On January 29, 1979, 16-year-old Brenda Ann Spencer sat in
her bedroom window with a .22 rifle her father had given to her as a gift. She opened fire on children arriving at Cleveland Elementary School
in San Diego as
they were arriving for school. She wounded
eight students and a police officer. The Principal was killed while he was
attempting to rescue children in the line of fire, The custodian was slain attempting to aid the
principal.
During police negotiations she said such things as: ''There was no reason for it, and it was just
a lot of fun'' and ''It was just like shooting ducks in a pond'' and ''they
(the children) looked like a herd of cows standing around, it was really easy
pickings.''
However, when all was said and done she wasasked what had
prompted the shooting spree, she told a reporter, “I don't like Mondays. This
livens up the day.''
At her trial, Spencer pled guilty to two counts of murder
and assault with a deadly weapon and was sentenced to 25 years to life in
prison. She has been up for parole four times and has been turned down each
time.
Despite pleading guilty at her trial, during her parole
hearings she claimed that she hadn’t hit anybody with her gun and said they
must have been shot by the police. She
also asserted that she had been under the influence of alcohol and
hallucinogenic drugs at the time of the shootings; this despite the fact that evidence
showed that there had been no drugs in her system. She finally, expressed remorse
but still said that she had been drunk and high on marijuana laced with PCP the
day of her deadly rampage.
She is eligible to again apply for parole in 2019. It's unlikely that she will ever be released . . . California doesn't generally parole convicted murderers.
No comments:
Post a Comment