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A Texas As a result of the 2019 attack in 2019, aimed at Hispanic buyers at El -Paso Walmart, guilty of killing the murder, which will finish the case.
Patrick Crucins are expected to find himself guilty of killing capital on Monday and will receive a life sentence in prison without the possibility of parole for racist mass firing near the US border and Mexico on August 3, 2019. El Paso Mono Montoye, Democrat district prosecutor, said he offered Cruice an agreement last month to avoid the death penalty on state charges.
Counts have already been sentenced to 90 in a row in a federal court after the guilt of the hate and accusations of weapons in 2023. Federal prosecutors also removed the death penalty from the table as part of the Baden administration.
The militant is expected to take place in Texas. Crucins were originally arrested by local authorities and will be transferred to the Texas Department of Criminal Justice if he was sentenced to state charges, the Federal Prison Bureau reports.
Shooter El Paso Walmart gets 90 lifetime for the attack, which killed 23
The woman is displayed in the picture when she looks at the improvised memorial at the mass shooting site in the shopping mall on Tuesday, August 6, 2019, in El -Pasa, Texas. (AP)
Crucia was 21 years old when the authorities say he was traveling for more than 10 hours from his house in the suburban Dallas to El Pas and opened fire at Walmart.
Prosecutors said the Crucins carried the headphones to turn off the shooting sound when he started firing the AK style rifle in the parking lot. He then moved to the store and continued to shoot, turning the buyers in the shore near the entrance, where the nine were killed before shooting at people who were at the box office and in the aisles.
When he left the store, he fired at a passing car, killing an elderly man and injuring his wife.
Crups was taken into custody soon and confessed to shooting to officers.
In the placement of the internet exile messages to the shooting, the circles, which is white, stated that the massacre “was in response to a Spanish invasion of Texas.” He also claimed that the Latinos were going to take over the government and the economy.
The “invasion” language continues after shooting El Pas Walmart
In this photo, on August 12, 2019, mourning will visit an improvised memorial near Walmart in El Paso, Texas. (AP)
His reports on social media included rhetoric about national immigration debate. He expressed support for Presidential Policy Donald Trump, who is engaged in immigration, including the president’s plan to build a wall on the southern border. The Republican president was at his first term at the time.
After shooting the croops said the officers that he is aimed at the Mexicans.
People who died in the shooting ranged from 15-year-old to grandparents. The victims were immigrants and Mexican citizens who crossed the US border in ordinary purchases.
“Racism is what I always wanted to think that it did not exist. Obviously, it was so,” said Jessica Coco Garcia, who suffered his feet wounds, but resumed, in a speech across the road from the county, where the Crucins took place after the shooting. The husband was killed in the incident.
Prosecutor Joe Spencer, who represents Crucins, called the Crucins “a broken brain” on Thursday. Spencer said Crucia was diagnosed with a schizo -affective disorder that could include hallucinations, delusions and mood swings.
The memorial that honors the victims of Walmart 2019 mass shooting is drawn on Tuesday, March 25, 2025, in El -Pasa, Texas. (AP)
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Montoy said he offered a guilt agreement, as most of the victim’s relatives sought to complete the case, although he acknowledged that not all families agreed. He said he supported the death penalty and believes that the Crucins deserves it, but the case may not go to court until 2028 if his office continued to continue the death penalty.
When he took over in January, Montoy became the fourth prosecutor of the county who had been watching the case for almost six years. One of his predecessors resigned in 2022 under pressure on the case. Montoya said the Covid-19 pandemic also caused delay in the end of the case.
Stephanie Melendes, whose father David Johnson died, guarding her wife and granddaughter, said that she initially wanted the circles to receive the death penalty before he wanted to end because the case was over because she continued.
“I just wanted it to end,” Melendes said. “I was doing everything that was going through everything. I was doing in court for hours. I was doing with briefings that happened after that, and it was just the same conversation again and again. We were just ready to do it, because, frankly, it doesn’t matter what the injury is over and over again.”
The Associated Press contributed to this report.