David Chou, suspect charged in deadly California church shooting, had ‘diabolical plan’ to massacre
- David Chou is accused of killing one person, wounding five others at a Taiwanese-American church in California
- If convicted, Chou would face a sentence of either life in prison without possibility of parole or the death penalty
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California church shooting suspect may face death penalty
The man charged with opening fire on a Taiwanese church congregation of mainly elderly people in Southern California wanted to “execute in cold blood as many people in that room as possible,” a prosecutor said in announcing murder, attempted murder and other charges for the shooting that killed one person and wounded five.
Orange County District Attorney Todd Spitzer referred to David Chou, 68, as a monster whose rampage was thwarted by the heroic actions of a doctor who charged at him, a pastor who hit Chou with a chair and several parishioners who tied him up until police arrived.
“This monster crafted a diabolical plan to lock the church doors with his victims inside in order to lead what he thought were innocent lambs to slaughter,” Spitzer said on Tuesday. “But what he didn’t realise was the parishioners at the church that day weren’t lambs – they were lions and they fought back against the evil that tried to infiltrate their house of worship.”
Spitzer said Chou was motivated by hatred for Taiwan, where he was born after his family was forced from mainland China when Communists prevailed in a civil war that ended in 1949. He apparently chose the church at random and didn’t know anyone there, authorities said.
He drove from his home in Las Vegas on Saturday and arrived at the church the next day. Chou spent about an hour mingling with dozens of members of the congregation at a lunch, which Spitzer said was Chou’s way of gaining their trust so they wouldn’t notice as he began carrying out his plot – chaining closed doors, super gluing locks and placing incendiary devices in several locations.
Chou’s method amounted to “lying in wait,” Spitzer said, a legal designation that can enhance penalties if he is convicted.