” Hartman said. 

    That is what sparked the idea for his project.

    Click here to explore the interactive feature.

    So seven years ago, he began writing letters to parents asking to photograph their murdered children’s rooms. 

    “I don’t think there’s really a better way to get to know a kid and to remember a life than to look around that room, to stand in that space,” he said. 

    “I wanted to shake people out of this numbness that I was feeling whenever there was a school shooting,” Hartman said. “I was moving on quickly. I was forgetting the names of the children who were lost. And I knew the country was doing the same.”

    Eight families whose children were killed in five different schools agreed to let photographer Lou Bopp into their kids’ rooms. A recent exhibit in New York displayed some of the 10,000 photos he’s taken.

    “I’m trying to take a picture of a child who’s not there,” Bopp said.

    The photographs serve as a reminder that while the country moves on, the families left behind never do, Hartman said. 

    The project is now the subject of a documentary premiering on Netflix Dec. 1. It follows Hartman and Bopp as they travel across the country, visiting rooms.

    What’s next for parents and the project

    The Muehlbergers were considering moving when they got Hartman’s letter in 2024 but they didn’t know if they could leave Gracie’s room behind. 

    “It’s, like, do you take a lotta pictures of it and then try to recreate it somewhere else? We didn’t know what to do with it. And it really wasn’t until this opportunity to work with Steve on this film that we started feeling a peace about it,” Bryan Muehlberger said. 

    Earlier this year, the Muehlbergers sold their house and packed up Gracie’s room. They found mementos, artwork, and cards she had made that they hadn’t seen in years. For now, they’ve placed them in a storage unit, while they build a new life in Georgia.

    They’ve designated an outdoor area on the plot of land where they’re building a new home as “Gracie’s Point.” 

    “So peaceful, which is what we were looking for,” Cindy Muehlberger said. 

    Anderson Cooper with the Muehlbergers at Gracie's Point

    Anderson Cooper with the Muehlbergers at Gracie’s Point

    60 Minutes


    For Hartman, the project isn’t over. 

    “If parents want us to, we’ll continue to document the rooms, just so they have the pictures,” Hartman said. “I wish this project would end, but I don’t anticipate it will.”

    More than 160 children have been killed in school shootings across the U.S. since the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School.

    Back in Nashville, the Scruggs have no plans to change Hallie’s room but they did send some of her drawings and journals to an artist, Brenda Bogart, who created a collage portrait of her. 

    “Everything on this canvas is something that was made by Hallie’s hand,” Jada Scruggs said. “Brenda went through and noticed a theme of, ‘I am happy. I am happy. I am happy.’”

    Chad and Jada Scruggs hope the images of Hallie’s room will help people better understand the person she was. . 

    “This is not a generic person, you know? It’s someone that uniquely bore God’s image in the world and [was] irreplaceable,” Chad Scruggs said. “We just want you to know her, you know? She’s worth being known.”

    If you or someone you know is struggling with the loss of a child, support networks are available.  

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  • Memorializing the bedrooms of children killed in school shootings:

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    Since the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, 13 years ago, more than 160 children have been killed in school shootings across the U.S. They’ve left behind devastated families, and friends, and empty bedrooms they once filled with life. For many parents, these rooms have become sanctuaries: a tangible link to a child they can still feel but no longer hold. Steve Hartman, a veteran CBS News correspondent, and Lou Bopp, a photographer, have spent the last seven years asking parents whose children have been killed for permission to take pictures of the empty rooms they’ve left behind. No easy task; they are, after all, portraits of a child who is no longer there.

    Up a flight of stairs in their Nashville home, Chad and Jada Scruggs took us to see their daughter Hallie’s room. It remains as she left it one Monday morning two and a half years ago.

    Chad Scruggs: I don’t think anything’s changed.

    Hallie Scruggs loved Legos, Tennessee football, and hiding things in a toy safe from her three older brothers. The books she and her mom read together at night are still stacked by her bed. A school project, with important milestones in her life, a reminder Hallie was just 9 years old.

    Chad Scruggs: First tooth, first soccer game, first Tennessee game. 

    Anderson Cooper: That was a– that was a– a milestone. 

    Jada and Chad Scruggs: Yeah. 

    Chad Scruggs: This is the first time they held her.

    Jada Scruggs: I love that picture.

    Chad and Jada Scruggs with Anderson Cooper in Hallie’s room

    60 Minutes


    Jada Scruggs: I do wonder, sometimes, like, what will we do with this room, eventually. All these physical things are tangible ways of reminding me, like, she was real. She was here. She lived with us. In some ways, this room kinda holds the space for her.

    Chad Scruggs: Yeah.

    Jada Scruggs: And so–

    Anderson Cooper: And it still does.

    Jada and Chad Scruggs: Yeah. Yeah.

    Hallie was killed along with two classmates, Evelyn Dieckhaus and William Kinney, in a shooting at The Covenant School in Nashville in 2023.

    Anderson Cooper: What has grief been like, for you?

    Chad Scruggs: It felt like everything collapsed, everything, internally, pain that– I mean, gosh. It’s just hard to endure. And then, you know, you have to relearn how to do everything, like how to eat, how to sleep. And you just have a– new relationship with pain, and sadness, and anger. There’s been joy, too, but– the– the sadness– was– has been– was just, I mean, overwhelming.

    Chad is a pastor at the church that’s part of The Covenant School. He was drawn to Hallie’s room the day she was killed.

    Chad Scruggs: I went into her room to lay on her bed to smell. I knew that would go. And I wanted, you know–

    Anderson Cooper: You knew that– you knew the smell would dissipate?

    Chad Scruggs: Oh, yeah. Yeah, yeah. And her blankie was there and everything was there.

    Anderson Cooper: And you could smell her, that day?

    Chad Scruggs: Oh, yeah. Absolutely. Yeah. That was true probably, for a week or two after. So you’re trying to get her back. And it’s not possible. But you don’t believe that. And so anything that– that draws that possibility closer, I wanted to be there for that, so– yeah. I went in, just laid on her bed, and cried by myself.

    Chad and Jada Scruggs

    Chad and Jada Scruggs

    60 Minutes


    Anderson Cooper: Has your relationship to the room changed over time?

    Jada Scruggs: Maybe, it’s not as frequent that I go up there, but the feelings haven’t changed, when I go in the room. You know, it kind of captures all the feelings of sadness and joy, just because it’s– it’s a capsule of time.

    Chad Scruggs: I think initially, that room was for me, an indication of, like, presence. And now, it feels more of an indication of absence.

    Jada Scruggs: Absence, yeah.

    Chad Scruggs: You know. It feels more like a relic now. 

    Anderson Cooper: Like a relic?

    Chad Scruggs: A relic. 

    Anderson Cooper: Yeah. 

    Some 2,000 miles away, in Santa Clarita, California, another room, another child killed. 

    This is Gracie Muehlberger. She was 15. She adored her brothers and her Vans sneakers. She was killed six years ago in the Saugus High School shooting. Cindy and Bryan Muehlberger are her parents. 

    Anderson Cooper: Do you remember the first time you went into Gracie’s room after–

    Cindy Muehlberger: Right when we got home from the hospital.

    Anderson Cooper: You went right to her room?

    Cindy Muehlberger: Right to her room. And that’s where I spent, like, the next week or two. I slept in her bed. I just–it’s the closest I could feel to her, so. 

    Anderson Cooper: Did that feeling though of the room providing comfort, did that last for a long time?

    Cindy Muehlberger: Yes.

    Bryan Muehlberger: Oh yeah–

    Cindy Muehlberger: Always. Yeah.

    Bryan Muehlberger: Always.

    Gracie Muehlberger and Hallie Scruggs’ rooms are two of eight that were photographed as part of the project begun by Steve Hartman, who began covering these tragedies for CBS News 28 years ago. This was his first, a shooting at a high school in Pearl, Mississippi, two years before the massacre at Columbine High School in Littleton, Colorado. 

    Steve Hartman

    Steve Hartman

    60 Minutes


    Steve Hartman: It was news, at the time. A school shooting was actually big news.

    Anderson Cooper: As opposed to now?

    Steve Hartman: As opposed to now. It still gets coverage, but it’s usually a day or two. And people forget about them, I’d say, by the end of the week, many times.

    Anderson Cooper: Initially, in your mind, what was the idea?

    Steve Hartman: I wanted to shake people out of this numbness that I’ve– that I was feeling whenever there was a school shooting. Now, I was moving on quickly. I was forgetting the names of the children who were lost. And I knew the country was doing the same.

    So seven years ago, he began writing letters to parents asking to photograph their murdered children’s rooms. 

    Steve Hartman: Because when you go into a kid’s room, you go into my kid’s room, you see their whole history. You see every dream, every desire, everything they value. It’s all there on the walls and sitting on the shelves.

    Anderson Cooper: Or scattered on the floor.

    Steve Hartman: Or scattered on the floor, in some cases. It’s all there. And I don’t think there’s really a better way to get to know a kid and to remember a life than to look around that room, to stand in that space.

    Eight families whose children were killed in five different schools agreed to let photographer Lou Bopp into their kids’ rooms. At a recent exhibit in New York, he showed us some of the 10,000 photos he’s taken.

    Lou Bopp: You know I’m trying to take a picture of a– of a– of a child who’s not there.

    Dominic Blackwell’s room is still filled with Spongebob. He was killed, along with Gracie Muehlberger, at Saugus High School. Dominic was 14. A basket of his laundry still waits to be washed. A toothpaste tube remains uncapped in the bathroom of 14-year-old Alyssa Alhadeff, killed at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida.

    Charlotte Bacon loved pink. She was 6, killed at Sandy Hook. There’s a library book in her room that’s now 13 years overdue.

    Lou Bopp: If that’s not a little girl’s room, I don’t know what is. 

    Lou Bopp: And even this. This to me, it’s so poignant, the way the head is tilted down. 

    Anderson Cooper: It’s such a reminder– that while everybody else moves on– from what is a story to them the– the families never move on.

    Lou Bopp

    Lou Bopp took thousands of photos for the project.

    60 Minutes


    Steve Hartman: That’s part of the reason the families did agree because it’s very frustrating for them when the country moves on. And they certainly haven’t moved on and will never move on.

    Anderson Cooper: I think there’s such weight in– for these parents in being the holders of the memory, that they are the only ones who remember–excuse me–

    Steve Hartman: It’s okay. What are you thinking about?

    Anderson Cooper: Whew. I’ve been in a lot of these rooms, as well. And there’s such sadness in being the last ones left to remember everything about this child.

    Steve Hartman: And that’s why they can’t surrender the rooms, because you surrender the rooms and that’s just another piece of their kid that’s gone.

    Steve Hartman’s project is now the subject of an upcoming documentary on Netflix. It follows him and Lou Bopp as they travel across the country, visiting rooms, including Dominic Blackwell’s and Gracie Muehlberger’s.

    When Bryan and Cindy Muehlberger received Steve’s letter in 2024, they were considering moving — but didn’t know how they could leave their daughter’s room behind. 

    Anderson Cooper: How much of the discussion was about, “What do we do with the room?”

    Bryan Muehlberger: I would say that was the primary driver of– of us not moving sooner. I mean, after the– the shooting we– we wanted to get outta town.

    Anderson Cooper: But you didn’t want to leave that room.

    Cindy Muehlberger: Right–

    Bryan Muehlberger: But we didn’t want to leave that room, yeah. You know, it’s, like, do you take a lotta pictures of it and then try to recreate it somewhere else? We didn’t know what to do with it. And it really wasn’t until this opportunity to work with Steve on this film that we started feeling a peace about it.

    Earlier this year, the Muehlbergers felt ready. They sold their house and packed up Gracie’s room. They found mementos, artwork, and cards she made they hadn’t seen in years.

    For now, they’ve placed them in a storage unit, while they build a new home, and a new life in Georgia.

    Anderson Cooper: When you found this did you– did you know how you wanted to kind of incorporate Gracie?

    Bryan Muehlberger: Not initially.

    In September, they showed us the plot of land where they’ll live, and an area they are going to create called “Gracie’s Point.” 

    Anderson Cooper with the Muehlbergers at Gracie's Point

    Anderson Cooper with the Muehlbergers at Gracie’s Point

    60 Minutes


    Anderson Cooper: So this is going to be Gracie’s Point?

    Bryan Muehlberger: Yeah, this kinda area right here. Where when you’re out here you know all you’ve got is nature and the water.

    Anderson Cooper: And a place for a fire pit, a place where people can come together?

    Bryan Muehlberger: Yeah, come together. She loved doin’ s’mores and things like that.

    Anderson Cooper: It could not be a more beautiful spot.

    Cindy Muehlberger: So peaceful, which is what we were lookin’ for.

    Anderson Cooper: Is this project over for you? 

    Steve Hartman: No. If parents want us to, we’ll continue to document the rooms, just so they have the pictures. I wish this project would end, but I don’t anticipate it will.

    Back in Nashville, Chad and Jada Scruggs have no plans to change Hallie’s room but they did send some of her drawings and journals to an artist, Brenda Bogart, who created this collage portrait of her. 

     Jada Scruggs: Everything on this canvas is something that was made by Hallie’s hand. Brenda went through and noticed a theme of, “I am happy. I am happy. I am happy.”

    Anderson Cooper: Wow.

    Jada Scruggs: She pretty much ended every journal entry with, “I am happy.” She wanted to make sure that that got put on Hallie.

    Anderson Cooper: When people see the photos, of Hallie’s room, what would you like them to take away?

    Chad Scruggs: This is not a generic person, you know? It’s someone that uniquely bore God’s image in the world and–irreplaceable. And we just want you to know her, you know? She’s worth being known. We don’t have a lot of aspirations, beyond that. We want you to come step inside of our world for a moment, so.

    Anderson Cooper: Step inside the sadness?

    Chad Scruggs: Yeah.

    Jada Scruggs: And feel it. 

    Chad Scruggs: People can talk about solutions. But until they feel the weight of the problem, I don’t know how to really talk about solutions.

    If you or someone you know is struggling with the loss of a child, support networks are available.  

    Produced by Katie Brennan. Associate producer, Matthew Riley. Broadcast associate, Grace Conley. Edited by Matthew Lev.

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  • Parkland shooting survivor David Hogg launches organization to guide a

    Parkland shooting survivor David Hogg launches organization to guide a

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    He survived the Parkland school shooting that claimed 17 lives in 2018. Five years later, former student-turned-activist David Hogg says he wants to use his advocacy to get more young people into political office.

    “Obviously, what happened in Parkland to me and my classmates is a huge motivator for why I’m doing this work,” Hogg told CBS News. “That’s what got me involved in politics.” 

    The 23-year-old is launching a new grassroots organization called Leaders We Deserve to help young, progressive candidates around the country get elected to state legislatures and the U.S. Congress. 

    david-hogg-youtube.jpg
    Activist David Hogg appears in a social media video announcing the launch of the “Leaders We Deserve” organization.

    YouTube/Leaders We Deserve


    Hogg founded the group with Kevin Lata, who served as campaign manager for Rep. Maxwell Frost, of Florida, the first Gen Z member of Congress. 

    “There is a pathway for winning as a young person,” Lata said. “We’ve done it, and we are trying to export that and elect a new generation of young people to office.”

    According to the group, Gen Z and millennials make up 45% of the electorate, but only hold 21% of state legislature seats. The Leaders We Deserve PAC and SuperPAC will work with 15-30 candidates under the age of 30 in key states such as Florida, Texas and Georgia. 

    “Whether it’s abortion bans, whether it’s weakening gun laws, it’s not coming from the federal government. It’s coming from Tallahassee. It’s coming from Austin. It’s coming from state capitals around the country,” Hogg told CBS News. “This is not just an outside game. You’re not just pushing politicians to hold them accountable to their promises and make them better but we also need to have the inside game.”


    Biden meets “Tennessee Three,” says “stay tuned” on reelection bid

    02:14

    The group, which counts “Tennessee Three” state representative Justin Jones among its board members, eventually hopes to build a pipeline of young leaders to run for higher state or federal office. It will work with prospective candidates on campaign strategies — everything from fundraising to endorsements. 

    “When you’re first starting out when you’re running for office, part of the challenge is you don’t really have as much fundraising connections, political connections, just the know-how of the basics of running a campaign,” Lata said.

    Lata and Hogg worked together on Frost’s 2022 congressional campaign. Hogg previously co-founded March for Our Lives, a youth-driven movement that organized one of the largest anti-gun violence protests in Washington following the Parkland massacre. 

    “There’s so many charismatic, brilliant young people that have come from March For Our Lives and have now started running for office, like Maxwell, and there’s so many more that I think can come,” Hogg said. “That’s why I’m doing this, it’s to help build that pathway.”

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  • Parkland school shooting reenacted with live bullets as part of lawsuit

    Parkland school shooting reenacted with live bullets as part of lawsuit

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    Parkland school shooting reenacted with live bullets as part of lawsuit – CBS News


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    More than 100 rounds of live ammunition were fired Friday in Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, part of a reenactment of the 2018 Parkland mass shooting in which 17 people were killed. The reenactment was for a civil lawsuit against a former Florida sheriff’s deputy, who parents say failed to protect the victims of the shooting. CBS News national correspondent Manuel Bojorquez reports.

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  • Watch Live: Parkland shooting gunman sentenced to life in prison, called a “monster” by victims’ family members

    Watch Live: Parkland shooting gunman sentenced to life in prison, called a “monster” by victims’ family members

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    The gunman who killed 17 people in the Parkland shooting was sentenced to life in prison without parole Wednesday for the 2018 high school massacre in Florida. Circuit Judge Elizabeth Scherer had no choice but to impose the sentence as the jury in the penalty trial could not unanimously agree that Nikolas Cruz deserved the death penalty.

    Before the gunman formally received his sentence for the Valentine’s Day massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in suburban Fort Lauderdale, family members of the victims, and survivors of the shooting, were given time to address him.

    “It was extremely painful to hear all the horrific details of this massacre at our children’s high school,” Annika Dworet, who with her husband, Mitch, attended every day of the gunman’s trial. “Just to be in the same room as this monster who killed our son Nicholas and attempted to murder our son Alex. It’s unbearable.”

    She continued, “One of the most disgusting and unprofessional actions that occurred in this courtroom was the defense team holding, touching and giggling with this cold-blooded murderer.”

    The gunman, shackled and wearing a red jail jumpsuit, stared at the speakers but showed little emotion, as he did the day before. He removed a face mask after Jennifer Guttenberg, mother of Jaime Guttenberg, told him he shouldn’t be wearing one.

    “It’s disrespectful to be hiding your expressions under your mask when we as the families are sitting here talking to you, lowered down in your seat, hunched over, trying to make yourself look innocent when you’re not,” Guttenberg said.

    Since Tuesday, members of the victims’ families and some of the 17 wounded who survived the shooting didn’t waste the opportunity to verbally thrash the gunman face-to-face after almost five years.

    “The idea that you, a cold-blooded killer, can actually live each day, eat your meals and put your head down at night seems completely unjust,” teacher Stacey Lippel, who was wounded in the shooting, told the gunman. “The only comfort I have is that your life in prison will be filled with horror and fear, so my hope for you is that you die, sooner rather than later.”

    Those who spoke went to a lectern about 20 feet from the 24-year-old gunman, stared him in the eye and let out their anger and grief. Many also criticized a Florida law that requires jury unanimity for a death sentence to be imposed — jurors voted 9-3 on Oct. 13 for execution.

    “He has escaped this punishment because a minority of the jury was given the power to overturn the majority decision made by people who were able to see him for what he is — a remorseless monster who deserves no mercy,” Meghan Petty said. Her younger sister, 14-year-old Alaina, died when the gunman fired his AR-15-style semiautomatic rifle into her classroom as he stalked the halls of a three-story building for seven minutes, firing 140 shots. He had been planning the shooting for seven months.

    “A person has to be incredibly sick to want to hurt another human being. Even sicker to dwell on the desire and craft a plan and unimaginably evil to execute that plan, which didn’t just hurt people but ended lives,” she said. “To add insult to murder he was even arrogant enough to plan a disguise believing that he’d be able to escape his actions while my sister lay dying on a dirty classroom floor.”

    The gunman, a former Stoneman Douglas student and then 19, wore a school shirt so that he could blend in with fleeing students as he escaped. He was arrested an hour later.

    Patricia Oliver, who lost her son Joaquin, railed on Tuesday against the defense attorneys who’d argued their client should be spared because of his mother’s drug and alcohol abuse while pregnant and he never got the help he needed.

    “Karma,” she said, “will eventually catch up to you all.”

    Patricia Padauy Oliver speaks during the sentencing hearing for Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooter Nikolas Cruz at the Broward County Courthouse in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, Nov. 1, 2022.
    Patricia Padauy Oliver speaks during the sentencing hearing for Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooter Nikolas Cruz at the Broward County Courthouse in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, Nov. 1, 2022.

    Amy Beth Bennett/Pool via Reuters


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  • Watch Live: Parkland shooting victims’ families get chance to address gunman ahead of expected sentencing of life in prison

    Watch Live: Parkland shooting victims’ families get chance to address gunman ahead of expected sentencing of life in prison

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    The two-day sentencing hearing for the Florida school shooter begins Tuesday with the families of the 17 people he murdered in Parkland getting their chance after almost five years to address him directly about the devastation he brought to their lives.

    After the families and the 17 people Nikolas Cruz wounded get their chance to speak, Circuit Judge Elizabeth Scherer on Wednesday will formally sentence him to life in prison without parole for his Feb. 14, 2018, massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. She has no other option as the jury in his recently concluded penalty trial could not unanimously agree that the 24-year-old former Stoneman Douglas student deserved a death sentence.

    The families gave highly emotional statements during the trial, but were restricted about what they could tell jurors: They could only describe their loved ones and the toll the killings had on their lives. The wounded could only say what happened to them.

    They were barred from addressing the gunman directly or saying anything about him — a violation would have risked a mistrial. And the jurors were told they couldn’t consider the family statements as aggravating factors as they weighed whether the gunman should die.

    Now, the grieving and the scarred can speak directly to the gunman, if they choose.

    Shara Kaplan reacts as she hears that Nikolas Cruz will not receive the death penalty as the verdicts are announced in the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting trial at the Broward County Courthouse in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, October 13, 2022.
    Shara Kaplan reacts as she hears that Nikolas Cruz will not receive the death penalty as the verdicts are announced in the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting trial at the Broward County Courthouse in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, October 13, 2022. Kaplan’s daughter, Meadow Polack, was killed in the 2018 shootings.

    Amy Beth Bennett/South Florida Sun Sentinel/Pool via Reuters


    One who will not is Fred Guttenberg, whose 14-year-old daughter Jaime was shot by the gunman in the back as she tried to flee. He tweeted Tuesday that it won’t change anything if he addresses “the monster” who murdered his daughter, the defense team he believes “gave up its humanity” to defend him or the teacher he says faked heroism. He would thank the prosecutors and others who supported the families, but said that won’t make a difference either.

    “The reality is that I will still visit Jaime at the cemetery and the monster’s fate will not change. It has already been decided. With that decision made, the monster is out of my head,” Guttenberg wrote. He said he will think of the gunman only two more times — when he watches him being sentenced and “when I read news reporting of the prison justice that he will eventually receive.”

    The gunman’s attorneys say he is not expected to speak. He apologized in court last year after pleading guilty to the murders and attempted murders — but families told reporters they found the apology self-serving and aimed at garnering sympathy.

    That plea set the stage for a three-month penalty trial that ended Oct. 13 with the jury voting 9-3 for a death sentence — jurors said those voting for life believed the gunman is mentally ill and should be spared. Under Florida law, a death sentence requires unanimity.

    Following the trial, Ilan and Lori Alhadeff, whose 14-year-old daughter, Alyssa, was killed in the shooting, called the jury’s recommendation “a stain on this world that we live in.”

    “I’m disgusted with our legal system. I’m disgusted with those jurors,” Ilan Alhadeff said. “That you can allow 17 dead and 17 others shot and wounded and not give the death penalty? What do we have the death penalty for?”

    “The jurors let us down,” he said.

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  • Jury hears closing arguments in sentencing trial for Parkland school shooter

    Jury hears closing arguments in sentencing trial for Parkland school shooter

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    Jury hears closing arguments in sentencing trial for Parkland school shooter – CBS News


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    A Florida jury will decide whether the convicted gunman in the Parkland school massacre should receive the death sentence after hearing closing arguments in his sentencing trial Tuesday. David Weinstein, a partner at Jones Walker LLP, and a former federal prosecutor, joined CBS News to discuss the trial.

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  • Watch Live: Closing arguments begin in the penalty trial of the Parkland school shooter

    Watch Live: Closing arguments begin in the penalty trial of the Parkland school shooter

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    Warning: This video may contain strong language and violent content that some may find disturbing.

    Closing arguments began Tuesday in the penalty trial of the man who has admitted to one of the nation’s deadliest school shootings. Seventeen people were killed and 17 others wounded in the Feb. 14, 2018 shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida.

    The seven-man, five-woman jury will have to decide if Nikolas Cruz, now 24, will get the death penalty or life without parole. He pleaded guilty in 2021. 

    The jury must be unanimous on at least one count for the admitted killer to get the death sentence.

    The trial started in July after months of delays because of the COVID-19 pandemic. During months of testimony, the defense has argued the shooter suffered from brain damage because his birth mother drank heavily during pregnancy. He was adopted at birth by a couple who later also adopted his half-brother. Witnesses, including his half-sister, testified to his birth mother’s substance abuse and to his history of violent behavior.

    Prosecutors argued he suffers from antisocial personality disorder and knew what he was doing. They focused their case on the shooting itself, including taking the jury to the largely untouched high school campus to retrace his steps.

    The jury also heard from the families of victims and from the shooter himself, via video of jailhouse interviews with a forensic psychiatrist and a neuropsychologist. He shared graphic details with the two experts, including about his preparations and memories of the massacre itself.

    Debbi Hixon, whose husband, athletic director Chris Hixon, was killed during the mass shooting, told CBS Miami she is glad the trial is “near an end.”

    “Having a death sentence will bring some justice and send a message this is intolerable,” she said. 

    Deliberations are expected to start Wednesday.

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