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‘Batman’ massacre trial hinges on gunman’s sanity

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Jurors will begin deliberating Wednesday whether accused "Batman" theater gunman James Holmes was sane when he cold-bloodedly opened fire on a packed Colorado cinema three years ago.

In closing arguments Tuesday, prosecutors and defense attorneys sparred over whose psychiatric experts assessed Holmes mental state correctly.

The troubled 27-year-old's defense team insisted he should be found not guilty due to insanity over the July 2012 shootings, which killed 12 theatergoers and injured 70 others in Aurora just outside Denver.

"We can't separate the mental illness from him or this crime because the mental illness is the sole reason this occurred," lead public defender Dan King told the jury.

Ashleigh Grove grieves over the lost of her friend Micayla Medek at the makeshift memorial for the 1...
Ashleigh Grove grieves over the lost of her friend Micayla Medek at the makeshift memorial for the 12 movie theater shooting victims built across the street from the Century 16 Theater July 27, 2012 in Aurora, Colorado
Joshua Lott, Getty/AFP/File

Wrapping up the two-and-a-half month trial, prosecutor George Brauchler ran through a blow-by-blow account of the massacre, which stunned America and reignited the country's perennial debate about gun control.

Referring to the 400 people in the theater, he said: "They came in hoping to see a story of a hero dressed in black, someone who would fight insurmountable odds in the name of justice and trying to protect others.

"Instead a different figure appeared by the screen dressed all in black. And he came there with one thing in his heart and in his mind -- and that was mass murder," the prosecutor said.

Holmes has been in custody since he was arrested outside the crowded midnight screening of "The Dark Knight Rises" on July 20, 2012.

He faces two counts of murder or attempted murder for each of the 82 victims.

Two people sit across from the Century 16 movie theatre July 23  2012 in Aurora  Colorado
Two people sit across from the Century 16 movie theatre July 23, 2012 in Aurora, Colorado
Joshua Lott, Getty/AFP/File

Defense lawyer King said: "The fact of the matter is that when Mr Holmes stepped into that theater... he had lost touch with reality.

"You cannot divorce the mental illness from this case, or from Mr Holmes," he said.

"The mental illness caused this to happen. Only the mental illness caused this to happen, and nothing else."

Brauchler, however, urged the court to "reject this claim that he didn't know right from wrong... That guy was sane beyond a reasonable doubt, and he needs to be held accountable for what he did."

Simply having a mental illness does not make a defendant insane under Colorado law, Brauchler said.

What matters, he said, is "if he knows what society thinks is right or wrong."

- Grisly evidence -

An Aurora police officer holds up yellow crime scene tape that surrounds the apartment building wher...
An Aurora police officer holds up yellow crime scene tape that surrounds the apartment building where suspect James Holmes lived, July 24, 2012 in Aurora, Colorado
Joshua Lott, Getty/AFP/File

Defense attorneys did not contest what happened in the massacre where Holmes lobbed smoke bomb-type devices into the theater and randomly fired weapons including an AR-15 military-style rifle, a 12-gauge shotgun and a .40 caliber pistol.

His apartment was later found to be booby-trapped with an array of homemade explosive devices, which police had to disarm before entering the dwelling.

The 49-day-long trial included weeks of grisly evidence and testimony from more than 250 witnesses.

The jury also was shown hours of videotaped interviews of Holmes by psychiatrists for the state.

Both they and two defense psychiatrists agreed the defendant struggled with mental illness.

A man stands over the makeshift memorial for the 12 movie theater shooting victims built across the ...
A man stands over the makeshift memorial for the 12 movie theater shooting victims built across the street from the Century 16 Theater on July 27, 2012 in Aurora, Colorado
Joshua Lott, Getty/AFP/File

The state's psychiatrists, however, maintained that Holmes was sane when he carried out the rampage.

Defense attorneys contended that Holmes' belief that killing people would enhance his self-worth is indicative of the profoundly delusional mental illness that barred him from telling right from wrong.

During the trial, five jurors were dismissed for various reasons from the panel of 24 jurors and alternates selected to hear the case.

Before the jury was dismissed Tuesday evening, Judge Carlos Samour named the 12 jurors who will deliberate in this portion of the trial.

If Holmes is found guilty, the alternates will be recalled to hear the arguments supporting a penalty. A second jury panel of 12 would then be picked to decide a punishment.

The punishment phase of the trial could last the rest of the summer, Samour has told the jury.

If Holmes is found not guilty by reason of insanity, he will be confined to a state mental hospital.

To win a release, he would have to be found free of mental illness and no longer a danger to himself or to others.

Under Colorado law, he could not be retried for the criminal offenses at that time.

Jurors will begin deliberating Wednesday whether accused “Batman” theater gunman James Holmes was sane when he cold-bloodedly opened fire on a packed Colorado cinema three years ago.

In closing arguments Tuesday, prosecutors and defense attorneys sparred over whose psychiatric experts assessed Holmes mental state correctly.

The troubled 27-year-old’s defense team insisted he should be found not guilty due to insanity over the July 2012 shootings, which killed 12 theatergoers and injured 70 others in Aurora just outside Denver.

“We can’t separate the mental illness from him or this crime because the mental illness is the sole reason this occurred,” lead public defender Dan King told the jury.

Ashleigh Grove grieves over the lost of her friend Micayla Medek at the makeshift memorial for the 1...

Ashleigh Grove grieves over the lost of her friend Micayla Medek at the makeshift memorial for the 12 movie theater shooting victims built across the street from the Century 16 Theater July 27, 2012 in Aurora, Colorado
Joshua Lott, Getty/AFP/File

Wrapping up the two-and-a-half month trial, prosecutor George Brauchler ran through a blow-by-blow account of the massacre, which stunned America and reignited the country’s perennial debate about gun control.

Referring to the 400 people in the theater, he said: “They came in hoping to see a story of a hero dressed in black, someone who would fight insurmountable odds in the name of justice and trying to protect others.

“Instead a different figure appeared by the screen dressed all in black. And he came there with one thing in his heart and in his mind — and that was mass murder,” the prosecutor said.

Holmes has been in custody since he was arrested outside the crowded midnight screening of “The Dark Knight Rises” on July 20, 2012.

He faces two counts of murder or attempted murder for each of the 82 victims.

Two people sit across from the Century 16 movie theatre July 23  2012 in Aurora  Colorado

Two people sit across from the Century 16 movie theatre July 23, 2012 in Aurora, Colorado
Joshua Lott, Getty/AFP/File

Defense lawyer King said: “The fact of the matter is that when Mr Holmes stepped into that theater… he had lost touch with reality.

“You cannot divorce the mental illness from this case, or from Mr Holmes,” he said.

“The mental illness caused this to happen. Only the mental illness caused this to happen, and nothing else.”

Brauchler, however, urged the court to “reject this claim that he didn’t know right from wrong… That guy was sane beyond a reasonable doubt, and he needs to be held accountable for what he did.”

Simply having a mental illness does not make a defendant insane under Colorado law, Brauchler said.

What matters, he said, is “if he knows what society thinks is right or wrong.”

– Grisly evidence –

An Aurora police officer holds up yellow crime scene tape that surrounds the apartment building wher...

An Aurora police officer holds up yellow crime scene tape that surrounds the apartment building where suspect James Holmes lived, July 24, 2012 in Aurora, Colorado
Joshua Lott, Getty/AFP/File

Defense attorneys did not contest what happened in the massacre where Holmes lobbed smoke bomb-type devices into the theater and randomly fired weapons including an AR-15 military-style rifle, a 12-gauge shotgun and a .40 caliber pistol.

His apartment was later found to be booby-trapped with an array of homemade explosive devices, which police had to disarm before entering the dwelling.

The 49-day-long trial included weeks of grisly evidence and testimony from more than 250 witnesses.

The jury also was shown hours of videotaped interviews of Holmes by psychiatrists for the state.

Both they and two defense psychiatrists agreed the defendant struggled with mental illness.

A man stands over the makeshift memorial for the 12 movie theater shooting victims built across the ...

A man stands over the makeshift memorial for the 12 movie theater shooting victims built across the street from the Century 16 Theater on July 27, 2012 in Aurora, Colorado
Joshua Lott, Getty/AFP/File

The state’s psychiatrists, however, maintained that Holmes was sane when he carried out the rampage.

Defense attorneys contended that Holmes’ belief that killing people would enhance his self-worth is indicative of the profoundly delusional mental illness that barred him from telling right from wrong.

During the trial, five jurors were dismissed for various reasons from the panel of 24 jurors and alternates selected to hear the case.

Before the jury was dismissed Tuesday evening, Judge Carlos Samour named the 12 jurors who will deliberate in this portion of the trial.

If Holmes is found guilty, the alternates will be recalled to hear the arguments supporting a penalty. A second jury panel of 12 would then be picked to decide a punishment.

The punishment phase of the trial could last the rest of the summer, Samour has told the jury.

If Holmes is found not guilty by reason of insanity, he will be confined to a state mental hospital.

To win a release, he would have to be found free of mental illness and no longer a danger to himself or to others.

Under Colorado law, he could not be retried for the criminal offenses at that time.

AFP
Written By

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