Suspect in El Paso Shooting Indicted on Capital Murder Charge

Share:
People pray and pay their respects at the makeshift memorial for victims of the shooting that left a total of 22 people dead at the Cielo Vista Mall Walmart in El Paso, Texas.

People pray and pay their respects at the makeshift memorial for victims of the shooting that left a total of 22 people dead at the Cielo Vista Mall Walmart in El Paso, Texas. (Mark Ralston/AFP/Getty Images)

September 12, 2019

The suspect in the mass shooting at an El Paso, Texas, Walmart that left 22 dead and dozens wounded was indicted on a capital murder charge Thursday.  

Patrick Crusius, a 21-year-old white male, is facing the death penalty or life imprisonment without parole if found guilty. He is on suicide watch and is being held without bond in the El Paso County Detention Center. Jaime Esparza, the district attorney for El Paso, said he will seek the death penalty.

The grand jury decision comes more than a month after a gunman entered a busy Walmart on a Saturday morning carrying an AK-47 assault rifle. After he was arrested, the defendant told authorities he was targeting Mexicans, according to an affidavit, and wanted to shoot as many as possible. FRONTLINE reporters were in El Paso in the aftermath of the shooting for an upcoming documentary.

Authorities are investigating whether a hate-filled manifesto, posted online minutes before the first shots were fired in the Walmart, is linked to the suspect. The 2,300-word screed states the attack was spurred by the “Hispanic invasion of Texas” and warned that whites will be replaced by foreigners.

The Department of Justice is treating the massacre as a domestic terrorism case and is weighing a possible hate crime connection. Prosecution under domestic terrorism may be onerous — there is no specific domestic terrorism law in the federal criminal code. 

The charge comes on the heels of a series of sweeping laws that loosen gun restrictions in Texas. Starting Sept. 1, Texas school districts can no longer prohibit licensed gun owners from storing firearms or ammunition in vehicles on a school parking lot. In addition, landlords and homeowners cannot prohibit residents from lawfully carrying firearms or ammunition on the property. A total of nine firearm laws were passed in the state this month.  

A total of 29 people died in mass shootings in Texas in August. Shortly after the El Paso massacre, a gunman in Odessa started indiscriminately shooting at cars, killing seven. It was the 38th mass shooting in the United States this year.

Last month, the Texas Tribune reported that the Walmart suspect bought his assault weapon online from Romania and a thousand rounds of ammunition from Russia. El Paso police had previously said that the alleged gunman purchased the AK-47 used in the massacre legally. The details come from an internal Texas Department of Public Safety report obtained by the Tribune.

The report also notes that the suspect “was surprised no one challenged him or shot him” when he walked into the Walmart openly carrying an assault weapon.


Marcia Robiou

Marcia Robiou, Hollyhock Filmmaker-in-Residence, FRONTLINE

Twitter:

@MarciaRobiou

More Stories

U.S. ‘Virtually Never Held Anyone Accountable’ for Civilian Deaths in Afghanistan War, Former White House Official Says
A new FRONTLINE series probes mistakes behind the U.S. failure in Afghanistan — including errant raids and other military operations that repeatedly killed Afghan civilians, and for which, according to former deputy national security adviser and retired Lt. Gen. Douglas Lute, ‘we virtually never held anyone accountable.’
April 11, 2023
The Fight Over the Abortion Pill Mifepristone and the Financial Impact of Abortion Access
The battle over abortion in America continues to escalate, with competing rulings from two different courts over abortion pills. FRONTLINE looks at the latest developments and the potential implications for people trying to access abortions.
April 10, 2023
What the Wisconsin Supreme Court Election Could Mean for the 2024 Election, Gerrymandered Maps and Abortion
FRONTLINE takes a closer look at the potential state- and national-level ramifications of Wisconsin Supreme Court’s judicial election.
April 7, 2023
Remembering Marian Marzyński (1937-2023)
Read FRONTLINE founder David Fanning's message about the passing of filmmaker Marian Marzyński and his legacy.
April 6, 2023