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Dylann Roof tells death penalty trial jury: 'There's nothing wrong with me psychologically'

Convicted Charleston, S.C., church shooter Dylann Roof spoke to the jury for the first time at his death penalty trial Wednesday, telling them there's nothing wrong with him psychologically and that he is not trying to keep any secrets from them.

Charleston church shooter is representing himself at sentencing hearing

Dylann Roof, pictured here on June 18, 2015, is defending himself at the sentencing phase of his trial for the hate-fuelled murders of nine people at a historically black South Carolina church. (Jason Miczek/Reuters)

Convicted Charleston, S.C., church shooter Dylann Roof spoke to the jury for the first time at his death penalty trial Wednesday, telling them there's nothing wrong with him psychologically and that he is not trying to keep any secrets from them.

But perhaps most important is what he didn't say: He didn't ask jurors to spare him from the death penalty.

The jury last month unanimously found Roof guilty of hate crimes and other charges in the shooting deaths of nine black church members during Bible study. The jurors will now decide whether he should be sentenced to life in prison or death.

"My opening statement is going to seem a little bit out of place," the 22-year-old white man said calmly as he stood in front of a podium, occasionally glancing at notes.

"I am not going to lie to you. ... Other than the fact that I trust people that I shouldn't and the fact that I'm probably better at constantly embarrassing myself than anyone who's ever existed, there's nothing wrong with me psychologically."

Roof shuns mental illness defence 

Roof's attorneys have indicated that he chose to represent himself during the sentencing phase of his trial because he was worried his legal team might present embarrassing evidence about him or his family.

As early as last summer, they said they planned to introduce evidence that Roof suffers from mental illness, and they hinted at that idea again during closing arguments of the trial's guilt-or-innocence stage.

"I would ask you to forget it," Roof told jurors, referring to what his lawyers said then.

This undated photo that appeared on Lastrhodesian.com, a website investigated by the FBI in connection with Dylann Roof, shows the killer posing with a Confederate flag. Roof, who has said he wanted to start a race war, fatally shot eight black worshippers and their pastor at the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church. (Lastrhodesian.com via Associated Press)

It's clear, from his own writings, Roof doesn't believe in psychology. In a journal read in court during his trial, Roof called the specialty "a Jewish invention" that "does nothing but invent diseases and tell people they have problems when they don't."

Prosecutors said Roof deserves the death penalty because he painstakingly chose to target vulnerable people during Bible study at Emanuel AME Church in June 2015.

Roof sat with the church members for about 45 minutes and waited until their eyes were closed before opening fire.

He told Polly Sheppard, one of the three survivors, that he wanted to leave her alive to tell the world why he attacked a historic African-American church.

He said "you're raping our women and taking over the nation."

'Horrific acts justify the death penalty'

Assistant U.S. Attorney Nathan Williams said the "horrific acts justify the death penalty."

"He killed nine people.... He killed them because of the colour of their skin. He killed them because they were less than people," Williams said.

The prosecutor also read a portion from a journal found in Roof's jail cell six weeks after his arrest in which Roof said he had not wept for any of the victims.

"I remember how I felt when I did these things and how I knew I had to do something and then I realize it was worth it," Roof wrote, as a handwritten page from his journal appeared on screens in the courtroom. "I would like to make it crystal clear. I do not regret what I did. I have not shed a tear for the innocent people I killed."

Victim's widow testifies

Prosecutors plan to call up to 38 people related to the slain and the survivors. The first witness to testify was Jennifer Pinckney, the widow of Clementa Pinckney, a state senator and pastor at Emanuel AME.

During more than an hour of testifying, Pinckney described her husband as an affable figure who garnered respect from all corners in his roles as legislator and preacher but was a goofy family man in private with his two young daughters.

"He always made time for the family, and he always made time for the girls," said Pinckney, describing her husband's affinity for cartoonish neckties and socks. "He was the person I think that every mom would be happy that their daughter met and married.... I know that he loved me. And he knew how much that I loved him."

The Rev. Kylon Middleton, from left, Jennifer Pinckney, widow of Emanuel's slain pastor, and Johnette Martinez enter the courthouse in Charleston, S.C., Wednesday. (Leory Burnell/The Post and Courier via Associated Press)

She talked about the night of the shootings, saying she and her then-six-year-old daughter, Malana, were in her husband's office when gunfire erupted. She locked the doors, shoved her daughter under a desk and put her hand over her daughter's mouth.

"She was like, 'Mama, is Daddy going to die?' And I told her, 'Malana, be quiet."'

She said she believed she survived the shootings because she was meant to continue her husband's legacy, part of which involved fighting to get the Confederate flag removed entirely from the South Carolina Statehouse, which happened about a month after the attack.

"Yes the flag came down and so forth, but he just did so much," she said. "You can't please everyone. He tried to please as many people as he could."

When it was Roof's turn to cross-examine Pinckney, he said, "No questions."

Roof was found competent to represent himself during two different hearings, one before the trial and another one within the last week. He has said he doesn't plan on calling any witnesses or introducing any evidence.