San Diego

Poway Synagogue Shooting Suspect Pleads Not Guilty to New Charges

Earnest's parents attended the brief hearing but did not seem to exchange eye contact with their 19-year-old son

The sole suspect in a fatal shooting at a Poway, California synagogue pleaded not guilty to federal hate crimes and dozens of other charges Tuesday.

John T. Earnest of San Diego's Rancho Peñasquitos neighborhood, entered the plea a week after a grand jury returned a 113-count indictment that largely mirrors a complaint filed shortly after his arrest on April 27.

The indictment added four counts of using and carrying a firearm during commission of a violent crime. It also includes charges for the March 24 arson of the Dar-ul-Arqam Mosque Escondido. 

The suspect's parents attended the brief hearing but did not seem to exchange eye contact with their 19-year-old son. The suspect spoke only once, to acknowledge his name.

Two days after the shooting, the family said their son's actions "were informed by people we do not know, and ideas we do not hold."

"To our great shame, he is now part of the history of evil that has been perpetrated on Jewish people for centuries," they said in their only public statement since the shooting.

The suspect looked blankly ahead as one of his attorneys argued that shackles should be removed from his wrists, ankles and waist during the hearing. Peter Ko, a prosecutor, countered, "He tried to commit mass murder," and the judge, Michael Berg, denied the defense request.

Earnest also faces charges of murder and attempted murder for the attack on Chabad of Poway on the last day of Passover.

Federal documents said Earnest was armed with an AR-15-style semi-automatic rifle that was fully loaded with a 10-round magazine.

"He wore a chest rig that contained five additional magazines, each loaded with 10 rounds of ammunition," the documents from Brewer’s office stated.

Lori Gilbert-Kaye  was struck twice by bullets as she prayed in the synagogue foyer. Three others were wounded: Rabbi Yisroel Goldstein, as well as an 8-year-old girl and her uncle.

Earnest is being represented by public defenders. His family is not paying his legal costs.

Both federal and state crimes make him eligible for the death penalty if convicted but prosecutors have not said if they will seek it. 

Copyright The Associated Press
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