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Software engineer convicted of killing seven co-workers in Massachusetts rampage

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Posted 3:29PM on Wednesday 24th April 2002 ( 23 years ago )
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. - A man who gunned down seven co-workers at a software company in what he called a divine mission to prevent the Holocaust was convicted of murder Wednesday by a jury that rejected his insanity defense. <br> <br> Michael McDermott, a hulking 43-year-old with long, shaggy hair and a bushy black beard, stood impassively as the verdict was delivered in a courtroom packed with tearful relatives of the victims. <br> <br> The convictions on seven counts of first-degree murder meant an automatic sentence of life in prison without parole. Massachusetts does not have a death penalty. <br> <br> Prosecutors said McDermott went on his rampage because he was angry about the company&#39;s plan to comply with an IRS order to withhold a large portion of his salary to pay back taxes. They said he concocted the Holocaust story after boning up on how to fake mental illness. <br> <br> During sentencing, McDermott sat at the defense table with his burly arms in front of him and read a Bible without looking up as relatives of the dead took the stand and sorrowfully recalled their loved ones. Some stole glances across the courtroom at McDermott, but he didn&#39;t meet their eyes. <br> <br> &#34;His life is insignificant. He will die in a silent hell he has created for himself,&#34; said Scott Troy, whose sister, Cheryl Troy, was killed. &#34;He has accomplished nothing.&#34; <br> <br> The defense claimed the software engineer was insane, suffering from depression and schizophrenia, and didn&#39;t know what he was doing at Edgewater Technology Inc. in suburban Wakefield on Dec. 26, 2000. <br> <br> The trial featured chilling testimony from workers who hid under their desks or ran out of the building after McDermott began shooting. Some said they heard co-workers begging for their lives before McDermott blasted them with an AK-47 and a pump-action shotgun. <br> <br> The jury deliberated for nearly 16 hours over three days. <br> <br> McDermott spent two days on the witness stand testifying in his own defense. He matter-of-factly told the jury he was given a mission by St. Michael the Archangel, who told him he could earn a soul and prevent the Holocaust if he killed Adolf Hitler and six German generals. <br> <br> In vivid detail, McDermott described being transported back in time to 1940 and entering a bunker where he heard Hitler&#39;s thoughts and saw men and women wearing swastika armbands. He described killing Nazis, one by one, as horrified family members of the real victims wept and eventually left the courtroom. <br> <br> &#34;The last Nazi was there. I shot and killed him. And Hitler was there. I shot and killed him,&#34; he said. &#34;My mission was complete. I knew at this point I had a soul.&#34; <br> <br> McDermott&#39;s defense presented medical experts who said he had a long history of depression, obsessive-compulsive disorder and schizophrenia. He testified that he was raped repeatedly by a neighbor as a child and that he tried to commit suicide at least three times. <br> <br> He also said he heard voices in his head and even &#34;clustered&#34; them into different groups. <br> <br> &#34;The major one I call the chorus,&#34; he testified. &#34;The chorus continuously tells me what a bad person I am, what a waste of space and skin and air I am.&#34; <br> <br> The day of the killings, McDermott was suffering from hallucinations and delusions and did not know right from wrong, a defense psychologist testified. <br> <br> Prosecutors, however, said McDermott cooked up the story about killing Nazis in a desperate attempt to appear insane to the jury. <br> <br> McDermott even acknowledged buying the book, &#34;Clinical Assessment of Malingering and Deception,&#34; a textbook for psychiatrists attempting to detect when criminal defendants are lying or faking mental illness. <br> <br> McDermott said he researched the subject in order to make himself appear sane and to make sure his doctors prescribed Prozac, the anti-depressant he preferred. <br> <br> Prosecutors also pointed out McDermott&#39;s genius-level IQ and steps they said he took to plan the killings, including test-firing his shotgun two days earlier and bringing the guns to work on Christmas, the day before the killings, when no one was in the office. <br> <br>

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