National Post

Suspected gunman ‘normal,’ ‘smart’

- BY STEPHANIE SIMON AND MARTY GRAHAM

Soda bottles littered his apartment, the top floor unit of a three-storey red brick building in a run-down neighbourh­ood, what seemed typical quarters for a 24-year-old doctoral student with one critical exception: Police now believe it to be booby-trapped.

Just seven kilometres away from his Aurora, Colorado, apartment, James Eagan Holmes became a national figure on Friday, identified by police as the gunman who opened fire in a movie theatre, killing at least 12 people and wounding dozens more while dressed in body armour, black gloves and a gas mask.

Police say Mr. Holmes, who was taken into custody by police in a parking lot behind the cinema, boobytrapp­ed his apartment with sophistica­ted explosives, creating a hazard for law-enforcemen­t and bomb squad officers who swarmed to the scene.

The living room of the suspect’s apartment was crisscross­ed with trip wires connected to what appeared to be plastic bottles containing an unknown liquid, said Chris Henderson, Aurora’s deputy fire chief.

A picture of Mr. Holmes released on Friday reveals nothing unusual: Instead of a bulletproo­f vest, he is photograph­ed wearing a burnt-orange crewneck T-shirt. He is a handsome young man with dark hair, sloping and uneven eyebrows and long sideburns.

There is a slight smile across his face; stubble covers his chin. Among those who recognized the picture was Jackie Mitchell, a 45-year-old furniture mover who lives about a block away and said he met Mr. Holmes at the Zephyr Lounge, a bar a few blocks away, on Tuesday afternoon. “I was like, man, I know that dude!” he said, recalling his reaction to the picture.

Mr. Mitchell said they drank a couple of beers together — there was a two for $2 special that afternoon — and talked about the Denver Broncos NFL team. Mr. Holmes wore jeans, sunglasses were propped backwards on his head and he brought along a backpack. The young man came off as smart, Mr. Mitchell said, and carried himself with a swagger.

Indeed, Mr. Holmes, appears to be intelligen­t and studious. Born Dec. 13, 1987, he spent at least part of his childhood in San Diego, where his parents still live on a quiet suburban street. His father holds a patent for technology that can be used to detect telecommun­ications fraud.

After high school, Mr. Holmes received a bachelor’s degree in neuroscien­ce from the University of California, Riverside, but couldn’t find a job after returning to San Diego several years ago. For a year or so, he worked part-time at a McDonald’s, according to Tom Mai, who lives near the Holmes family in San Diego.

One Christmas, Mr. Mai said, James Holmes served him soft drinks at a Christmas party. “He was very kind to my children,” Mr. Mai said.

By June 2011, Mr. Holmes was in Colorado, where he enrolled in a doctoral program in neuroscien­ce at the University of Colorado Denver/Anschutz Medical Campus. In a statement, the school said on Friday he had been in the process of withdrawin­g.

Before Friday, his only other brush with police was a traffic ticket, authoritie­s said. When not in school, Mr. Holmes would sometimes hang out on the stoop of his building, located in a part of Aurora where drugs and gunshots were not uncommon, according to one neighbour.

Another neighbour, Rachel Reed, 25, saw him a number of times on the stoop, with his backpack. A couple of months ago she ran into him at the Zephyr, where she had put a Lil Wayne rap song on the jukebox.

Mr. Holmes disapprove­d, she said, preferring rock’n’roll music. He came over and “made some racially charged comments about rap,” she said. “He seemed like he was a normal dude,” she said. “He was a little buzzed.”

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