Hearing may be 'mini-trial' in Colo. theater shootings

CENTENNIAL, Colo. (AP) - The suspect in the Colorado movie theater killings returns to court this week for a hearing that might be the closest thing to a trial the victims and their families will get to see.
James Holmes, a former neuroscience graduate student, is charged with killing 12 people and injuring 70 by opening fire in a darkened theater in the Denver suburb of Aurora last July.
At a weeklong preliminary hearing starting Monday, prosecutors will outline their case against Holmes, the first official public disclosure of their evidence. The judge will then determine whether to send the case to trial.
Legal analysts say that evidence appears to be so strong that Holmes may well accept a plea agreement before trial. In such cases, the preliminary hearing can set the stage for a deal by letting each side assess the other's strengths and weaknesses, said Laurie Levenson, a former federal prosecutor and now a professor at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles.
Preliminary hearings "are often the first step to resolving the case, a mini-trial so both sides can see the writing on the wall," Levenson said.
Judges rarely throw out a case at this stage because prosecutors must only meet a "probable cause" standard - much lower than the "beyond a reasonable doubt" standard for a guilty verdict at trial, said Mimi Wesson, a professor of law at the University of Colorado Law School.
Holmes, who faces more than 160 counts including first-degree murder and attempted murder, could have waived his right to a preliminary hearing, allowing lawyers on both sides to prepare for trial. But defense lawyers sometimes go through with the hearing because it gives them a clearer picture of prosecution evidence.
"In this case, I think it likely that the genuine purpose of the hearing would be information-gathering by the defense," Wesson said.
Court officials expect many survivors and family members of the dead to attend the preliminary hearing, along with scores of spectators and reporters. At least two overflow rooms are being prepared where the hearing can be observed by video and audio feeds.
District Judge William B. Sylvester has imposed a gag order on attorneys and investigators, and many court documents have been filed under seal, so little is known about Holmes' path from promising graduate student to suspect in a mass murder.
The few details that have been made public suggest a disturbing descent.
Holmes enrolled in the University of Colorado, Denver Ph.D. program in neuroscience in 2011. In the spring of 2012, authorities say, he began buying weapons, high-capacity magazines, ammunition, explosives and combat gear. At some point in the school year, he began seeing a university psychiatrist. He failed an oral exam on June 7 and withdrew from the university three days later.
He was arrested outside the theater shortly after the July 20 shootings. Federal authorities have said he entered the theater with a ticket and is believed to have propped open a door, slipped out to his car and returned with his weapons.
Hours later, investigators found his apartment booby-trapped with potentially deadly explosives, police said.
In previous hearings - many witnessed by victims and survivors - Holmes' appearance and behavior ranged from bizarre to unremarkable. On his first day in court, his hair was a shocking orange-red, his face was covered with stubble and he seemed to be in a daze.
By last week, his hair was a natural-looking brown and he wore a full beard. He sat quietly and seemed to be aware of the proceedings.
Holmes could get the death penalty or life in prison without parole if he goes to trial and is convicted of murder. He could avoid the death penalty if his lawyers argue he is mentally ill or innocent by reason of insanity.
Holmes' mental health is expected to be a major factor whether his case ends in a plea agreement or goes to trial.
His lawyers have told the judge that Holmes was mentally ill, and court records indicate they may call witnesses in the preliminary hearing to testify about his mental health. The defense team has not said whether Holmes would enter an insanity plea.
An insanity plea is different from the competency argument used for Jared Loughner, who pleaded guilty to killing six people and wounding 13, including then-Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, in Arizona in 2011.
A judge ruled in May 2011 that Loughner was mentally incompetent to stand trial and ordered him to undergo psychiatric treatment. After Loughner spent more than a year in treatment, the judge ruled he had become competent, and Loughner accepted a plea agreement that carried a sentence of life in prison without parole instead of execution.
The decision on whether to seek the death penalty will be up to the new district attorney for Arapahoe County, George Brauchler, who was elected in November and takes office Tuesday, after the preliminary hearing begins. Brauchler has not indicated what he will do.
A spokeswoman for outgoing District Attorney Carol Chambers, who oversaw the filing of charges against Holmes, declined to comment.
If prosecutors do not seek the death penalty, and if Holmes is convicted of or pleads guilty to first-degree murder charges, he would face a mandatory sentence of life without parole.
James Holmes, a former neuroscience graduate student, is charged with killing 12 people and injuring 70 by opening fire in a darkened theater in the Denver suburb of Aurora last July.
At a weeklong preliminary hearing starting Monday, prosecutors will outline their case against Holmes, the first official public disclosure of their evidence. The judge will then determine whether to send the case to trial.
Legal analysts say that evidence appears to be so strong that Holmes may well accept a plea agreement before trial. In such cases, the preliminary hearing can set the stage for a deal by letting each side assess the other's strengths and weaknesses, said Laurie Levenson, a former federal prosecutor and now a professor at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles.
Preliminary hearings "are often the first step to resolving the case, a mini-trial so both sides can see the writing on the wall," Levenson said.
Judges rarely throw out a case at this stage because prosecutors must only meet a "probable cause" standard - much lower than the "beyond a reasonable doubt" standard for a guilty verdict at trial, said Mimi Wesson, a professor of law at the University of Colorado Law School.
Holmes, who faces more than 160 counts including first-degree murder and attempted murder, could have waived his right to a preliminary hearing, allowing lawyers on both sides to prepare for trial. But defense lawyers sometimes go through with the hearing because it gives them a clearer picture of prosecution evidence.
"In this case, I think it likely that the genuine purpose of the hearing would be information-gathering by the defense," Wesson said.
Court officials expect many survivors and family members of the dead to attend the preliminary hearing, along with scores of spectators and reporters. At least two overflow rooms are being prepared where the hearing can be observed by video and audio feeds.
District Judge William B. Sylvester has imposed a gag order on attorneys and investigators, and many court documents have been filed under seal, so little is known about Holmes' path from promising graduate student to suspect in a mass murder.
The few details that have been made public suggest a disturbing descent.
Holmes enrolled in the University of Colorado, Denver Ph.D. program in neuroscience in 2011. In the spring of 2012, authorities say, he began buying weapons, high-capacity magazines, ammunition, explosives and combat gear. At some point in the school year, he began seeing a university psychiatrist. He failed an oral exam on June 7 and withdrew from the university three days later.
He was arrested outside the theater shortly after the July 20 shootings. Federal authorities have said he entered the theater with a ticket and is believed to have propped open a door, slipped out to his car and returned with his weapons.
Hours later, investigators found his apartment booby-trapped with potentially deadly explosives, police said.
In previous hearings - many witnessed by victims and survivors - Holmes' appearance and behavior ranged from bizarre to unremarkable. On his first day in court, his hair was a shocking orange-red, his face was covered with stubble and he seemed to be in a daze.
By last week, his hair was a natural-looking brown and he wore a full beard. He sat quietly and seemed to be aware of the proceedings.
Holmes could get the death penalty or life in prison without parole if he goes to trial and is convicted of murder. He could avoid the death penalty if his lawyers argue he is mentally ill or innocent by reason of insanity.
Holmes' mental health is expected to be a major factor whether his case ends in a plea agreement or goes to trial.
His lawyers have told the judge that Holmes was mentally ill, and court records indicate they may call witnesses in the preliminary hearing to testify about his mental health. The defense team has not said whether Holmes would enter an insanity plea.
An insanity plea is different from the competency argument used for Jared Loughner, who pleaded guilty to killing six people and wounding 13, including then-Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, in Arizona in 2011.
A judge ruled in May 2011 that Loughner was mentally incompetent to stand trial and ordered him to undergo psychiatric treatment. After Loughner spent more than a year in treatment, the judge ruled he had become competent, and Loughner accepted a plea agreement that carried a sentence of life in prison without parole instead of execution.
The decision on whether to seek the death penalty will be up to the new district attorney for Arapahoe County, George Brauchler, who was elected in November and takes office Tuesday, after the preliminary hearing begins. Brauchler has not indicated what he will do.
A spokeswoman for outgoing District Attorney Carol Chambers, who oversaw the filing of charges against Holmes, declined to comment.
If prosecutors do not seek the death penalty, and if Holmes is convicted of or pleads guilty to first-degree murder charges, he would face a mandatory sentence of life without parole.
Really tough to call him mentally ill when he was studying neuroscience at graduate level... The people defending him are just as sick.
 @mikeyb123 It has been widely speculated that Hitler had an IQ above 140. Intellect does not preclude insanity.Â
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"Truly great madness cannot be achieved without significant intelligence."
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-H. Tikkanen
 @MarkKpic "speculated"...Quotes don't make things true...
'Holmes could get the death penalty or life in prison without parole if he goes to trial and is convicted of murder. He could avoid the death penalty if his lawyers argue he is mentally ill or innocent by reason of insanity.'
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If?
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What other possible 'defense' could they possibly come up with?
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Just short of some sort of prosecutorial misconduct, or evidence tampering that gets everything from his apartment and the theater thrown out, a trial would result in him being convicted and sentenced to death. There is simply no way around that reality. The defense attorneys, doing their constitutional and judicial duties, are seeking to avoid having him put to death. That leaves, realistically, only two options.Â
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Plea bargain, or not guilty by reason of mental defect.Â
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Hence why Mr Holmes has been so notably devoid of conscious appearance in every court appearance he's made.Â
 @MarkKpic There won't be an if. They just can't say "when" yet. No jury in their right mind would vote this guy innocent. He's toast.
In Phd program in neuroscience, sounds to me like he was doing research on how to act in order to plead insanity. Hinckley gets furloughs from prison now to visit his family. You play nutcase just long enough for people's memories to fade and then some shrink says you are no longer a threat to society and are sorry for the deed and you get furloughs. I say we let him loose in general prison population and see what happens.
Here we go again with the " he is mentally ill or innocent by reason of insanity" crap. Of course he is nuttier than squerrel sh-it! Who else would premeditate a massacre like that? Damn nutball needs what he dished out!
 @iamtroglodite@yahoo.com ' Who else would premeditate a massacre like that?'
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Jiverly Wong, Howard Unruh, Michael McLendon, George Hennard, James Pough, James Huberty,  Tim McVeigh, Dylan Klebold & Eric Harris.Â
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...and that's just a partial list, exclusive to the US.Â
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An interesting read... http://news.discovery.com/history/mass-shootings-history-121220.html
@MarkKpic @iamtroglodite@yahoo.com My post (and point) was " Of course he is nuttier than squerrel sh-it! Who else would premeditate a massacre like that? ". Every one of those freaks fit that. The "system" tends to try to excuse crazy-making like this with the insane plea instead of just giving what they dished out.
 @iamtroglodite@yahoo.com  @MarkKpic >'The "system" tends to try to excuse crazy-making like this with the insane plea instead of just giving what they dished out.'
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A technicality, but it's not 'the system' that attempts to excuse their behavior through the insanity defense, it's their attorneys.Â
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That's specifically why I'm a big proponent of 'guilty, but insaine' becoming an accepted plea. Found guilty, the defendant is sentenced. They serve out part of their sentence in a max security mental health facility (or ward within a prison), and once deemed 'sane', they move into appropriate prison to serve out the remainder of their sentence.Â
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'Insanity' as a defense.. a genuine defense reason for the crime, is abused and misapplied all to frequently to allow meat sticks to get (what amounts to) a minimum security, shortened sentence for some pretty horrendous crimes.Â
He looks demented and lost He has an empty sole, eyes are glassed over..
No much to call human if you ask me.
@lee986321 cool, put him out of his misery.
 @Jeepers  @lee986321 Would like to, but, law prevents me from doing so. besides he is in a cell for now.
 @Jeepers He is a modern day Barabas.
He's got that whole Johnny Depp thing goin'. Â http://i2.mirror.co.uk/incoming/article203486.ece/ALTERNATES/s615/image-6-for-johnny-depp-in-alice-in-wonderland-gallery-918135751.jpg