Lodi News-Sentinel

Florida airport shooter to plead guilty

- By Paula McMahon

MIAMI — Esteban Santiago, the man who confessed to fatally shooting five people and wounding six at Fort Lauderdale’s internatio­nal airport, has agreed to plead guilty and spend the rest of his life in federal prison.

Prosecutor­s have accepted his offer and are not seeking the death penalty. But the judge wants Santiago to first undergo a mental health evaluation to make sure he knows what he is doing and is legally competent to plead guilty.

The decision should take a very expensive and potentiall­y long and emotional trial — followed by years of appeals — off the table.

Santiago’s documented history of severe mental illness, the fact that he went to the FBI and asked for help two months before committing the mass shooting, his willingnes­s to plead guilty and his military service in the Iraq War were likely among the top factors that affected the decision, experts said.

“Mr. Santiago is remorseful and will plead guilty,” Assistant Federal Public Defender Eric Cohen told the judge.

Santiago, 28, had pleaded not guilty to a 22-count indictment in the Jan. 6, 2017 mass shooting at Fort Lauderdale Hollywood Internatio­nal Airport. Ten of those charges carry a maximum punishment of death or life in federal prison.

Shackled and dressed in beige scrubs, Santiago wore his hair in a short ponytail and spoke only briefly in court. His leg visibly trembled under the defense table.

“Yes, Your Honor,” Santiago said when the judge asked if he’d had enough time to discuss everything with his attorneys, Cohen and Chief Assistant Federal Public Defender Hector Dopico. He said he had no questions.

His change-of-plea hearing is expected to be scheduled in the next several weeks in federal court in Miami, after a mental health expert examines Santiago and issues a confidenti­al report.

Both sides are due back in court May 23 for a competency hearing with U.S. District Beth Bloom. If the judge is satisfied that Santiago is mentally competent, she would then allow him to plead guilty.

“That is the court’s utmost concern,” Bloom said of Santiago’s competency and ability to understand the rights he is giving up.

Santiago is locked up in the Federal Detention Center in downtown Miami and has been prescribed medication to treat his diagnosis of schizophre­nia.

He was briefly hospitaliz­ed for psychiatri­c care in Alaska in November 2016, two months before the shooting. He had driven to the FBI office in Anchorage, asked for help and told agents he was hearing voices and thought the government was controllin­g his mind.

After Santiago surrendere­d at the airport, FBI agents said he confessed and told them he was “programmed” to act under government mind control. Later in the interview, he said he was inspired by the Islamic State extremist group, but authoritie­s said no terrorism links have been found.

Federal prosecutor­s rarely seek a death sentence and it is even rarer for jurors to endorse their requests.

Only 61 people are on federal death row, according to statistics compiled by the Death Penalty Informatio­n Center. Since Congress reinstated the death penalty in 1988, only three prisoners have been executed — in 2001 and 2003.

 ?? AMY BETH BENNETT/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL FILE PHOTOGRAPH ?? Esteban Santiago is taken from the Broward County main jail as he is transporte­d to the federal courthouse Jan. 9, 2017 in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Santiago will plead guilty to fatally shooting five people and wounding six at Fort Lauderdale’s airport.
AMY BETH BENNETT/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL FILE PHOTOGRAPH Esteban Santiago is taken from the Broward County main jail as he is transporte­d to the federal courthouse Jan. 9, 2017 in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Santiago will plead guilty to fatally shooting five people and wounding six at Fort Lauderdale’s airport.

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