A jury was seated on Monday in the trial of a man charged with killing the former US Navy SEAL depicted in the Oscar-nominated movie American Sniper, with the judge estimating no more than two dozen people were dismissed from service because of publicity about the case.
Ten women and two men will serve as jurors for Eddie Ray Routh’s trial, which is scheduled to start today with opening statements. Routh, a former US marine, is charged with capital murder in the deaths of 38-year-old Chris Kyle and Kyle’s friend, 35-year-old Chad Littlefield. Kyle and Littlefield were trying to help Routh when prosecutors say he shot them at a Texas gun range in 2013.
The Clint Eastwood-directed movie based on Kyle’s memoir as a celebrated sniper who served four tours in Iraq has grossed nearly US$300 million. In response to the attention paid to the Kyle case, officials called in more than four times as many potential jurors as they would for a regular trial. Yet it took just one day to seat the panel, after a screening process last week narrowed the jury pool.
Simply reading Kyle’s book or seeing the movie starring Bradley Cooper — which ends with a depiction of Kyle meeting Routh, followed by footage from Kyle’s funeral — were not grounds for dismissal. Instead, potential jurors were asked if they could set aside what they had already heard.
“It’s hard not to have knowledge of this case,” Erath County District Attorney Alan Nash said. “It’s pervasive.”
Judge Jason Cashon denied defense motions to delay the trial or move it to a different county, and noted how few potential jurors were dismissed because of pretrial publicity.
Routh’s attorneys plan to pursue an insanity defense. Prosecutors have said they would not seek the death penalty. He faces life in prison without parole if convicted.
Family members have said Routh, 27, struggled with post-traumatic stress disorder after leaving the US Marines in 2010. The small arms technician served in Iraq and was deployed to earthquake-ravaged Haiti. Kyle took Routh to the shooting range after Routh’s mother asked if he could help her son.
Kyle made more than 300 kills as a sniper for SEAL Team 3, according to his own count and earned two Silver Stars for valor. After leaving the military, Kyle volunteered to help veterans facing mental health problems, often taking them shooting.
About two hours after Kyle, Littlefield and Routh arrived at Rough Creek Lodge and Resort on Feb. 2, 2013, an employee discovered the bodies of Kyle and Littlefield at the remote range.
Authorities said Routh drove to his sister’s house in Kyle’s truck, telling her and her husband that he had killed Kyle and Littlefield.
His sister told police that Routh “was out of his mind, saying people were sucking his soul and that he could smell the pigs.”
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