New shocking information about the Texas butcher (video)

cZM3dOse03ULoCh6wxbP

Pagourtzis' deadly attack lasted about 30 minutes before he finally surrendered, with police describing it as collapsing.

The details of the deadly attack of 17-year-old Dimitris Pagourtzis, who spread death at Santa Fe High School in Texas, causing the death of 10 people, are still causing shock.

According to an eyewitness who survived the massacre that took place on Friday, Pagourtzis after shooting at a student sang "Another one bites the dust!".

According to protothema.gr, according to the same testimony, the 17-year-old from Karditsa played a military anthem of the Japanese kamikaze as loud as he could.

At the same time, the mother of a schoolgirl wrote on Facebook that the 17-year-old butcher was shouting "Woo Hoo!" while shooting. As her daughter told her, Pagourtzis, while shooting a closet in which two students were hiding, whom he killed, shouted "surprise m @@@ a. Then he asked, "Are you dead?" while hearing a cell phone ring, he made a black joke by asking "is it for you?".

Pagourtzis' deadly attack lasted about 30 minutes before he finally surrendered, with police describing it as collapsing in order not to accept the fire of uniformed men who had rushed to the school.

A week before he danced traditional dances

The video released by the TMZ website, in which Pagourtzis is seen dancing traditional dances with other members of his parish a week before the massacre, is causing a sensation.

The video shows Pagourtzis dancing a traditional Greek dance dressed in traditional costume at a Greek festival held in a town 30 minutes away from Santa Fe.

He does not face the death penalty

Despite the brutality of his crime, the 17-year-old butcher is not threatened with the death penalty, although Texas law provides for this punishment for murderers of his age.

According to USA Today, there is a 2005 case law from the US Supreme Court that prohibits the execution of murderers under the age of 18.

"The court ruled that those 17 years of age or younger do not have the mental development to distinguish right from wrong," said Michael Randlett, a sociology professor at the University of Colorado who has filed more than 75 death penalty cases. penalty.

Source: Politis