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Jurors continue deliberations in civil case against parents of Dimitrios Pagourtzis in connection with the shooting at Santa Fe High School

GALVESTON COUNTY, Texas — Jury deliberations in the civil trial over the Santa Fe High School shooting will continue Monday at the Galveston County Courthouse.

If a decision is made in the trial, ABC13 will broadcast it live in the video player above or wherever you stream ABC13.

Lawsuits have been filed against the parents of the confessed shooter, Dimitrios Pagourtzis. The victims' families claim that, as parents, Antonios Pagourtzis and Rose Maria Kosmetatos should have secured the family's weapons and also arranged for psychiatric treatment for their son.

On May 18, 2018, ten people – eight students and two teachers – were shot and 13 others injured in the school shooting. Dimitrios was 17 years old at the time. The Galveston County District Attorney's Office has declared him incompetent to stand trial and he remains in custody at the North Texas State Hospital.

The victims and their families had to endure weeks of exhaustive testimony.

PREVIOUS STORY: Jury begins deliberations in civil case against parents of Santa Fe High School shooter

Closing arguments were completed on Friday in the Santa Fe school shooting trial, in which victims are suing the parents of confessed shooter Dimitrios Pagourtzis.

The jury, consisting of eight men and four women, was called to deliberate at around 4:50 p.m. on Friday and adjourned for the day at 5:35 p.m. Deliberations continued on Monday at 9:00 a.m.

The jury was presented with 24 charges to which they had to respond. They had to answer several questions on each charge.

In his closing argument on Friday, the victims' attorney, Clint McGuire, said the case was about justice and accountability.

“We're here because (Pagourtzis and Kosmetatos) refused to take responsibility,” McGuire said. “It was their son under their roof with their guns who went out and committed this mass shooting.”

McGuire showed the shirt Dimitrios was wearing during the shooting, which read “Born to kill,” and excerpts from his diary, one of which reads: “What I do will have both immeasurable implications and be incredibly minor. I will have destroyed bloodlines that go back thousands of years.” McGuire told jurors that the then-17-year-old had an intention in what he did.

He asked the jury to award $25 million each to the families of the deceased and the surviving victims.

During their one-hour and 20-minute closing arguments, the victims' attorneys took the time to speak about each victim and their experiences on May 18, 2018. Many of the attorneys were moved during their speech.

“We can’t send our children to school and then bring them home in body bags,” McGuire said.

Alton Todd is representing Rhonda Hart, whose daughter Kimberly Vaughan was killed in the shooting. He said, “You could fill this room with money. Every one of these parents wants their child back. But money is all you can give. That's all. Nobody goes to jail. It's money. Your money is going to say something. It's not what it is. It's what it's going to say, and that needs to be heard loudly.”

When Pagourtzis and Kosmetatos' attorney, Lori Laird, spoke, she said, “The reality is they're trying to make a case out of nothing. They're looking at little things that a normal person wouldn't consider problematic and making it into something that it's not.”

She said her clients did not know her son suffered from mental illness or planned the mass shooting. During her argument, Laird showed photos of Dimitrios on a projector from the days before the shooting and emphasized that he looked normal.

The lawyer quoted Socrates as saying, “You don’t know what you don’t know.”

“He was sneaky and clever. He didn't want to get caught,” Laird said.

Laird urged jurors to put aside their emotions to “effectively evaluate the facts of the case.”

She argued that they were trying to hold the parents accountable for something that had made them victims too.

Dimitrios, 23, is also named as a defendant in the lawsuit. His lawyer, Roberto Torres, said his client is not a monster, even though he was called one during the trial. He said he had done something “monstrous.”

Torres said it was easier to single out “a severely mentally disturbed young man who was going through hell” than to blame his parents or the arms industry.

He said Dimitrios was possessed by a demon and was in the “mother of all psychotic hurricanes” at the time of the shooting, so he “didn't stand a chance.”

“Let’s blame the sick person,” Torres said.

The final witness in the case on Thursday was the psychiatrist who questioned the confessed shooter. He told jurors that it became apparent during questioning that he was suffering from a psychotic illness.

SEE ALSO: Psychiatrist paints disturbing picture of Santa Fe HS suspect's mental state

The civil trial over the Santa Fe High School shooting is entering closing arguments after a psychiatrist testified about the mental state of the suspected shooter.

Dimitrios was diagnosed with schizoaffective disorder, Tourette syndrome, social anxiety disorder, psychosis, obsessive-compulsive disorder, probable transvestite disorder and anorexia, which was in remission.

Other witnesses who testified during the trial included Dimitrios' father and his younger sister.

His father, Antonios, said he had no knowledge of his son's mental health problems, which lawyers argued were evident in poor grades, antisocial behavior and an obsession with weapons.

READ MORE: Sister of suspected Santa Fe High School shooter testifies about her upbringing as parents' lawyers present case

Dimitrios Pagourtzis' younger sister took the stand and was questioned about her upbringing as her parents' defense team called witnesses in the civil trial over the Santa Fe High School shooting.

Antonios denied any responsibility for the shooting but said he wished he could have prevented what happened. He acknowledged that his son destroyed several lives on May 18, 2018.

When asked if he believed his son should be held accountable for his actions, he said he would leave that to a judge, but that he had destroyed his own life.

Dimitrios' younger sister, Vasiliki Gerbsoti, now 20 years old, testified that neither of her parents abused her. She said that she and her brother had a normal upbringing.

She said she had not noticed any changes in Dimitrios' behavior or personality before the shooting.

Because this is a civil case, the jury's decision does not have to be unanimous. Only 10 of the 12 jurors have to agree with the decision.

RELATED: Judge rejects motion to add Santa Fe ISD as third defendant in 2018 shooting trial

A judge ruled Wednesday that Santa Fe ISD will not be included in the civil lawsuit against the parents of suspected school shooter Dimitrios Pagourtzis.

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