The man who burst into a newsroom in Maryland and fatally shot five people in 2018 was found criminally responsible for the crime.
It took less than two hours Thursday for an Annapolis jury to conclude that Jarrod Ramos was responsible for the killings, rejecting defense attorneys’ arguments about mental illness. Some people in the courtroom applauded.
Legal analyst and former News4 reporter Chris Gordon shared news of the verdict.
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John McNamara, Gerald Fischman, Wendi Winters, Rob Hiaasen and Rebecca Smith died in the mass shooting on June 28, 2018.
"This is a really bittersweet day here in Annapolis,” county prosecutor Anne Colt Leitess said after the verdict was announced.
Survivors and family members of victims, some fighting tears, gathered outside the courtroom to applaud prosecutors and embrace.
Andrea Chamblee, McNamara’s window, called on lawmakers “to keep guns out of the hands of dangerous people" and spoke about the profound impact of the killings.
“When people talk about the five victims of this violent crime, you can look around see there’s a lot more than five. It ripples all over the county, the state and the country," she said.
Ramos sat motionless for hours, said nothing and showed no emotion.
The jury of eight men and four women found that Ramos could understand the criminality of his actions and conform his conduct to the requirements of law when he attacked the newsroom.
The jury’s finding means Ramos, 41, will be sentenced to prison, not a maximum-security mental health facility. Prosecutors are seeking five life sentences without the possibility of parole.
Ramos already had pleaded guilty to all 23 counts against him in 2019 but pleaded not criminally responsible — Maryland’s version of an insanity plea.
The second phase of his trial was delayed multiple times, most recently because of the pandemic. It was largely a battle between mental health experts called by defense attorneys and prosecutors.
Ramos developed a long-running grudge against the newspaper after an article it published about his guilty plea to a misdemeanor charge of harassing a former high school classmate in 2011. He filed a lawsuit against the paper in 2012, alleging he was defamed, but it was dismissed as groundless. His appeals failed.
Defense attorneys argued that Ramos suffered from a delusional disorder as well as autism and obsessive-compulsive disorder. They contended Ramos became consumed with the idea that the article had ruined his life. As his defamation appeals failed, his lawyers said he came to believe there was a vast conspiracy against him involving the courts and the newspaper.
Prosecutors, however, repeatedly pointed to shortcomings in the mental health evaluations done by the defense, which relied mostly on interviews with Ramos and his sister.
Prosecutors said Ramos acted out of revenge for the article. They said his long, meticulous planning for the attack and the manner in which he carried it out — including plans for arrest and long incarceration — proved he understood the criminality of his actions and was able to conform his behavior to the requirements of the law.
They emphasized how Ramos called 911 from the newsroom after the shooting, identified himself as the gunman and told him he surrendered — evidence he clearly understood the criminality of his actions. He was arrested while facedown under a newsroom desk.
Anne Colt Leitess, the Anne Arundel County state’s attorney, said that although Ramos has personality disorders like narcissism, he does not have serious mental illness that would have qualified him to be found not criminally responsible for five murders.
Leitess told the jury that Ramos thought he was smarter than everyone else, and his repeated losses in court were “too much for him to bear, and so he started plotting his revenge.” Leitess also said Ramos was concerned the article about him harassing his former classmate would hinder his ability to get dates with women.
Leitess told the jury he initially wanted to attack the building housing the state’s appellate courts but changed his mind when he thought of the police security. Instead, he decided on the soft target of the newspaper.
The trial began last month, three years and a day after the attack at the newspaper’s office in a building complex in Maryland’s capital city.
Under Maryland’s insanity defense law, a defendant has the burden to show by a preponderance of the evidence that he is not criminally responsible for his actions. That means defense attorneys had to show that it’s more likely than not that Ramos isn’t criminally responsible.
Stay with NBC Washington for more details on this developing story.