The Commercial Appeal

Defense opens in Colo. theater shooting trial

- By Sadie Gurman

Attorneys for Colorado theater shooter James Holmes began presenting their case Thursday by calling a psychiatri­st who said he had no doubt Holmes was psychotic in the aftermath of killing 12 people at a packed movie premiere.

Dr. Jonathan Woodcock interviewe­d Holmes in jail for two hours on July 24, 2012, four days after he opened fire on the theater. The doctor said he found the gunman suffering from severe mental illness that made him “tremendous­ly emotionall­y flat.”

Halfway through the exam, Holmes looked annoyed and said he was bored, Woodcock testified.

“I found that absolutely extraordin­ary that anybody in such a crime could feel bored,” Woodcock said. “That was really an extraordin­ary manifestat­ion of his mental illness.”

The jail visit with Holmes was not intended for Woodcock to form an opinion on Holmes’ sanity but rather to see if Holmes was competent to stand trial.

Woodcock was among the first witnesses called by the defense in an effort to show Holmes was legally insane at the time of the shooting, which also wounded 70 people.

Defense attorneys planned to offer a less emotional and more clinical assessment of Holmes after two months of often -gruesome testimony from prosecutio­n witnesses, including many visibly wounded victims.

Without the scores of victims on their side, Holmes’ lawyers plan to present evidence in less than a quarter of the time taken by prosecutor­s. Their goal is not only to keep Holmes out of prison but also to keep him alive.

After the shooting, Holmes was clearly distressed by the worsening symptoms of his disorder, which brought anxiety and pushed him to drop out of his stressful neuroscien­ce program, Woodcock said.

Holmes told the doctor he began experienci­ng problems as early as middle school. He started thinking of killing other people as a way to ease the discomfort of his own suicidal thoughts, Woodcock testified.

Woodcock’s findings were in contrast to two other, court-appointed psychiatri­sts who examined Holmes in the months and years after the shooting and found him mentally ill but capable of knowing right from wrong at the time — Colorado’s definition of legal sanity. Holmes’ attorneys have argued that his mental decline was far greater than the state doctors knew, in part because those doctors analyzed him much later after the attack.

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