Accused airport shooter Esteban Santiago indicted

UPDATE    Airport shooting suspect Esteban Santiago was formally charged Thursday with carrying out the fatal mass shooting on Jan. 6 at Fort Lauderdale’s international airport.  Santiago, 26, was indicted on 22 federal charges after prosecutors presented their evidence to a grand jury in Fort Lauderdale.Santiago was charged with five counts of causing death at an international airport, six counts of causing serious bodily injury at an international airport, five counts of causing death during a crime of violence and six counts of using a firearm during a crime of violence.

Santiago, an Iraq war veteran with a history of mental health problems, would face either life in federal prison or possibly the death penalty, if convicted. He is due back in federal court in Fort Lauderdale on Monday, when he is expected to plead not guilty to the charges against him.  The case has been assigned to U.S. District Judge Beth Bloom who usually holds court in Miami.  Since his arrest, Santiago has been locked up, in solitary confinement and under suicide watch, at the Broward County main jail in downtown Fort Lauderdale.

The grand jurors made special findings, required by law if prosecutors decide to seek the death penalty, regarding Santiago’s age, mental state and other factors. They found that Santiago caused “grave risk of death to other people and the crime involved “substantial planning and premeditation.”

Five people died and six others survived gunshot injuries in the shooting incident in the baggage carousel area in Terminal 2.  The five people who died were Mary Louise Amzibel, 69, of Dover, Delaware, Michael John Oehme, 57, of Council Bluffs, Iowa, Olga M. Woltering, 84, of Marietta, Ga., Shirley Wells Timmons, 70, of Senecaville, Ohio and Terry Michael Andres, 62, of Virginia Beach, Va., who are all named in the indictment.

The six people who were injured by gunfire, including Amzibel’s husband, Edward, Timmons’ husband, Steve, and Oehme’s wife, Kari, are identified only by their initials in the indictment.

Santiago confessed to planning the massacre and told investigators he traveled to South Florida to carry it out, according to court records and testimony. His motive remains unclear, though family members said he was mentally ill.

Investigators said they have not ruled out terrorism but they filed no terrorism-related charges against him. Santiago told agents he had visited online jihadi chat rooms and thought he was in contact with Islamic State terrorists but investigators have not yet confirmed if that is true.

In November, Santiago voluntarily agreed to enter a psychiatric hospital for treatment after he went to the FBI office in Anchorage, Alaska, where he lived at the time.  He asked for help and told agents that the U.S. government was controlling his mind and urging him to watch terrorist propaganda videos. Local police confiscated his gun and he was hospitalized for less than a week. His guns were returned to him one month before the fatal attack.

The case is being handled by prosecutors Ricardo Del Toro and Lawrence LaVecchio and Assistant Federal Public Defenders Robert Berube and Eric Cohen.

pmcmahon@sunsentinel.com

Source   www.sun-sentinel.com

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