Prosecutor: LA airport gunman lacks remorse, holds to views

Mail.com

LOS ANGELES (AP) — The gunman who killed a federal security officer and wounded three other people during a rampage at Los Angeles International Airport has shown no remorse and clings to the beliefs that led to the violence in 2013, prosecutors said in advance of his sentencing Monday.

Paul Ciancia, 26, faces a mandatory life sentence in federal prison for the attack that crippled the nation’s second-busiest airport and disrupted air travel nationwide. Ciancia “plotted to commit mass murder at one of the nation’s foremost transportation hubs, murdered a beloved public servant in cold blood, seriously injured two other federal officers whom he shot and was attempting to kill, shot and injured a passenger who was traveling to attend a wedding, and terrified hundreds of other passengers and employees at Los Angeles International Airport who feared for their lives and the safety of their families,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald wrote in sentencing papers.  

Paul CianciaFitzgerald is asking that Ciancia be sentenced to an additional 60 years even though it would have no practical impact on his term. He also asked that the court not recommend that Ciancia, who has a combination of mental disorders and has been suicidal in the past, be sent to a federal medical facility instead of prison.

The probation office made that recommendation in a sealed presentencing report the prosecutor referenced, but Fitzgerald said it would be inappropriate given Ciancia’s crimes and the threat he poses to federal employees. That determination should be made by the federal Bureau of Prisons, he said.

Fitzgerald said the bureau needs to protect its “personnel from a prisoner who killed a federal official, attempted to kill many more, has shown no remorse over his conduct, and continues to harbor the same beliefs that led him to commit his crimes.”

Ciancia, 26, an unemployed motorcycle mechanic from New Jersey, pleaded guilty two months ago to murdering Transportation Security Administration Officer Gerardo Hernandez and to 10 other charges for the attack driven by his anger over airport security measures.

Ciancia shot and wounded TSA officers Tony Grigsby and James Speer as they ran from a screening checkpoint, and he struck passenger Brian Ludmer, who had been in the screening area, in the calf. Ludmer, a high school theater technical director at the time, wrote a letter to the court saying he could no longer walk without pain or work in the same way, and his outlook on life has been altered. He’s lost his sense of security, is anxious in crowds and feels “utterly vulnerable in the world around me.”

Ludmer has nothing to say to Ciancia, but he noted the crimes were another example where warning signs of a killer’s mental illness went unheeded and didn’t prevent him from buying an assault rifle. “I’m mad at the system that failed him. That is failing all of us,” Ludmer wrote. “If cases like his are passing by without any red flags, if guns and ammunition can be sold to people without even checking for any such flags, then of course someone like him would do something like this.”

The pale, thin Ciancia expected to die in the attack and left behind a note venting about unconstitutional searches. He wrote that the TSA treated Americans as terrorists, and he intended to strike fear in their hearts.

“I want it to always be in the back of your head just how easy it is to take a weapon to the beginning of your Nazi checkpoints,” he wrote in the note signed with his name and “Pissed-off Patriot.” ”If you want to play that game where you pretend that every American is a terrorist, you’re going to learn what a self-fulfilling prophecy is.”

Ciancia’s lawyers didn’t return requests for comment. Their sentencing brief was sealed, so it was unclear what pitch they would make to Judge Philip Gutierrez. Regardless of a sentence that carries no parole option, Ciancia apparently still thinks he may one day be released.

In a court filing, one of his lawyers noted: “Ciancia believes he will get out of prison when the revolution begins.”

https://www.mail.com/news/us/4735436-prosecutor-la-airport-gunman-lacks-remorse-holds-t.html#.7518-stage-hero1-10

7 thoughts on “Prosecutor: LA airport gunman lacks remorse, holds to views

  1. Paul CIA n CIA…… man i get tired of this SIMSONESQUE DISNEY BULLSHIT…………………………..

    1. A staged attack can’t be ruled out, but neither do I think we can automatically assume that this attack wasn’t real. There are a lot of people out there who absolutely detest the TSA. (Personally, I hate several other agencies even more than I hate the TSA, but regardless, all federal law enforcement is lowlife, anti-American scum.)

    2. Yes, the guarded 200yd luggage trolley dash with the “victim” on board for the sake of helicopter footage past onlookers is sickeningly comical. After being loaded aboard, the ambulance goes nowhere and everyone brushes off their hands. Photos of him laying handcuffed in a humanly impossible position add to the incredibility of the reported “event”. Just more legal precedent for interstate firearm travel restrictions and mental health firearm infringements.

  2. He doesn’t sound crazy to me. He sounds like a patriot who wanted to give his life in the fight for freedom. Unfortunately he caused some collateral damage, but I suspect that was unintentional. His intentions appear to have been pure.

    From the Navy’s “Barking SEALs” to the Army’s Delta Farce, this land is full of phonies who took an oath to “protect and defend the Constitution,” then turned around and started taking orders from the Constitution’s domestic enemies.

    Anyone can be “courageous” in the service of the powerful, especially when one is made to feel important and special through titles, privileges, and access to official secrets. But what takes REAL courage is to stand up against the odds, putting a fist in the face of a powerful totalitarian system with little hope for one’s personal survival.

    The System’s minions have no excuse. Not when violations of constitutional rights have become so egregious and widespread. If mass surveillance, civil asset forfeiture, gun restrictions, and other such routine practices in today’s “America” aren’t unconstitutional, then words have no meaning, and any written phrase or sentence can be “interpreted” to mean anything at all.

    The Bill of Rights guarantees privacy from unwarranted government intrusion. It does NOT guarantee security against criminals or terrorists (nor is such a guarantee possible), nor does it provide for a “balance between liberty and security.” Liberty IS security of the kind that matters most: security against government power-grabs.

  3. People still believe this actually happened??
    -Watch the witness (heavy set Spanish dude) who said it was the TSA uniformed guy popping off shots.
    -Watch for yourself as they roll a CPR Dummy down the road as if that is SOP instead of bringing an ambulance to the “victim”.
    -And finally, when that stooge got in front of the podium and stated, “That we practiced this SAME SCENARIO just yesterday.” And the “handlers” priceless reaction in the backround.

    This is just another False Flag portrayed as real for low IQ Americans.. A la Sandy Hook, Boston Bombing. Good thing they repealed the Smith-Mundt Act to bring YOU all this fakery.

  4. Seriously? Who gives a shit about this guy anymore? He’s been debunked as a false flag patsy by everyone. Anything new brought up by the MSM is utter nonsense.

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