The man suspected of killing two and injuring six others after opening fire on the Florida State University campus April 17 was denied bond during a court appearance Tuesday.
Phoenix Ikner, 20, appeared in a Leon County, Florida, court, where he was found to be indigent by Circuit Court Judge Monique Richardson.
He was appointed a public defender, Randall Harper. Fox News Digital reached out to Harper.
Ikner has been charged with two counts of first-degree murder and seven counts of attempted first-degree murder with a gun.
Along with requesting Ikner be held without bond, the state also asked the court to order him not to have contact with the victims’ families or any potential witnesses to the alleged crime.
Richardson granted both of the state’s requests after Harper waived an argument against those requests for the time being.
On Monday, Ikner’s mugshot was released for the first time since the shooting.
He spent several weeks in the hospital recovering from multiple surgeries to treat a jaw injury after being shot in the face by responding officers the day of the mass shooting.
After he was booked, Ikner was transferred to the Wakulla County Detention Facility, which Tallahassee Chief of Police Lawrence Revell said was standard policy, given that Ikner’s stepmother is a sheriff’s deputy with the Leon County Sheriff’s Department.
FSU SHOOTING SUSPECT’S CHILDHOOD INCLUDED ALLEGED FAMILY KIDNAPPING ABROAD, CUSTODY FIGHT: DOCS
“In any case, especially one of this magnitude, the Tallahassee Police Department has the highest commitment to justice, transparency and the safety of our community,” Revell said in a news release. “We are grateful for the work of our detectives, officers, medical personnel and partner agencies who helped bring us to this point.”
Ikner’s checkered past has been a subject of interest since the shooting.
He was allegedly kidnapped by his biological mother in violation of a custody agreement in 2015, when he was 11, and taken to Norway, according to court records.
Fox News Digital’s Stepheny Price and Greg Norman contributed to this report.