Friend of Charleston church massacre suspect pleads guilty
The plea by
Authorities have said Meek failed to tell investigators all he knew about Roof’s plans to shoot the parishioners at
Meek signed a deal with prosecutors, agreeing to plead guilty to lying to authorities and failure to report a crime. He could face up to eight years in prison when he’s sentenced later, although prosecutors say they will argue he deserves less time if he’s cooperative.
Meek, clad in a dark suit, sat silently looking ahead as more than a dozen relatives of the shooting victims were ushered to seats reserved on one side of the courtroom. He spoke softly, often simply replying “Yes, your honor,” to routine questions from U.S. District Judge
Assistant
“Roof told
Richardson also said Meek knew Roof had planned the attack for six months, had a gun and would carry extra ammunition in an attempt to start a race war. He also said Roof told him he had planned to kill himself after the shootings.
The prosecutor said the morning after the
In an initial interview with the
When the judge asked if he thought Roof was the gunman when he heard the news the night of the shootings, Meek replied “since he had told me a week before, I had an idea it was him.”
Meek said he had only finished the 10th grade, is currently taking medication for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and sees a psychiatrist. His attorney,
She told reporters that Meek feels remorse and hopes relatives of those slain will forgive him but understands they likely won’t.
One of those relatives, 54-year-old
Washington, who is deaf, spoke through a sign language interpreter, telling Gergel that the day of the shootings he hugged his mother at the church, told her to be careful and then went to work. He said he didn’t find out she had been killed until later when all the victims’ families were gathered at a nearby hotel.
“I don’t understand why he did what he did,” he said of the gunman.
Prosecutors are seeking the death penalty in Roof’s state murder trial set for next January. Federal prosecutors haven’t said if they too will seek the death penalty. No date for that trial has been set.
A day after the shootings Meek, who had hung out with Roof off and on in the previous weeks, told The Associated Press that Roof had drunkenly complained to him that “blacks were taking over the world” and “someone needed to do something about it for the white race.”
Meek also told the AP he called the
Roof’s federal defense team had no comment on Meek’s guilty plea. The Associated Press left messages with his attorneys in the state case seeking comment.
“As far as the prosecution goes you now have this other person saying this is what the plan was,” she said, calling it good evidence for state and federal prosecutors.
Under the plea agreement, Meek must testify truthfully and also provide “any books, papers or documents of evidentiary value to the investigation.”
Kinnard can be reached at http://twitter.com/MegKinnardAP. Read more of her work at http://bigstory.ap.org/content/meg-kinnard/
Category: International




