Feds will NOT seek death penalty for El Paso Walmart gunman Patrick Crusius who ... trends now

Feds will NOT seek death penalty for El Paso Walmart gunman Patrick Crusius who ... trends now
Feds will NOT seek death penalty for El Paso Walmart gunman Patrick Crusius who ... trends now

Feds will NOT seek death penalty for El Paso Walmart gunman Patrick Crusius who ... trends now

A Texas man who shot and killed 23 people at an El Paso Walmart will not face the federal death penalty, prosecutors announced on Tuesday.

Patrick Crusius, now 24, opened fire at the supermarket in August 2019, having posted a slew of racist material online.

He will go on trial on 90 hate crime charges in January 2024, but will not be federally executed, after Joe Biden campaigned to end the federal death penalty and the attorney general instigated a moratorium in July 2021.

Crusius could, however, still be executed by the state of Texas. 

His lawyers argued that their client has diagnosed mental disabilities that should be a 'red flag' for prosecutors.

They said Crusius 'has been diagnosed with severe, lifelong neurological and mental disabilities' and was treated with antipsychotic medication following his arrest moments after the massacre in El Paso.

Jail mental health staff found the then-21-year-old to be in a 'psychotic state.'

 Patrick Crusius 'has been diagnosed with severe, lifelong neurological and mental disabilities', his attorneys wrote in a court filing

Crusius' mental health conditions, which have not been previously reported, were revealed in a request by his lawyers for more time to investigate these 'mitigating themes' because of the coronavirus pandemic.

Crusius' mental health conditions, which have not been previously reported, were revealed in a request by his lawyers for more time to investigate

Crusius' mental health conditions, which have not been previously reported, were revealed in a request by his lawyers for more time to investigate 

'Counsel must gather all of the information necessary to inform experts who will then be in a position to interview Mr. Crusius at the jail and render opinions regarding his mental status at the time of the shooting,' the motion said, CBS DFW reports. 'As of now, no experts can accomplish these things, as to date, they have either been under stay-at-home orders from the Government or their employers, or they are in a high-risk category for COVID and cannot travel to meet Mr. Crusius.' 

The court record also states Crusius was in special education for much of his schooling, but does not elaborate on his mental health. A lawyer for his family, Christopher Ayres, declined to comment.

Crusius was arrested soon after the August 3 shooting. Police later said he confessed to driving to border city from his home near Dallas to target Mexicans. Soon before the attack, he posted a racist screed online that railed

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