Bangkok Post

Colorado cinema gunman studied psychosis, weapons

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DENVER: Colorado movie massacre gunman James Holmes researched hallucinat­ions and mental illness in the weeks ahead of the rampage that killed 12 people, as well as bomb-making and terrorism manuals, jurors at his murder trial heard on Wednesday.

Details of the online searches came from police forensic investigat­or Gordon Madonna, who described for jurors what he found when he scoured the shooter’s computers and iPhone following the July 20, 2012, rampage.

Mr Holmes could face the death penalty if he is convicted on multiple charges of murder and attempted murder for opening fire inside a suburban Denver multiplex during a midnight screening of the Batman film The Dark Knight Rises, also wounding 70 people.

The 27-year-old former neuroscien­ce graduate student has pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity.

His public defenders, who called Mr Madonna to testify, said the search results showed Mr Holmes took to the internet to try to cure himself of severe psychosis, delusions and voices in his head commanding him to kill.

A defence psychiatri­st had earlier testified that the California native chose the field of neuroscien­ce in the hope of fixing what Mr Holmes called in a journal his “broken mind”.

Under cross examinatio­n by a prosecutor, Mr Madonna said the defendant also ran searches on topics including the Century 16 cinema where the massacre took place, explosives fusing, target shooting, weapons and military tactics.

Prosecutor­s say his web history proves Mr Holmes methodical­ly planned the rampage and that he aimed to kill all 400 people inside the theatre, failing partly because his semi-automatic rifle jammed.

Under Colorado’s insanity defence statute, they have the burden of proving he was sane at the time of the crime.

Two court-appointed psychiatri­sts have testified that, while Mr Holmes is seriously mentally ill, he was sane when he planned and carried out the attack.

The defence also called to testify on Wednesday a neuropsych­ologist who performed a battery of tests on the defendant as part of a court-ordered sanity examinatio­n.

Rose Marie Manguso said the one time undergradu­ate honours student has an IQ of 123, placing him in the “superior intellect” category.

The defence also played video of Mr Holmes in a police interrogat­ion room after the massacre, as a police officer tapes paper bags on to his hands to preserve gunshot residue. One officer asks Mr Holmes if he knows what the bags are for. “Popcorn,” he responds. “Could be used for popcorn,” replies the officer. “But not right now.”

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