Showing posts with label Colorado Movie Theater. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Colorado Movie Theater. Show all posts

Monday, July 23, 2012

Colorado massacre suspect silent in first court hearing



CENTENNIAL, Colorado - The man accused of killing a dozen people in a Colorado movie theater during a showing of the new "Batman" film made his first appearance in court on Monday, sitting silently in a red jailhouse jump suit and with his hair dyed bright red.

James Eagan Holmes, 24, who was detained immediately after the massacre early on Friday morning, appeared groggy and emotionless during the brief hearing, looking straight ahead and occasionally closing his eyes. He was shackled at the wrists and ankles.




The judge said murder charges would be filed on Monday July 30.
Police say Holmes was dressed in body armor and toting three guns when he opened fire at a packed midnight screening of the new Batman movie at a theater complex in the Denver suburb of Aurora. Fifty-eight other people were hurt, and many of them have serious wounds.
Police say they are still searching for a motive for the crime.

Holmes was represented by a public defender during the brief hearing before Arapahoe County District Judge William Sylvester.

Arapahoe County District Attorney Carol Chambers has the task of deciding whether to seek the death penalty for Holmes. She has prosecuted two of the three inmates who are now on Colorado's death row.

On Sunday, President Barack Obama traveled to the suburb of 325,000 to offer comfort to families of the victims. He told them their loved ones would be remembered long after the justice system was done with the killer.

The dead included war veterans, an aspiring sportscaster who had barely escaped a shooting in a Toronto mall earlier this summer, and a 6-year-old girl.

The crime meets all the elements of Colorado capital case law, including premeditation, multiple victims, and the killing of a child, said former Denver prosecutor Craig Silverman.

"If James Holmes isn't executed, Colorado may as well throw away its death penalty law," he said.

Many in Aurora have vowed to deny Holmes the publicity they believe he craves by not uttering his name.

"I refuse to say his name. In my house we're just going to call him Suspect A," Colorado Governor John Hickenlooper told a memorial on the steps of the suburb's municipal center on Sunday night. He captured a spirit of defiance voiced by citizens as well as religious and political leaders.

Holmes and his motives remained largely a mystery, with past associates saying he displayed no hints of a mental illness or violent tendencies.

He was armed with a Smith & Wesson M&P .223 semi-automatic rifle, similar to an AR-15 assault rifle, a 12-gauge shotgun and a Glock .40-caliber handgun. Police found an additional Glock .40-caliber handgun in his car. All the weapons had been bought legally.

He is in solitary confinement to protect him from other prisoners. Holmes had recently dropped out of a doctoral degree program in neuroscience at the University of Colorado's Anschutz Medical School, a few blocks from his apartment.— Reuters

source: gmanetwork.com

Sunday, July 22, 2012

'Batman' Christian Bale Horrified by Colorado Shooting

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Actor Christian Bale, who plays Batman in "The Dark Knight Rises," expressed horror and grief for the victims of Friday's shooting spree that left 12 dead in a Colorado theater at a midnight showing of his new movie.

"Words cannot express the horror that I feel," he said in a statement released on Saturday by his spokeswoman, Jennifer Allen. "I cannot begin to truly understand the pain and grief of the victims and their loved ones, but my heart goes out to them."

James Holmes, 24, is in police custody and accused of the crime in which 58 others were injured. Holmes also is accused of booby-trapping his apartment in the Denver suburb of Aurora, Colorado, before the rampage.

source: nytimes.com

Fil-Am teen among Denver injured


Manila, Philippines - A Filipino-American teenager was one of those injured when a gunman opened fire on Friday at a Colorado movie theater playing the new Batman film “The Dark Knight Rises,” the Department of Foreign Affairs confirmed yesterday.

DFA spokesman Raul Hernandez said the Philippine Consulate in San Francisco reported that Ryan Lumba, 17, was among those injured and admitted to the University of Colorado Hospital.


“The Consulate received a report that a Fil-Am was one of those injured and had been admitted to one of the local hospitals in the Aurora area. However, no specific information could be released,” Hernandez said in a text message to The STAR.

In an ABS-CBN report, Lumba’s mother Remy said her son, who remains unconscious was shot in the stomach and underwent surgery.

Aurora is a suburb of the city of Denver, Colorado, 32 kilometers from the scene of the 1999 Columbine High School massacre, in which two students shot dead 13 people before committing suicide.

Other Asians who were injured during the shooting incident include three Indonesians, Indonesian Foreign Affairs Minister Marty Natalegawa reported yesterday.

“Three Indonesian nationals were injured in the incident. It’s a father, a mother and their son,” he said.

Natalegawa added the 15-year-old son and the mother were being treated for gunshot wounds while the father only suffered a bruise on his left eye.

Police said Holmes was arrested soon after the massacre, although the motive of the assailant remains unknown.

A federal law enforcement official said Holmes bought a ticket to the show, went into the theater as part of the crowd and propped open an exit door as the movie was playing.

Several survivors remarked on their initial confusion as the attack unfolded that the silhouetted gunman dressed in black, wearing a helmet, body armor and a gas mask as he stepped through a side door, was part of a stunt in the movie.

“I thought it was showmanship. I didn’t think it was real,” Jennifer Seeger, one of the shooting survivors, said.




“He looked like an assassin ready to go to war,” said Jordan Crofter, one of the moviegoers unhurt in the attack.

“All I saw is the door swinging open and the street lights behind, and you could see a silhouette,” Crofter, who was sitting on the left side of the theater and toward the front, added.

But then as he threw gas canisters that filled the packed suburban Denver theater with smoke and opened fire, people screamed and dove for cover.

Seeger, who was in the second row, about four feet from the gunman, ducked to the ground as the gunman shot people seated behind her.

“He would reload and shoot and anyone who would try to leave would just get killed,” Seeger recalled, adding that bullet casings landed on her head and burned her forehead.

Within minutes, frantic emergency services calls brought some 200 police officers, ambulances and emergency crews to the theater.

Holmes was captured in the parking lot.

According to Aurora police chief Dan Oates, Holmes used a military-style semi-automatic rifle, a shotgun and a pistol.

“My understanding is all weapons he possessed, he possessed legally. All ammunition he possessed, he possessed legally,” Oates told a news conference, adding that he had purchased four guns at local gun shops within the past 60 days and bought 6,000 rounds of ammunition.

Suspect described as ‘a loner, shy’

Meanwhile, neighbors described Holmes as a “loner” often seen carrying guns to and from his home.

“He was always wearing camouflage pants and a hat,” said Gabriel Macias, a Mexican who works at a meat factory. He recalled seeing Holmes carrying guns and weapon cases to and from his apartment.

“We did not know him well because he talked to nobody. He was always locked up behind his door,” said Macias.

Melvin Evans, a security guard from a nearby building, said he occasionally saw Holmes at a local bar.

“He was always by himself. Looked like a nice guy,” said Evans, 33. “I go to the bar every Sunday for karaoke. I’ve seen him there every now and then. We would talk sometimes, the weather, you know.”

A student, who only gave his name as Ben, said Holmes kept to himself and would not say hello or acknowledge other people in the hallway.

Ben also revealed he had called police shortly after midnight – coincidentally around the time of the massacre at a Batman premiere – to report a song blaring from inside Holmes’ apartment.

Ben could not make out the song, but it appeared to be playing on repeat.

Tom Mai, a next-door neighbor of the Holmes family in San Diego, remembered Holmes as a shy teenager who did not play or socialize with other youngsters in the neighborhood, the San Diego Union-Tribune newspaper said.

“He said that he last saw him two years ago when he came home during summer recess from college,” it said on its website. The family, he said, “was nice and involved with a Presbyterian church.”

On Friday morning, police escorted Holmes’ father, a manager of a software company, from their home while his mother, a nurse, stayed inside, receiving visitors who came to offer support. Holmes also has a younger sister.

“As you can understand, the Holmes family is very upset about all of this,” Lt. Andra Brown, the San Diego police spokeswoman, told reporters in the driveway of the family home. “It’s a tragic event and it’s taken everyone by surprise. They are definitely trying to work through this.”

Police released a statement from his family that said: “Our hearts go out to those who were involved in this tragedy and to the families and friends of those involved.”

Holmes’ family said they were cooperating with investigators.

The FBI described Holmes as a white male, 6-foot-3 (1.9 meters) tall, born on Dec. 13, 1987, with no significant criminal record and no links to terrorism.

Police in Aurora, Colorado, told reporters records showed that the shooting suspect’s only infringement in the city was a speeding ticket in 2011.

Holmes graduated from University of California, Riverside, in the spring of 2010 with a bachelor’s degree in neuroscience, a school spokesman said.

Mai said the mother told him Holmes could not find a job after earning a master’s degree and returned to school.

He enrolled in the Ph.D. neuroscience program at the University of Colorado-Denver in June 2011 but left the program last month, according to the university. – With AP

source: philstar.com