Live updates: Austin Thompson sentenced to life without possibility of parole for killing 5 people

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Last updated: Saturday, February 14, 2026 11:26AM GMT
Judge rules Raleigh mass shooter to life without parole

RALEIGH, N.C. (WTVD) -- Austin Thompson, 18, was sentenced to life without possibility of parole Friday for all five counts of first-degree murder.

The judge ruled he was sentenced to at least 157 months for attempted first-degree murder and assault with a deadly weapon causing serious injury to Lynn Gardner.

The hearing lasted about two weeks. Thompson and his legal team decided to enter a guilty plea for all five murders and some additional charges on Jan. 21 in Wake County.

The five people killed on Oct. 13, 2022 shooting:

  • Nicole Connors, 52
  • Susan Karnatz, 49
  • Mary Marshall, 35
  • Gabriel Torres, 29
  • James Thompson, 16

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Feb 10, 2026, 3:05 PM GMT

Mother of Austin Thompson takes the stand

The mother of Austin Thompson took the stand in her son's defense during his sentencing hearing.

The defense asked her about the family's life before the shooting and after. Not about the day of the shooting.

Pictures were shown of the Thompson children when they are young.

SEE ALSO: Follow our live updates for the Austin Thompson sentencing

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Feb 10, 2026, 12:35 PM GMT

Second week of testimony begins in Thompson sentencing

Today begins the second week of testimony in the hearing that will ultimately decide Austin Thompson's fate.

Last week the state closed its case with an FBI profiler.

Now the defense will present their case and we are expecting to hear from Thompson's mother once again.

Throughout last week, a Raleigh police investigator says leading up to the shooting Thompson searched serial killers and school
shooters upwards of 25 times, but less than .5% of content in his phone included assaults and shootings.

An alleged confession letter was also read where Thompson himself wrote why he killed his brother and others.

SEE ALSO: Follow our live updates for the Austin Thompson sentencing

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Feb 10, 2026, 12:35 PM GMT

Week in review: State rests case in Austin Thompson sentencing hearing

The state has rested its case against Raleigh mass shooter Austin Thompson in the sentence hearing.

The 18-year-old pleaded guilty to killing five people in the Hedingham neighborhood in October 2022. Him and his legal team decided to enter a guilty plea and some additional charges on Jan. 21 in Wake County.

The prosecution's final witness was Dr. Carrie Gibson, an FBI profiler and licensed psychologist.

Gibson spoke generally Friday about what drives someone to commit a mass shooting and said people can follow a pathway to violence without ever committing a violent act prior.

"There is a desire for them to kill or a desire to die," she said. "What we see is that the pathway starts with a grievance. It can be a personal slight, it can be a humiliation, it can be something that's unbearable, it can be real or perceived something that they struggle to move past."

SEE ALSO: Follow our live updates for the Austin Thompson sentencing

The state is trying to prove the mass shooting was premediated, which would carry a stiffer sentence. The judge has already said law requires the court to give special consideration to the defendant's age, at the time of crime, when sentencing.

Many of the victims' loved ones were in court every day after delivering powerful testimony themselves and hearing from Thompson's parents.

"I cannot even begin to describe the pain we feel every day. we've just tried to do the best we can," Alan Thompson said during his victim impact statement.

"We lost both of our children in one afternoon," Elise Thompson said.

The parents apologized to the victim's families and said there were no warning signs ahead of the Hedingham mass shooting.

Lynn Gardner and former Raleigh Police Officer Casey Clark survived.

"I heard a gunshot and I felt like a train going through my knee drops me to the ground," Clark said about being shot in the leg.

"Because of who I am and what I believe in, (it) as given me the grace to forget the young man who shot me," said Gardner.

This is the note was found in Austin Thompson's bedroom on the day of the shooting.
This is the note was found in Austin Thompson's bedroom on the day of the shooting.

On Thursday, Austin's apparent confession letter was presented to the court. The note was found in his bedroom on the day of the shooting, reading:

The reason I did this is because I hate humans. They are destroying the planet/earth. Killed him at 4:20 about 5 minutes off maybe. He kept breathing so I stabbed him. Stopped breathing about 10-15 mins later. I don't have a goal. I'm not suicidal. Death is like sleep. That's why I don't care if I die. I was never buillied or anything. By dad. I don't like you mom. Every other family member is good. Thanks juan and deangelo for taking me hunting. I don't want to die but it's going to happen anyway. You were the best dad. I was never bullied in school either. (Cops) i killed James because he would get in my way. I killed James with a subsonic 22 I stole from Cabella's. I have no regrets. I'm not mental either. I was sane when I did this.

Court will resume Tuesday at 9:30 a.m. and the defense will begin presenting its case. Austin's attorneys are planning to call Elise Thompson back to the stand, and the line of questioning is expected to take several hours.

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Feb 10, 2026, 12:35 PM GMT

State rests evidence presentation ahead of recess

At 11:13 a.m., the defense started to cross-examine Gibson.

Research shows that in 100% of such cases, she said at least one bystander near the violent individual has witnessed one or more violent behaviors.

At 11:19 a.m., the prosecution asked about motivators other than revenge and whether bystanders always recognize the behaviors they see.

At 11:27 a.m., the state rested its evidence presentation, and the court recessed until Tuesday at 9:30 a.m.