Man charged in Jewish community center shootings to plead guilty today
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Furrow is shown with an ATF agent in this undated file photo
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From CNN Correspondent Charles Feldman
and Producer Stanley Wilson
LOS ANGELES, California (CNN) -- Buford O. Furrow Jr., the accused
shooter in a hate crime that left a postal carrier dead and five others wounded
at a Jewish community center in 1999, will plead guilty to murder and other charges
Wednesday, U.S. Attorney spokesman Thom Mrozek said.
Because of the plea agreement, Furrow will not face the death penalty but
will serve a term of life in prison without parole, a law enforcement source
told CNN.
Furrow, a 38-year-old avowed white supremacist, was indicted by a federal
grand jury last year on charges of murder and firearms violations stemming from
the killing of U.S. Postal carrier Joseph Santos Ileto.
Furrow expressed no regrets
According to the indictment, Furrow expressed no regrets over the August
1999 shooting death of Ileto and the wounding of five people at the North
Valley Jewish Community Center.
In the 61-page indictment, Furrow told authorities he would not have
killed Ileto if the Filipino-American mail carrier had been white. Furrow also
said he targeted the Jewish Community Center because of his hatred of Jews.
A federal grand jury returned a 16-count criminal indictment against
Furrow that included charges he committed an act of terrorism and that he was
motivated by religious and racial hatred.
In addition to murder charges stemming from the Ileto killing, he faced
a dozen other charges including hate crimes violations stemming from the
shooting rampage at the North Valley Jewish Community Center's day-care
facility west of downtown Los Angeles.
The three federal counts included:
Murder of a federal employee of the United States which carries a
potential death sentence.
Use of a firearm during a crime of violence causing death, which also
carries a potential death sentence.
Possessing a firearm in violation of his parole as a convicted felon --
he served five months for threatening two mental hospital nurses with a knife.
The shooting rampage at the community center occurred August 10, 1999, as
dozens of children were playing. Five people were wounded, including three
young children. All five survived and have since recovered from there wounds.
Furrow then allegedly carjacked a sedan belonging to a waitress and
killed Ileto, a Filipino-born postman. Federal authorities called his murder a
hate crime, inspired by the victim's race or nationality.
The gunman eluded a massive manhunt in Los Angeles, abandoned the stolen
car and took a taxi to Las Vegas -- an $800 trip -- where he turned himself in
to FBI authorities the next day. Authorities say Furrow admitted shooting
Ileto and wounding five people at the Jewish community center as a "wake up
call" to anti-Semites and hate groups.
It is unclear whether newly-elected Los Angeles District Attorney Steve
Cooley will try to seek the death penalty on other related charges against
Furrow if the case is brought to state court.
RELATED STORIES:
Boy who almost died in L.A. shooting goes home
September 23, 1999
5-year-old victim in Jewish center shooting released in good condition
September 21, 1999
Suspect in L.A. shooting spree pleads not guilty in murder
August 30, 1999
Feds charge Jewish Center shootings suspect with killing postman
August 19, 1999
RELATED SITES:
Temple Beth Torah of Granada Hills CA
The Los Angeles Police Department
Federal Bureau of Investigation
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