Roses brought to honor love on that Valentine’s Day in 2018 lay withered, their dried and cracked petals scattered across classroom floors still smeared with the blood of victims gunned down by a former student more than four years ago.
Bullet holes pocked walls, and shards of glass from windows shattered by gunfire crunched underfoot at Parkland’s Marjory Stoneman Douglas high school, where shooter Nikolas Cruz killed 14 students and three staff members.
Nothing had been changed, except for the removal of the victims’ bodies and some personal items.
Twelve jurors and 10 alternates who will decide whether Cruz gets the death penalty or life in prison made a rare visit to the massacre scene on Thursday, retracing Cruz’s steps through the three-story freshman building, known as Building 12.
After they left, a group of journalists was allowed in for a much quicker first public view. The sight was deeply unsettling.
Large pools of dried blood still stained classroom floors. A lock of dark hair rested on the floor where one of the victims’ bodies once lay. A single black rubber shoe was in a hallway. Browned rose petals were strewn across a hallway where six people died, and Valentines Day gifts, such as toy bears, and cards lay where they had tumbled in the havoc.
In classroom after classroom, open notebooks displayed uncompleted lessons. A blood-coated book called Tell Them We Remember sat atop a bullet-riddled desk in the classroom where a teacher, Ivy Schamis, taught students about the Holocaust.
A sign attached to a bulletin board read: “We will never forget.” Two students died there.
In the classroom of the English teacher Dara Hass, where the most students were gunned down, there were essays about Malala Yousafzai, the Pakistani teenager shot by the Taliban for going to school, and who has since become a global advocate for education access for women and girls.
The door of Room 1255, teacher Stacey Lippel’s classroom, was pushed open – like others to signify that Cruz shot into it. Hanging on a wall inside was a sign reading: “No Bully Zone”. The creative writing assignment for the day was on the whiteboard: “How to write the perfect love letter.”
And still hanging on the wall of a second-floor hallway was a quote from James Dean: “Dream as if you’ll live forever, live as if you’ll die today.”
In slain teacher Scott Beigel’s geography classroom, a laptop was still open on his desk. Student assignments comparing the tenets of Christianity and Islam remained, some graded, some not.
Prosecutors, who rested their case after the jury’s tour, hope the visit will help prove that Cruz’s actions were cold, calculated, heinous and cruel; created a great risk of death to many people and “interfered with a government function” – all aggravating factors under Florida’s capital punishment law.
Under Florida court rules, neither the judge nor the attorneys were allowed to speak to the jurors – and the jurors weren’t allowed to converse with each other – when they retraced the path Cruz took on 14 February 2018, as he moved from floor to floor, firing down hallways and into classrooms.
Before the tour, the jurors had already seen surveillance video of the shooting and photographs of its aftermath.
The building has been sealed and the Broward county school district plans to demolish it whenever prosecutors approve. For now, it is a court exhibit.
Cruz, now 23, pleaded guilty in October to 17 counts of first-degree murder.
After jurors returned to the courtroom on Thursday from the rare crime scene visit, the mothers of two victims testified that the massacre permanently cast a pall over not only every Valentine’s Day but other important family celebrations.
Helena Ramsay, 17, died on her father’s birthday. “That day will never be a celebration and can never be the same for him,” her mother, Anne Ramsay, said.
Hui Wang, whose 15-year-old son Peter was killed, said the shooting occurred the day before lunar new year. A planned celebration was canceled that year and every year since then. “This day of unity became a day that hurts the most,” she said.
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