Pittsburgh synagogue mass shooter Robert Bowers sentenced to death



The man who killed 11 congregants and wounded seven others at a Pittsburgh synagogue in 2018 was sentenced to death Thursday.

The formal sentence came one day after a jury had reached the unanimous decision to impose the death penalty on the perpetrator of the deadliest attack on Jews in U.S. history.

U.S. District Judge Robert Colville handed down the sentence to Robert Gregory Bowers, 50, a truck driver whose vicious antisemitism led him to shoot his way into a place of worship and target people for practicing their faith at the Tree of Life synagogue.

“I have nothing specific that I care to say to Mr. Bowers,” Colville said, before issuing the formal sentence. “I am however convinced there is nothing I could say to him that might be meaningful.”

Despite the judge’s sentence, it could be years before the shooter’s execution takes place, in light of the Department of Justice’s moratorium on capital punishment.

Federal jurors had decided Wednesday that the shooter would be sentenced to death, and the judge was then bound to impose their punishment. The panel had to be unanimous or else the shooter would have received life in prison without parole.

In June, the same jury found the gunman guilty on 63 criminal counts stemming from the attack and deemed him eligible for the death penalty after deliberating for five hours over two days. He had pleaded not guilty to those counts.

Armed with an assault rifle and three handguns, the shooter gunned down the victims during Saturday morning Sabbath services at synagogue in Pittsburgh’s Squirrel Hill neighborhood, considered a historic Jewish enclave.

Worshipers told MSNBC at the time that a circumcision celebration, known as a bris, was taking place when the first shots rang out. He surrendered only when he ran out of ammunition.

For months before the attack, the shooter repeatedly posted antisemitic messages and hate speech on social media.

Prosecutors pointed to that documented history of antisemitism throughout the trial, arguing it showed his intent to carry out the massacre, while the defense unsuccessfully tried to argue that mental illness and delusional beliefs were the root cause of the attack.

The three-week trial also included emotional testimonies from survivors, victims’ family members and police officers.

Loved ones of the victims and members of the local community, however, were torn over whether the shooter should be put to death, Jeffrey Finkelstein, the president and CEO of the Jewish Federation of Greater Pittsburgh, told reporters last month.

“There’s always different opinions,” Finkelstein said at the time.

Following the sentencing Wednesday, Carol Black, whose brother, 65-year-old Richard Gottfried, was killed in the attack, said that she believed the punishment decided by jurors fit the crime.

“When a horrendous crime is committed, it deserves the most severe penalty,” Black said.

The other victims killed in the attack were Joyce Fienberg, 75; Rose Mallinger, 97; Jerry Rabinowitz, 66; Cecil Rosenthal, 59; David Rosenthal, 54; Bernice Simon, 84; Sylvan Simon, 86; Daniel Stein, 71; Irving Younger, 69; and Melvin Wax, 87.

Death sentences are rare in the federal system. The last execution was carried out on Jan. 16, 2021, when triple murderer Dustin John Higgs died by lethal injection at U.S. Penitentiary, Terre Haute, a maximum security federal prison in Indiana. Just 50 executions have been carried out since 1927.


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