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Dublin: 10 °C Thursday 23 May, 2013

Colorado shooting suspect charged with 24 counts of murder

The 24-year-old suspect has been formally charged with a total of 142 counts over the deadly shootings at a Colorado cinema earlier this month.

Image: AP Photo/Denver Post, RJ Sangosti, Pool, File

JAMES HOLMES APPEARED just as dazed as he did in his first court appearance last week after the deadly Colorado movie theatre shootings.

In a packed Denver-area courtroom Monday, Holmes, 24, sat silently and did not react as he heard formal charges against him, including first-degree murder for each of the 12 who died and attempted murder for each of the 58 people who were injured in one of the deadliest mass shootings in recent US history.

At one point, a shackled Holmes, still with his hair dyed orange-red, leaned over to speak with one of his lawyers and furrowed his brow.

When the judge asked the former neuroscience student if he agreed with his attorney’s request to delay a future court hearing so his defense team could have more time to prepare, Holmes said softly: “Yeah.”

Death penalty

Some of the people in the court wore Batman T-shirts. Several people clasped their hands and bowed their heads as if in prayer before the hearing. At least one victim attended, and she was in a wheelchair and had bandages on her leg and arm. One unidentified man glared at Holmes throughout the hearing.

Holmes was charged with 24 counts of murder, two each for the 12 victims, and 116 counts of attempted murder, two each for the 58 injured.

For the murder charges, one count included murder with deliberation, the other murder with extreme indifference. Both counts carry a maximum death penalty upon conviction; the minimum is life without parole.

A conviction under extreme indifference means that any life sentences would have to be served consecutively, not concurrently, said Craig Silverman, a former chief deputy district attorney in Denver.

In addition, Holmes was charged with one count of possession of explosives and one count of a crime of violence. Authorities said booby trapped his apartment with the intent to kill any officers responding there the night of the attack.

Legal analysts expect the case to be dominated by arguments over the defendant’s sanity.

Package

Attorneys also argued over a defence motion to find out who leaked information to the news media about a package the 24-year-old Holmes allegedly sent to his psychiatrist at the University of Colorado Denver.

Authorities seized the package July 23, three days after the shooting, after finding it in the mailroom of the medical campus where Holmes studied.

Several media outlets reported that it contained a notebook with descriptions of an attack, but Arapahoe County District Attorney Carol Chambers said in court papers that the parcel hadn’t been opened by the time the “inaccurate” news reports appeared.

Prosecutor Tamara Brady said Monday she will subpoena psychiatrist Lynne Fenton to testify in the dispute over whether a notebook is privileged because of a possible doctor-patient relationship. A hearing on the matter was set for Aug. 16.

District Chief Judge William Sylvester set an Aug. 9 hearing on a motion filed by news organizations seeking to have the case docket unsealed.

A hearing to update the status of the case was set for Sept. 27. A hearing to review evidence matters and to determine whether Holmes should continue to be held without bail was set for the week of Nov. 9.

Unlike Holmes’ first court appearance July 23, Monday’s hearing was not televised. At the request of the defense, Sylvester barred video and still cameras from the hearing, saying expanded coverage could interfere with Holmes’ right to a fair trial.

Last week, Sylvester allowed a live video feed that permitted the world its first glimpse of the shooting suspect. With an unruly mop of orange hair, Holmes appeared bleary-eyed and distracted. He did not speak.

Security was tight for Monday’s hearing. Armed officers were stationed on the roof of both buildings at the court complex, and law enforcement vehicles blocked entrances to the buildings.

Gearing for assault

Investigators said Holmes began stockpiling gear for his assault four months ago and bought his weapons in May and June, well before the shooting spree just after midnight during a showing of “The Dark Knight Rises.” He was arrested by police outside the theatre.

Analysts said that means it’s likely there’s only one main point of legal dispute between prosecutors and the defence.

“I don’t think it’s too hard to predict the path of this proceeding,” Silverman said. “This is not a whodunit. … The only possible defence is insanity.”

Under Colorado law, defendants are not legally liable for their acts if their minds are so “diseased” that they cannot distinguish between right and wrong. However, the law warns that “care should be taken not to confuse such mental disease or defect with moral obliquity, mental depravity, or passion growing out of anger, revenge, hatred, or other motives, and kindred evil conditions.”

Experts said there are two levels of insanity defences.

Holmes’ public defenders could argue he is not mentally competent to stand trial, which is the argument by lawyers for Jared Loughner, who is accused of killing six people in 2011 in Tucson, Ariz., and wounding several others, including Rep. Gabrielle Giffords. Loughner, who has pleaded not guilty to 49 charges, has been diagnosed with schizophrenia and is undergoing treatment at a Missouri prison facility in a bid to make him mentally fit to stand trial.

Insanity defence

If Holmes’ attorneys cannot convince the court that he is mentally incompetent, and he is convicted, they can try to stave off a possible death penalty by arguing he is mentally ill. Prosecutors will decide whether to seek the death penalty in the coming weeks.

He ultimately could verbally enter a plea to the anticipated dozen first-degree murder charges, or his attorneys could enter it for him.

Sam Kamin, a law professor at the University of Denver, said there is “pronounced” evidence that the attack was premeditated, which would seem to make an insanity defence difficult. “But,” he said, “the things that we don’t know are what this case is going to hinge on, and that’s his mental state.”

Friends in Southern California, where Holmes grew up, describe him as a smart, sometimes awkward youth fascinated by science. He came to Colorado’s competitive neuroscience doctoral program in June 2011. A year later, he dropped out shortly after taking his year-end exam.

Sylvester has tried to tightly control the flow of information about Holmes, placing a gag order on lawyers and law enforcement, sealing the court file and barring the university from releasing public records relating to Holmes’ year there.

A consortium of media organisations, including The Associated Press, is challenging Sylvester’s sealing of the court file.

On Friday, court papers revealed that Holmes was seeing a psychiatrist at the university. But they did not say how long he was seeing Fenton and if it was for a mental illness or another problem.

The University of Colorado’s website identified Fenton as the medical director of the school’s Student Mental Health Services.

An online resume listed schizophrenia as one of her research interests and stated that she sees 10 to 15 graduate students a week for medication and psychotherapy, as well as five to 10 patients in her general practice as a psychiatrist

Read: Colorado shooting: Suspect James Holmes to be charged today>

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Comments (42 Comments)

  • Think it’s fair to say that no matter what happens he’s not seeing sunlight anytime in the near/medium/long term/ever.

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  • lock him up for the rest of his natural life let him wallow and suffer for what he has done to many families.

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  • It’s scary how many people think he should get the death penalty.. double standards methinks. In my opinion, life sentence. No parole, suffer and repent.

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  • 13 victims now after that poor lady had a miscarriage.

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  • Why has he been charged with 24 counts of murder? I get that it’s two for each of the murders but I don’t understand why!

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    • bob 30/07/12 #

      if ya throw enough mud at a wall,some of it sticks! not that ya need that here but generally,prosecution heaps it on and sees what happens.prob,intent to commit murder,premeditated, murder,etc.

      Reply
    • “For the murder charges, one count included murder with deliberation, the other murder with extreme indifference…… A conviction under extreme indifference means that any life sentences would have to be served consecutively, not concurrently,”

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  • y dont they shot him once a year in the legs on the eve of the aniversary of the killens? that way the famlies will knw that he is in agony somewhere n no one giving a flying f.u.c.k

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  • For all those wanting execution.. Which is a worse punishment, spending the rest of your life in a small room or dying? I would say the former! Why do you think people commit suicide in prison, because they cant take it anymore. Life in prison is a far worse punishment in my opinion.

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  • But I got to point out it is good he’s in the US. In Ireland he would probably have been charged for manslaughter.

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  • Ah get rid if him, there’s some people this world just doesn’t need.

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    • Rocco 31/07/12 #

      Thumbs up for his execution, but thumbs down for the people who were executed in Mali by stoning. Get a grip people. You are no better than this guy if you want him executed.

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    • Agree with Rocco –
      The rest of the first world has managed to move away from the death penalty with a very good reason.

      Anyone with support for the death penalty (in my opinion) is demented and just as twisted as any killer out there.

      It’s very easy to say ‘oh yeah, just kill him’ but when you get to the basic facts of things – this guy is clearly mentally unstable.

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  • 1 concrete floor, 1 concrete ceiling, 4 concrete walls with a big steal door and just a little hatch on the bottom of that door to kick disgusting cheap food into him to keep him alive and let him live in that misery for as long as possible. He should never see Sunlight again and have as little Human contact as possible.

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  • I have a 6 yr old daughter and while it’s impossible to ever imagine the suffering of the parents of that little 6 yr old who was shot, I don’t believe that someone being tortured or shot in my child’s name would ease my loss or pain in any way.

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  • All this talk about locking him up and shooting him. I agree with neither… Should be tortured, slowly, so he’d die screaming.

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  • this is why we need the death penalty

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    • First of all the last person executed in Colorado was in 1976.

      Secondly if he is executed he might never provide a reason as to why he committed these acts. There is also the possibility that he may provide useful information in the future as to what sort of triggers and process’s caused him to act this way . These then may be used by law enforcement to solve cases or prevent future shootings. It is through interviews with the likes of Dahmer, Gacey, Kemper, Rameriez, Bundy etc that criminal psychology has advanced in the way that it has.

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    • I read somewhere recently that since the introduction of DNA in the state of Texas alone over 35 people on Death Row have been found to bee innocent, this begs the question how many were executed before DNA, and what about other State’s and countries?
      That said, in circumstances like this where the person is guilty beyond any doubt and has committed horrible crimes like this fool I have no problem shooting the fcuker. I agree with what Brian said though, a lot can be learned from him, used to educate law enforcement and hopefully prevent future fools from doing similar things. The problem is that we’re told he isn’t cooperating with police and is refusing to talk, personally I reckon a couple of power tools and he’d talk. Then shoot the fcuker.

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    • Yeah, because we have shooting sprees everyday here in Ireland…

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    • Kenneth Bianchi http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kenneth_Bianchi was one of two men who carried out the Hillside Strangling’s in 1977-1978. He feigned insanity and pretended to have Multiple Personality Disorder in order fool the prosecution. He eventually co-operated with police and this led to the conviction of his cousin for his part in the murders. He didn’t do it straight away , it takes time. After all most people who are up for murder aren’t too inclined to help the authorities but may eventually come around once they realize that their situation is hopeless.

      I can understand people wanting vengeance for such a horrific act however wouldn’t it be far better to learn his motives and help prevent other attacks. Most of the time people who carry out these acts either shoot themselves or get shot by the cops. This leaves us guessing as to why they did it and doesn’t give us the full picture. It is reported that Holmes failed an important exam and shortly after bought his first firearm. This failure could have been the stressor that drove him over the top. Executing him isn’t going to help stop future atrocities and certainly isn’t going to help crime prevention in any way.

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    • It’s easier to kill than to let live.
      Yet, it holds more benefit to keep him alive and serves no real purpose to kill him.

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  • My he rot in hell

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    • bob 30/07/12 #

      if you believe in hell that is! I don’t,so isolation in an iron maiden would be good for a start.but it doesn’t matter,the pain he caused will live on,while he blubs in a cell.

      Reply
  • JJ Rossi 31/07/12 #

    Get a grip people, just because he did a terrible thing doesn’t mean he should be tortured, shot in the legs etc. We aren’t animals in this world and shouldn’t be suggesting terrible things be done to him, that would make us just as bad as him if not worse, and the fact that we don’t have cruel punishments in the western justice system separates justice from revenge and the moral from the immoral.

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  • Not only should this guy be shot in the head himself but the NRA needs to be held accountable also.

    Legally thia guy obtained the ammunition that is responsible for the heartache and suffering of numerous families.

    saying that how many innocent people have the american army killed in the last 24 hours… id bet more than was killed at the cinema here.

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  • He should receive 24 consecutive death sentences.

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  • An eye for an eye I say….. Who needs to study this deranged excuse for a human ?? Just shoot the b**stard and be done with it . He doesn’t deserve all the media attention he’s getting ! Which probably is giving him some sort of strange thrill !

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    • And you have such a close connection to this case that you have full details of his mental state before and during the event. There is never a good reason to take a life, no matter what a person has done, it’s just state murder. Where there are doubts about the person’s sanity it is even worse. I’ve known people with schizophrenia do some weird stuff when off medication yet appear outwardly normal for a long time beforehand. We don’t know what mental state he was in, but judging from some of the lynch mob mentality on here thousands of miles away it is going to be very hard for him to get a fair trial from a jury over there. There aren’t many things I’m grateful for Europe over but banning the death penalty, as is right in a civilised society, is definitely one of them.

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    • I understand your anger Sharon, but one reason we need to study him, is that if we don’t, what answers can we possibly offer to subsequent victims of a similar killer in the future?. They would, quite rightly in my opinion, demand answers, as to why justice was rushed, at the expense of possible knowledge gained that could have been used to prevent further similar atrocities.If you were partly involved in taking that decision now, how would you feel down the road, if some parent in the future asked you that question regarding the death of their child, sibling, or parent?. I know it’s an extremely bitter pill to swallow, to allow him the privilege of breath and life, but if we rush to judgement, we may be rushing to a judgement that could ultimately result in ourselves being vilified in the future, for satiating our immediate thirst for revenge, rather than thinking selflessly of future generations. To finish, the eye for an eye idea of retribution, as everybody probably has already heard Ghandi explain, just leads to blindness. All you have to do is extend Ghandi’s observation, to a life for a life, and all mankind’s problems will be solved. There will be no problems, because, there will be no life.

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  • Come on America Dont waste time just execute him

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  • I’m an idiot

    he should be executed. Good Riddance

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  • Why does my comment not appear?

    Reply

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