Colorado theater shooting suspect makes first court appearance - CNN

Diablo

New member
120723020723-colorado-mourning-11-horizontal-gallery.jpg
Greg Zanis of Aurora, Illinois, carries two of the 12 crosses he made for a makeshift memorial to the victims of last weekend's mass shooting at the Century 16 movie theater on Sunday, July 22. Twelve people were killed early Friday, July 20, during a screening of "The Dark Knight Rises" in Aurora, Colorado. Suspected gunman James E. Holmes was taken into custody shortly after the attack.
120723020728-colorado-mourning-12-horizontal-gallery.jpg
Greg Zanis writes the names of the victims of last weekend's mass shooting on the crosses before erecting them at the memorial across from the Century 16 movie theater on Sunday.
120723020734-colorado-mourning-13-horizontal-gallery.jpg
Parishioners pray during morning Mass, remembering victims of the theater shooting, at the Queen of Peace Catholic Church on Sunday.
120723020738-colorado-mourning-14-horizontal-gallery.jpg
Angie Terry, from Alabama, prays next to a white wooden cross erected for victims.
120723020742-colorado-mourning-15-horizontal-gallery.jpg
A man pauses before the crosses at the memorial near the Century 16 movie theater on Sunday.
120723020747-colorado-mourning-16-horizontal-gallery.jpg
President Barack Obama embraces Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper as Sen. Mark Udall (left) and Sen. Michael Bennet look on during a visit to the University of Colorado Hospital on Sunday.
120723021221-colorado-mourning-17-horizontal-gallery.jpg
Mourners bow their heads in prayer during the vigil for the victims of the Aurora shooting.
120723021227-colorado-mourning-18-horizontal-gallery.jpg
A woman is overcome with emotion during the vigil.
120722022947-colorado-mourning-05-horizontal-gallery.jpg
Tiffany Garcia, right, and her six-year-old daughter, Angelina Garcia, cry on Saturday, July 21, as they look at a memorial for the victim's of Friday's shooting.
120722024101-colorado-mourning-06-horizontal-gallery.jpg
People pray at a cross erected on the site of the makeshift memorial across the street from the Century 16 theater on Saturday.
120722024105-colorado-mourning-07-horizontal-gallery.jpg
Family, friends and former classmates of movie theater shooting victim AJ Boik gather for a memorial service at Gateway High School on Saturday.
120722024109-colorado-mourning-08-horizontal-gallery.jpg
Boik and his girlfriend were at the midnight showing of 'The Dark Knight Rises' when a guman killed Boik and 11 other people.
120722024114-colorado-mourning-09-horizontal-gallery.jpg
Movie theater shooting victim AJ Boik's girlfriend, Lasamoa Croft, center, embraces his mother during the memorial service.
120722024119-colorado-mourning-10-horizontal-gallery.jpg
Eman Alexander, 17, pins a ribbon on his shirt while joining family, friends and former classmates to honor shooting victim AJ Boik.
120721111719-colorado-mourning-01-horizontal-gallery.jpg
Denise Toepel of Denver sheds tears while visiting a makeshift memorial across the street from the Century 16 movie theater on Saturday, July 21.
120721111724-colorado-mourning-02-horizontal-gallery.jpg
Handwritten signs decorate the makeshift memorial across from the Century 16 movie theater on Saturday.
120721111728-colorado-mourning-03-horizontal-gallery.jpg
Gerald Wright, 24, relights candles that have blown out at the victims' memorial across from the movie theater.
120721111733-colorado-mourning-04-horizontal-gallery.jpg
Aviation Boatswain's Mate 3rd Class Jajuan Mangual lowers the American flag on the flight deck of the aircraft carrier USS George H.W. Bush to half-mast on Saturday. One U.S. Navy sailor was injured in the shooting and another who was known to have been at the theater was unaccounted for.
120721101738-colorado-mourners-cry-horizontal-gallery.jpg
Two women mourn near the theater on Saturday.
120721101709-co-mourn-02-horizontal-gallery.jpg
Alicia Prevette, left, and Paul Stepherson attend a vigil for the victims Friday at the Century 16 movie theater.
120721101712-co-mourn-03-horizontal-gallery.jpg
A woman lights a candle at a makeshift memorial where the victims of the massacre are mourned.
120721101715-co-mourn-04-horizontal-gallery.jpg
Mourners hold hands at a vigil near the theater.
120721101717-co-mourn-05-horizontal-gallery.jpg
Mourners hug as they grieve the loss of the victims.
120721101721-co-mourn-06-horizontal-gallery.jpg
A group of teenagers stand behind a sign that reads "Strength."
120721101722-co-mourn-07-horizontal-gallery.jpg
Dara Anderson, left, and Monique Anderson cry during a candlelight vigil across the street from the crime scene.
120721101724-co-mourn-08-horizontal-gallery.jpg
A woman holds a lit candle at a makeshift memorial.
120721101726-co-mourn-09-horizontal-gallery.jpg
Marietta Perkins of Denver prays for victims and their families.
120721101729-co-mourn-10-horizontal-gallery.jpg
Lonnie Delgado, right, hugs Heaven Leek during a prayer.
120721101731-co-mourn-11-horizontal-gallery.jpg
A mourner grieves on the curb during a memorial service.
120721101734-co-mourn-12-horizontal-gallery.jpg
People hug during a vigil for the victims.
120721101736-co-mourn-13-horizontal-gallery.jpg
Handwritten consolation letters lay beneath flowers at a makeshift memorial.
120721101741-co-mourn-14-horizontal-gallery.jpg
Nathan Mendoza, left, and Melissa Clark sit on the grass during a vigil.
120721101743-co-mourn-15-horizontal-gallery.jpg
Flags, flowers and candles make up a memorial site.
120721101747-co-mourn-16-horizontal-gallery.jpg
Two mourners sit on the ground at a vigil.
120721101747-co-mourn-17-horizontal-gallery.jpg
A sign prevents moviegoers from wearing masks or bringing in props to the AMC Arapahoe Crossing 16 movie theater in Aurora.
120721101750-co-mourn-18-horizontal-gallery.jpg
A woman looks at a makeshift memorial after attending a candlelight vigil.



120723020723-colorado-mourning-11-topics.jpg

1
120723020728-colorado-mourning-12-topics.jpg

2
120723020734-colorado-mourning-13-topics.jpg

3
120723020738-colorado-mourning-14-topics.jpg

4
120723020742-colorado-mourning-15-topics.jpg

5
120723020747-colorado-mourning-16-topics.jpg

6
120723021221-colorado-mourning-17-topics.jpg

7
120723021227-colorado-mourning-18-topics.jpg

8
120722022947-colorado-mourning-05-topics.jpg

9
120722024101-colorado-mourning-06-topics.jpg

10
120722024105-colorado-mourning-07-topics.jpg

11
120722024109-colorado-mourning-08-topics.jpg

12
120722024114-colorado-mourning-09-topics.jpg

13
120722024119-colorado-mourning-10-topics.jpg

14
120721111719-colorado-mourning-01-topics.jpg

15
120721111724-colorado-mourning-02-topics.jpg

16
120721111728-colorado-mourning-03-topics.jpg

17
120721111733-colorado-mourning-04-topics.jpg

18
120721101738-colorado-mourners-cry-topics.jpg

19
120721101709-co-mourn-02-topics.jpg

20
120721101712-co-mourn-03-topics.jpg

21
120721101715-co-mourn-04-topics.jpg

22
120721101717-co-mourn-05-topics.jpg

23
120721101721-co-mourn-06-topics.jpg

24
120721101722-co-mourn-07-topics.jpg

25
120721101724-co-mourn-08-topics.jpg

26
120721101726-co-mourn-09-topics.jpg

27
120721101729-co-mourn-10-topics.jpg

28
120721101731-co-mourn-11-topics.jpg

29
120721101734-co-mourn-12-topics.jpg

30
120721101736-co-mourn-13-topics.jpg

31
120721101741-co-mourn-14-topics.jpg

32
120721101743-co-mourn-15-topics.jpg

33
120721101747-co-mourn-16-topics.jpg

34
120721101747-co-mourn-17-topics.jpg

35
120721101750-co-mourn-18-topics.jpg

36




  • Thousands gather to pray at a community vigil in Aurora, Colorado
  • Aurora mayor: "We will reclaim our city in the name of goodness, kindness"
  • Obama decries the attack as an "evil act" and pledges the support of the nation
  • Suspect James Holmes is accused of opening fire Friday in a crowded theater, killing 12


(CNN) -- The man accused of opening fire in a crowded movie theater in Aurora, Colorado, is set to make his first court appearance Monday,giving the public its first look at the suspect since his arrest in an attack that authorities say was planned months in advance.
James E. Holmes, 24, is likely to face first-degree murder -- an offense that carries a possible death penalty, if convicted -- in the shooting deaths, given allegations over the weekend by police that there is evidence to suggest "calculation and deliberation" in the rampage.
Holmes is being held in connection with the early Friday morning shootings that left 12 dead and 58 wounded, and the subsequent discovery of his booby-trapped apartment, which authorities believe he rigged before leaving for the Century Aurora 16 multiplex.
Authorities have been tight-lipped about a possible motive in the case, though police spokesman Frank Fania told CNN late Sunday that Holmes has been uncooperative with investigators and requested an attorney.
Arapahoe County public defender James O'Connor has been assigned to the case. The Colorado Judicial Department declined to say whether Holmes requested a public defender. A telephone call by CNN to O'Connor's office was not immediately returned.
Holmes' court appearance will come a few hours before his family is expected to break their silence with some sort of statement. The family, who lives in San Diego, has not spoken publicly since the allegations were leveled against Holmes.
Lisa Damiani, an attorney representing the family, told CNN the statement would be made at her San Diego office.
Over the weekend, Aurora Police Chief Daniel Oates told reporters that there was "evidence of, I think, some calculation and deliberation."
Holmes received a high volume of deliveries over the past four months to both his home and work addresses, which police believe begins to explain how he got his hands on some of the materials used in the attack and those found at his apartment, Oates said.
Meanwhile, the University of Colorado School of Medicine, where Holmes enrolled in 2011 as a doctoral candidate in its neuroscience program, was investigating whether Holmes received any of the alleged shipments while working as a research assistant at the Anschutz Medical Campus in Aurora.
University spokeswoman Jacque Montgomery would not comment on reports that authorities were looking into whether Holmes allegedly used his position to obtain materials used to booby-trap his apartment.
As of late Sunday, at least 17 people remained hospitalized -- eight in critical condition -- in five area hospitals.
President Barack Obama met Sunday with survivors and the families of those killed during a visit to Aurora, where thousands of residents gathered for a prayer vigil that drew state and local officials.
"I confessed to them that words are always inadequate in these kinds of situations, but that my main task was to serve as a representative of the entire country and let them know that we are thinking about them at this moment, and will continue to think about them each and every day," Obama told reporters after the meeting at the University of Colorado Hospital.
"It reminds you that even in the darkest of days, life continues and people are strong and people bounce back and people are resilient," the president said, after describing the recovery of some victims. "Out of this darkness a brighter day is going to come."
Though much attention has been paid the past couple of days to the "perpetrator of this evil act," that spotlight will fade, leaving behind just the good memories of those impacted by the tragedy, Obama said.
Aurora is bracing for another emotional week as families begin making funeral arrangements.
It was not immediately known when the coroner would release the bodies, though it was expected to occur early this week.
It also became clear that more people may have been killed if the semi-automatic rifle the gunman was had not jammed.
One survivor, Josh Nowlan, sustained gunshot wounds, but said he is happy just to be alive. He wouldn't be, he said, if the suspect's weapon had not jammed.
"I know I wouldn't be here. If that gun did not jam, I am full certain that I probably would not be here," he said from his hospital bed Saturday.
A law enforcement source, who spoke Sunday with CNN on condition of anonymity, said the semi-automatic rifle jammed because of a problem with the 100-shot magazine feeding it.
The military-style AR-15 had a separately purchased drum magazine, which can have trouble feeding bullets into the firing chamber if the gun is fired rapidly, the source said.
Investigators say the rifle was one of three guns used by the suspect, along with a shotgun and a .40-caliber pistol.
CNN's Dana Ford, Ed Lavandera, Nick Valencia, Don Lemon and Susan Candiotti contributed to this report.

p-89EKCgBk8MZdE.gif
 
Back
Top