Speaking deliberately and without emotion, Floyd apologized for his conduct and said he will regret what he did for the rest of his life. Brown said Floyd had been taking medication at the jail throughout the trial to help him sleep at night, and the medication caused his client's calm appearance in court.
Evidence at trial showed that Floyd spent time drinking and reflecting on the sorry state of his life before he went on his crime spree. He entered Albertson's around a. Floyd spent nearly four years in the Marine Corps before his abuse of alcohol led to an honorable discharge in July He had trouble holding down jobs after that and moved into a guest home behind his parents' house two days before the shootings.
After his arrest, Floyd told police he always had wondered what it would be like to shoot someone. On Thursday, as the Floyd jurors deliberated his punishment, another jury in the building returned a death sentence against a man who stabbed and strangled his ex-wife in front of their 3-year-old daughter. Floyd's attorneys asked Sobel to sequester jurors in their case to prevent the panel from being influenced by the outcome of the other case. Sobel denied the request but said he would tell the jury not to read any print media or watch any television news when they went home that night.
Court filings show a man arrested after a rampage in June told police he had visions of shooting people. The man accused of killing four people at a Las Vegas supermarket in June told police the rampage was the culmination of a lifelong fantasy. I've just always wanted to know what it's like to shoot someone," year-old Zane Floyd told a police detective after he was arrested on June 3 outside the Albertson's, now Raley's, at Sahara Avenue and Valley View Boulevard. This and other comments made by Floyd are included in recent court filings by prosecutors in the capital murder case scheduled for trial March 6.
Floyd also repeatedly portrayed himself as a loser, expressed his love for his shotgun, lamented that he was forced out of the Marines and said he decided to act on his violent fantasies after returning home from a disastrous night at the blackjack tables.
Patricia Kirby, who has interviewed serial killers and mass murderers as an academic and during her 20 years in law enforcement, said Floyd has much in common with those accused of similar crimes. Authorities allege Floyd entered the supermarket dressed in camouflage and used a shotgun to fatally shoot four people.
He was arrested outside the store after police persuaded him to drop the shotgun he had been holding to his head. Defense attorneys are not disputing the general allegations of what occurred at Albertson's. They instead plan to focus on as yet undisclosed factors that they say compelled Floyd to commit the crime.
Deputy Public Defender Curtis Brown on Friday declined to discuss Floyd's statements in detail, saying any comments would be particularly inappropriate while defense attorneys are seeking a change of venue on the grounds that massive publicity has caused the public to reach certain conclusions in advance of the trial. Defense attorneys are seeking separate trials on the events at Albertson's and the reported rape of an outcall dancer about an hour before the shootings. In opposing this effort, prosecutors say the two events are inextricably linked.
These fantasies are described in statements made by Floyd and the dancer, an Oregon native whom Floyd summoned to his parents' home on Oakey Boulevard after a night of drinking and gambling.
The year-old woman worked for Love Bound outcall service, one of dozens of local businesses that dispatch dancers to strip for customers, typically in a hotel room. The woman told police Floyd grabbed a shotgun immediately after she arrived at his home about 4 a. She said Floyd told her she was going to help him fulfill "a sick fantasy inside of his head. She said he raped and terrorized her for about an hour, then donned combat boots and his Marine Corps camouflage shirt and pants.
He placed a bathrobe over his clothing, and before leaving the home told the woman he planned to kill the first 19 people that he encountered. About 15 minutes later, Floyd walked into the Albertson's about a half-mile from his home and began firing. Four employees were slain, and another was seriously wounded. After he surrendered and was placed in a patrol car, Floyd gave officers a taped statement in which he described the carnage in ugly detail. He also reflected on the events that caused him to snap.
He told officers he had once again lost all his money playing blackjack the night before. The blackjack table's calling me, man," he said. Floyd said he left the casino, went home, drank a few beers and reflected on the sorry state of his life.
You know, I'm a expletive loser. I'm a bouncer, and I just moved back in with my parents," said Floyd, who worked part time in a local bar and had recently been fired from his job as a security guard. Floyd told the officers that amid this introspection a question popped into his head.
He later told a homicide detective this was not the first time he contemplated this question. He traced this fascination back to early childhood, when he saw his first war movie. That's the only reason I joined the Marine Corps," he said. Floyd was no more successful as a Marine than he was as a civilian. Though he served four years and was honorably discharged in July , he said the Marines had made it clear he was not welcome to re-enlist. It would have been denied. Floyd said he wanted to kill himself as he left the supermarket and encountered police, but could not do it.
Though he hoped police would shoot him, he said he had too much respect for law enforcement to draw their fire by pointing the weapon at them. Kirby, the former FBI profiler who now teaches at the College of Notre Dame of Maryland, said others who commit multiple homicides share Floyd's desire to be shot down.
Their name is remembered," said Kirby, who holds degrees in social psychology, criminology and sociology-justice. Kirby said Floyd exhibits many of the common traits of people accused of committing multiple homicides. Typically, these people begin to develop fantasies as children, often to cope with some psychological problem or an unpleasant reality.
They fantasize violence and death," Kirby said. These individuals usually are able to control the fantasies through their teen years, then begin to act them out while in their early 20s. Many of the multiple killers Kirby has interviewed refer to themselves as losers and underachievers.
Often, they see the military as a means to gain some validation, and at first the uniform grants them a sense of power they had not previously enjoyed. Yet dishonorable discharges are common among this group, as they replicate the same pattern of failure they had hoped to escape.
The violent fantasies nurtured since childhood generally are put into action in response to a triggering event of some sort, often involving a member of the opposite sex, Kirby said. Authorities have said Floyd and his girlfriend had a disagreement at the Rio the night of the rampage, when she wanted to leave and he did not. But prosecutors have described this as more of a spat than a full-blown argument.
Kirby said Floyd's decision to don camouflage before trekking to Albertson's likely reflects the clothing he wore in the bloody fantasy he had cultivated since childhood. They have gone over and over it so many times in their mind that when they finally act it out it is very familiar to them. Rape charge to be added against accused gunman. A man accused of gunning down four people in a supermarket also raped an escort service employee an hour before the rampage and told her he planned to kill the first 19 people he saw, prosecutors said Monday.
Zane Floyd, 23, was to be arraigned Monday on four counts of murder and one count of attempted murder, but prosecutor Bill Koot asked for a delay until Wednesday to allow for time to add sexual assault charges. Killer turns store into a war zone. With four grocery store workers already shot to death, a fifth wounded and others fleeing or hiding, the killer apparently ran out of victims, an investigator said Friday.
Kevin Manning said. A camouflage-clad man roamed through a supermarket blasting workers with a shotgun early yesterday, killing four people and critically wounding a fifth before being arrested by officers who talked him out of taking his own life.
Police said Zane Floyd, 23, was armed with a shotgun when he was taken into custody without incident outside the store. Ex-marine kills 4 in supermarket shooting spree. The first blast came suddenly, ripping through a supermarket clerk tending to shopping carts just inside the front door.
Then the muscular man with a shaved head began chasing his panicking victims. One by one, workers were shot at close range as they fled for their lives, their blood smearing the polished aisles of the Albertsons store. By the time the carnage ended early Thursday, four employees were dead and another was critically wounded.
LAS VEGAS -- A camouflage clad man armed with a pump-action shotgun roamed through a suburban supermarket before sunrise Thursday, killing four employees and wounding a fifth. Police arrested him in the parking lot after talking him out of taking his own life. Las Vegas police were alerted by a call from inside the Albertsons supermarket as shots were being fired. Zane Floyd, 23, a part-time bouncer at a sports bar who was honorably discharged from the Marine Corps in Camp Pendleton less than a year ago, was arrested for investigation of murder and attempted murder.
Seven witnesses recount a man's behavior and what happened the day of a shooting at a local grocery store. Seven witnesses gave harrowing accounts Wednesday of how they survived the bloody morning when a shotgun-wielding man stormed into a local Albertson's and killed four employees. The most dramatic testimony came from year-old Zachary Emenegger, who provided jurors with a step-by-step narration of the security videotape that captured his confrontation with murder suspect Zane Floyd.
The gunman -- who defense attorneys acknowledge was Floyd -- chased Emenegger around a produce island and shot him in the back of the right shoulder. He then stood over the victim, who just minutes earlier had been stocking shelves, and fired another blast that struck Emenegger in the arm. Emenegger, now employed outside the grocery business, has undergone extensive rehabilitation and multiple surgeries. He showed no obvious infirmities and maintained his composure throughout his testimony.
Boulware noted that such a potentially fatal cocktail has never been tested in the country. No one has been executed in Nevada since Late last week, lawyers for the makers of ketamine sent a cease-and-desist letter to Attorney General Aaron Ford, whose office represents the prison system, demanding that the state return 50 vials of the drug.
They asked for an inspection of Ely State Prison, where the execution would take place, along with a four-day hearing with testimony from expert witnesses in early October. Contact David Ferrara at dferrara reviewjournal. Follow randompoker on Twitter. A man convicted of the killings of three teenagers in North Las Vegas was ordered Tuesday to spend the rest of his life in prison. Though Ruggs did not attend a morning court hearing Wednesday, records show that he pleaded not guilty in the case.
A man pleaded guilty Tuesday to shooting and critically wounding Las Vegas police officer Shay Mikalonis at the end of a Black Lives Matter demonstration last year.
Police were called just after 10 a. Monday to assist marshals after someone called in a bomb threat to the courthouse, which houses both District and Justice courts. Although the minimum sentence for a charge of DUI resulting in death is two years, people convicted in recent cases have received prison terms of at least six years.
A man convicted of the killings of three teenagers in North Las Vegas was ordered Tuesday to spend the rest of his life in prison. Though Ruggs did not attend a morning court hearing Wednesday, records show that he pleaded not guilty in the case. A man pleaded guilty Tuesday to shooting and critically wounding Las Vegas police officer Shay Mikalonis at the end of a Black Lives Matter demonstration last year. Police were called just after 10 a.
Monday to assist marshals after someone called in a bomb threat to the courthouse, which houses both District and Justice courts. Although the minimum sentence for a charge of DUI resulting in death is two years, people convicted in recent cases have received prison terms of at least six years. Experts say the deadly crash involving Henry Ruggs is one of hundreds where speed, impairment and an increase in dangerous driving are leading causes.
The YouTube video, posted Sept. Zane Floyd Nevada Department of Corrections. By signing up you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service. Unsubscribe at any time.
0コメント