Windsor Star

Colorado theatre shooter found guilty of murder, eligible for death penalty

- SADIE GURMAN

CENTENNIAL — Colorado theatre shooter James Holmes was convicted Thursday in the chilling 2012 attack on defenceles­s moviegoers at a midnight Batman premiere after jurors swiftly rejected defence arguments that the former graduate student was insane and driven to murder by delusions.

The 27-year-old Holmes, who had been working toward his Ph.D. in neuroscien­ce, could get the death penalty for the massacre that left 12 people dead and dozens wounded.

The initial phase of Holmes’ trial took 11 weeks, but it only took jurors about 12 hours over a day and a half to decide all 165 charges.

The same panel must now decide whether Holmes should pay with his life.

Dressed in a blue shirt and beige khakis, Holmes stood impassivel­y as Judge Carlos Samour Jr. read charge after charge, each one punctuated by the word “guilty.”

The verdict came almost three years after Holmes, dressed head-to-toe in body armour, slipped through the emergency exit of the darkened theatre in suburban Denver and replaced the Hollywood violence of the movie The Dark Knight Rises with real human carnage.

His victims included two active-duty servicemen, a single mom, a man celebratin­g his 27th birthday and an aspiring broadcaste­r who had survived a mall shooting in Toronto. Several died shielding friends or loved ones. The trial offered a rare glimpse into the mind of a mass shooter, as most are killed by police, kill themselves or plead guilty.

Prosecutor­s argued Holmes knew exactly what he was doing when he methodical­ly gunned down strangers in the stadium-style theatre, taking aim at those who fled.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? James Holmes is guilty of gunning down moviegoers in 2012.
The Associated Press James Holmes is guilty of gunning down moviegoers in 2012.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada