That could happen.
When the trial's penalty phase begins Monday, the prosecution will tell the seven men and five women on the jury why the defendants should be executed by injection, and the defense will argue why they should spend the rest of their lives in jail.
The penalty phase may take another week, Common Pleas Judge Renee Cardwell Hughes told the jurors, whom she thanked for serving since the trial began June 29.
As the jury forewoman announced the verdict at 1:30 p.m., Warner's wife, Denise Monroe, began to sob loudly, prompting a deputy sheriff to ask her to leave the courtroom.
Michelle Liczbinski, the sergeant's widow, listened quietly while seated with Ramsey to her left and her three children to her right.
Court employees brought extra chairs into the courtroom to accommodate an audience that exceeded the room's 171-person capacity. Dozens of police officers were present, as was District Attorney Seth Williams.
Williams told reporters the message of the verdict is: "Don't shoot police; don't rob banks; don't conspire with other people to do things that are illegal."
Floyd, 35, and Warner, 41, helped Cain rob a Port Richmond Bank of America branch of $38,100. They fled in a Jeep stolen the day before. Liczbinski, 39, answering the report of the robbery, followed the trio.
Unable to shake the 12-year veteran, driver Floyd shouted, "Bang him!" and Cain, 34, asked for an assault rifle. Back-seat passenger Warner handed it to him, and Floyd stopped the Jeep, according to trial evidence.
Cain got out, shot Liczbinski eight times and got back in. Floyd floored it.
Assistant District Attorney Jude Conroy argued that what went on inside the Jeep was evidence of the defendants' shared intent to kill, which made them just as guilty as Cain.