Zero witnesses by Roof, testimony ends

FILE-In this undated file photo made available by Anita Brewer Dantzler shows Tywanza Sanders on the day of his graduation from Allen University in Columbia, SC.
FILE-In this undated file photo made available by Anita Brewer Dantzler shows Tywanza Sanders on the day of his graduation from Allen University in Columbia, SC.

CHARLESTON, S.C. -- After four days of testimony, prosecutors rested their death-penalty case Monday against convicted Charleston church shooter Dylann Roof, calling more than two dozen people during the trial's penalty phase. And, as he promised earlier in the trial, Roof -- who is representing himself -- rested his case without calling witnesses or presenting any evidence on his own behalf.

Friends and relatives of the nine victims shared memories and talked about a future without a mother, father, sister or brother.

They shed tears and their voices shook, but none of them said whether Roof should face the death penalty or life in prison for gunning down the church members during a Bible study at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal church. That will be left up to the jury, which will begin its deliberations today after hearing a closing argument from prosecutors and perhaps Roof.

He did try to limit the amount of heart-wrenching testimony the jurors heard, but with only little success.

Survivor Jennifer Pinckney talked about the life of her husband, church pastor and state Sen. Clementa Pinckney. She spoke about the harrowing minutes she spent huddled underneath a desk with her youngest daughter as shots rang out in the next room, unsure whether the shooter was coming her way.

In the hours that followed, the mother had to somehow explain the death to her two daughters.

"I sat in front of the girls, and I basically told them that something had happened," she said. "I think that that's the hardest thing that I've ever had to do."

The Rev. Anthony Thompson cried as he described a conversation with his wife, Myra, about their future plans to move and pursue studies and careers in the church.

"She was my world, and she was gone," he said.

Survivor Felicia Sanders, who also testified during the guilt phase of Roof's trial, wrapped up prosecutors' case Wednesday, talking about her creative, 26-year-old son, the youngest victim, and his commitment to his faith and Emanuel.

"That night they were getting basic instruction before leaving Earth," Sanders said. "I did not know that was going to be the life of them."

Law officers took the stand, too, reading from a journal found in Roof's cell. In pencil, on lined paper, six weeks after his arrest, the then-21-year-old Roof wrote that he had "not shed a tear for the innocent people I killed," scribbling white supremacy symbols and writing his thoughts about other races' inferiority.

The jury's decision must be unanimous. If they are unable to agree, a life sentence will be automatically imposed.

A Section on 01/10/2017

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