Dayton Daily News

Shooter to get mental evaluation

Robert Dear tells judge hewon’t submit to testing.

- BySadieGur­man

COLORADO SPRINGS,

— A man who COLO. acknowledg­es killing three people in an attack on a Colorado Planned Parenthood clinic defiantly told a judgeWedne­sday that he would not submit to a mental competency evaluation and wanted to fire his public defender and represent himself.

Robert Dear, 57, interrupte­d Judge Gilbert A. Martinez at a status hearing as the judge was ordering the evaluation.

Dear said competency evaluators would want to “administer the drug treatment and make me a zombie.”

“Do I sound like a zombie? Do I sound like I have no intelligen­ce?” he asked the judge.

Martinez advised Dear to trust his lawyer.

“How can I trust my attorney when he says I’m incompeten­t in the newspaper?” Dear replied.

Prosecutor­s also objected to the competency evaluation. One argued that Dear had made it clear that he understood the proceeding­s and the charges against him.

A backlog of orders for such evaluation­s made it unclear when the exam could be completed.

Attorneys who are not involved in Dear’s case say it isn’t unheard of for defendants to refuse to participat­e in a competency evaluation, but they can be forced to attend even if they don’t answer questions.

Prosecutor­s have yet to decide whether to seek the death penalty against Dear. Much of his legal team— from lead attorney King to his paralegals — also represente­d Colorado theater shooter James Holmes.

Dear faces 179 counts, including first-degree murder, attempted murder and other charges stemming from the Nov. 27 attack at the clinic. At a court appearance earlier this month, he called himself “a warrior for the babies” and objected to the sealing evidence in his case.

In addition, he repeatedly interrupte­d his own attorneys and accused them of conspiring with Planned Parenthood to cover up wrongdoing by the reproducti­ve health organizati­on.

Dear’s family and acquaintan­ces describe him as a man with a violent temper, anti-government sentiments and longstandi­ng disgust for people who provide abortion services. He spent most of his life in North and South Carolina before recently moving to an isolated community in Colorado’s mountains, where he lived in a trailer with no electricit­y.

Authoritie­s have revealed little about the preparatio­ns behind the attack.

Dear held police at bay for more than five hours in the attack that also wounded nine people and forced the evacuation of 300 people from businesses surroundin­g the clinic.

Dear’s next court appearance is Feb. 24.

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 ?? AP ?? Robert Dear, accused of killing three people, attends a court hearing recently in Colorado Springs, Colo.
AP Robert Dear, accused of killing three people, attends a court hearing recently in Colorado Springs, Colo.

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