The Columbus Dispatch

2,000 attend vigil for Boulder victims

- Thomas Peipert, Colleen Slevin and Bernard Condon

BOULDER, Colo. – About 2,000 people gathered for a vigil honoring the 10 people killed in the Colorado supermarke­t shooting Thursday night after attorneys for the shooting suspect asked during his first court appearance that he receive a mental health evaluation before the case against him proceeds.

The memorial at Fairview High School, a half-mile from the scene of the shooting at a King Soopers supermarke­t, emphasized remembranc­e and healing. The crowd said aloud the names of those slain this week in Boulder after one resident read the names of the eight people killed in a mass shooting in Georgia just days before.

Many held candles and roses while locking arms or embracing each other near the base of the snow-covered Rocky Mountain foothills. After a singer led the crowd in “Amazing Grace,” Nicole Liabraaten, a local leader of the guncontrol group Moms Demand Action, asked people to “take a healing breath.”

“Our hearts are broken, and our festering wounds are split open once again. And this time it’s for the whole world to see,” said Liabraaten, whose group helped organize the vigil.

Democratic U.S. Rep. Joe Neguse, whose district includes Boulder, told the crowd no words could describe how he felt when he heard about the shooting.

“Ten lives. Ten precious lives lost too soon and remembered by so many,” he said.

Neguse said he had spoken with some of his colleagues about how to curb gun violence. “It does not have to be this way,” he said, prompting cheers.

One woman yelled, “Ban assault weapons.” That prompted another woman to scold her. “This is about people who died,” she said. “This is a memorial.”

Earlier Thursday, an attorney for accused shooter Ahmad Al Aliwi Alissa asked for the mental health evaluation but provided no details about Alissa’s mental health. The suspect’s next hearing will not be scheduled for two to three months to allow the defense to evaluate his mental state and evidence collected

by investigat­ors.

“Our position is we cannot do anything until we are able to fully assess Mr. Alissa’s mental illness,” public defender Kathryn Herold said.

Alissa, 21, did not speak except to say “yes” to a question from the judge, who advised him that he is charged with 10 counts of first-degree murder and one count of attempted murder for allegedly shooting at a police officer, who was unhurt.

Boulder officer, 51-year-old Eric Talley, was among those killed. His funeral was set for next Tuesday.

Alissa did not enter a plea, which will come later in the judicial process. He has been jailed without bail.

Alissa entered court in a wheelchair, presumably because of a gunshot wound to the leg that he suffered Monday in a gunbattle with police. He appeared

alert and attentive, his eyes darting back and forth from his lawyers to the judge.

Boulder police tweeted Thursday that they used the handcuffs of the slain officer, Talley, to take the suspect from a hospital to jail earlier this week – and told him so.

A law enforcemen­t official briefed on the shooting previously said that the suspect’s family told investigat­ors they believed Alissa was suffering some type of mental illness, including delusions. The official was not authorized to speak publicly and spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity.

Alissa’s legal team includes public defender Daniel King, who represente­d Colorado theater gunman James Holmes, as well as Robert Dear, who is accused of killing three people in a 2015 attack on a Planned Parenthood clinic in

Colorado Springs, two cases in which mental illness was a factor.

Depending on what they learn from investigat­ors about Alissa’s mental health, his lawyers could ask the court to order an examinatio­n by a psychiatri­st or psychologi­st to determine whether he is competent to stand trial.

If defendants are unable to understand the proceeding­s and assist their lawyers, proceeding­s can be delayed to see if treatment, such as medication, can make them ready for trial.

A mentally ill defendant might eventually plead not guilty by reason of insanity, as Holmes did in the 2012 shooting at an Aurora movie theater that killed 12 people and injured 70. It would be up to a jury to decide whether the defendant knew right from wrong at the time of the crime – the state’s legal definition of insanity.

 ?? DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/AP ?? Mourners hug as they walk the temporary fence line Friday outside the parking lot of a King Soopers grocery store, the site of a mass shooting in which 10 people died.
DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/AP Mourners hug as they walk the temporary fence line Friday outside the parking lot of a King Soopers grocery store, the site of a mass shooting in which 10 people died.

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