On Jan. 23, the suspect, Zephen A. Xaver, 21, burst into the branch on U.S. Route 27 in Sebring, according to an affidavit released last month. He then made the five women inside the bank lay facedown on the floor, and he fatally shot each one, the affidavit states.
A sixth person, a bank employee, had been in a break room and escaped through a back door when he heard the shots around 12:30 p.m., police said at the time.
Xaver was arrested at the bank after the shooting and was charged with five counts of first-degree premeditated murder. In an initial court appearance just after his arrest, he was ordered to be held without bond at the Highlands County Jail in Sebring, a city of about 10,000 people about 80 miles south of Orlando. Peter Mills, an assistant public defender assigned to Xaver’s case, declined to comment on the indictment when reached Friday.
At a televised news conference Friday, the state attorney for the 10th Judicial Circuit said a grand jury had returned the decision to indict Xaver, who will be formally arraigned Feb. 25 on the five charges, and said he would be seeking the death penalty. “As this case moves forward, I will seek the ultimate punishment,” said the state attorney, Brian Haas.
He added that seeking the death penalty was appropriate considering the “horror” of the shooting. “It was the obvious conclusion to reach,” he said.
While he was still inside the bank after the shooting, Xaver, who was wearing a T-shirt that bore the image of four scythe-wielding grim reapers on horseback and a bulletproof vest, called police and said, “I have shot five people,” according to a police statement released Jan. 23.
The Sebring Police Department and the Highlands County Sheriff’s Office found the gunman barricaded inside the branch. After a standoff with police negotiators, an armored police vehicle rammed into the bank doors, and SWAT team members persuaded him to surrender, according to video footage and a statement released by authorities.
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.