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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
National
Paula McMahon

Airport shooter wasn't 'really thinking about it' when he killed 5, he says in pleading guilty

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. _ Esteban Santiago gave his first public statement Wednesday about why he killed five people and injured six others in the January 2017 mass shooting at Fort Lauderdale's main airport.

"Umm, I don't know. I wasn't really thinking about it at the moment. A lot of things were going on in my mind. Messages," Santiago said.

Santiago, an Iraq War veteran who has been diagnosed with schizophrenia, was found legally competent to plead guilty after he was examined by a mental health expert.

He spoke haltingly as he tried to answer the key question from U.S. District Judge Beth Bloom, posed after he pleaded guilty to 11 charges linked to the shooting.

"Why did you do what you did?" the judge asked Santiago during the hearing in federal court in Miami.

Santiago, 28, who is locked up under tight security at the Federal Detention Center in downtown Miami, knows what he did and has expressed remorse, according to his defense team and psychologist Heather Holmes, who found him legally competent.

Since a change in medication stabilized his condition, Santiago has been spending his time in prison reading the Harry Potter series of books and sometimes listening to NPR, Holmes testified.

Santiago is allowed to phone his mother about every two weeks to hear family news, including updates on his toddler son, who lives with the child's mother in Alaska, Holmes told the judge.

Federal prosecutors have agreed not to seek the death penalty under the terms of the plea agreement Santiago signed Monday. Instead, Santiago will be sentenced later this year to five life terms plus 120 years, if the judge signs off on the full terms of the agreement between the prosecution and defense at his Aug. 17 sentencing.

The judge said she would wait to hear from family members of the victims, and survivors of the attack, before making a final decision on whether to accept his guilty pleas and impose his punishment.

Santiago has admitted he fired 15 bullets, aiming at victims' heads and bodies in the crowded baggage carousel area at lunchtime on Jan. 6, 2017, in Terminal 2 at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport.

A total of 11 people were killed or injured.

Santiago took a one-way flight from Anchorage, Alaska, where he lived at the time, to Fort Lauderdale. The only item he checked was a hard-sided firearm case that contained a 9 mm handgun and two loaded ammunition clips.

After picking up the weapon from a Delta Air Lines employee, he loaded the gun in a restroom and began firing at the first people he encountered as he walked out at 12:52 p.m.

"Santiago pulled out the firearm from his waistband, took aim, and fired several rounds of ammunition at the passengers who were standing in the terminal, aiming at their heads and bodies," according to the plea agreement. "At one point, Santiago ran out of ammunition and reloaded a second magazine into the firearm. He then fired all the rounds in the second magazine at his victims."

After the two-minute attack, Santiago ran out of bullets. He lay down on the floor and surrendered to a Broward sheriff's deputy.

Killed in the rampage were: Mary Louise Amzibel, 69; Michael Oehme, 56; Olga Weltering, 84; Shirley Timmons, 70; and Terry Andres, 62.

Four men and two women, identified only by their initials and gender in court records, were seriously injured. Some of them were the spouses of the murder victims.

Several of the survivors sustained gunshot wounds to the arm, neck and shoulder.

Timmons' husband, Steve, "suffered a gunshot wound to the head resulting in the loss of his left eye and the excision (removal) of part of his skull in order to remove damaged brain tissue," court records show. And Amzibel's husband, Edward, "was shot in the face and required multiple surgeries in order to reconstruct his sinuses, palate and jaw with metal parts."

In new information revealed Monday, prosecutors said Santiago researched the layout of the Los Angeles International Airport three days before the mass shooting. Authorities did not explain why he used his cellphone to look up a map of the layout of LAX or why he bought a ticket to South Florida that same day. The defense declined to comment.

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