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The Pittsburgh synagogue killer’s death sentence is a dead letter already

Both the US justice department and the Tree of Life community back a penalty that will probably never be carried out

August 9, 2023 10:44
GettyImages-1178629457 (1)
PITTSBURGH, PA - OCTOBER 27: Visitors look at items well-wishers have left behind along the fence at the Tree of Life Synagogue on the 1st Anniversary of the attack on October 27, 2019 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. One year ago, Robert Bowers killed 11 people and wounded severa others during an attack of the Tree of Life synagogue. (Photo by Jeff Swensen/Getty Images)
4 min read

On August 2, a federal jury issued a death sentence in its verdict on Robert Bowers, the white supremacist whose massacre of 11 Jews at Pittsburgh’s Tree of Life synagogue in October 2018 is the worst act of antisemitic violence in American history.

The defence claimed that Bowers was schizophrenic. He had, the New York Times reports, been “committed to psychiatric hospitals multiple times and tried to kill himself more than once”.

Eric Olshan, the US attorney for the Western District of Pennsylvania, argued that Bowers was sane, and that his mind, like that of millions of others, was “filled with hate and common, extreme, white supremacist, antisemitic tropes”.

“Jews are the children of Satan,” Bowers wrote on Gab, a social media site. Was this demented incitement, or was Bowers merely misremembering Revelation 3:9, which asserts that the Jews are “the synagogue of Satan”?