OLATHE, Kan. — A Kansas prosecutor will seek the death penalty against a white supremacist from Missouri who was ruled competent Thursday to face trial on charges of killing three people at two Jewish sites in suburban Kansas City.
Johnson County District Attorney Steve Howe announced his intention to seek the death penalty at a hearing for Frazier Glenn Miller, 74, of Aurora, Missouri, who has said he felt it was his patriotic duty to kill Jews.
Miller is accused of killing Dr. William Lewis Corporon, 69, and his 14-year-old grandson, Reat Griffin Underwood, who were at the Jewish Community Center of Greater Kansas City on April 13 for a singing contest audition. He also is accused of fatally shooting 53-year-old Terri LaManno, who was visiting her mother at a Jewish retirement home in nearby Overland Park.
None of the victims was Jewish.
Miller, who has emphysema, was brought into the Johnson County courtroom Thursday in a wheelchair. After Judge Thomas Kelly Ryan scheduled a three-day preliminary hearing in March, Miller protested, shouting, "What about my speedy trial?"
After Howe announced his intention to seek the death penalty, Miller responded that he wasn't afraid because he is dying anyway. He offered to "grease the tracks" for prosecutors if they cooperated with him, but Ryan cut him off and said he needed to communicate through his attorneys.
Howe and Miller's attorneys declined to comment after the hearing. Miller has told the AP he wants to fire one of the attorneys, keep the other as an adviser and represent himself at trial.
Mindy Corporon, William Corporon's daughter and Reat Underwood's mother, issued a statement after Thursday's hearing saying the family respects the judicial process and has faith "that justice will prevail."