Jury to begin deliberating in Colorado theater shooting case

Closing arguments underway in James Holmes trial

CENTENNIAL, Colo. -- James Holmes was legally sane when he entered a packed movie theater armed with an assault rifle, a shotgun and a pistol, intent on killing as many people as he could, a prosecutor told jurors Tuesday in closing arguments at the gunman's trial.

"That guy was sane beyond a reasonable doubt, and he needs to be held accountable for what he did," District Attorney George Brauchler said.

But defense lawyer Daniel King countered that Holmes was controlled by his schizophrenia.

Closing arguments in Colorado theater shooting trial

"The mental illness caused this to happen. Only the mental illness caused this, and nothing else," King said.

Brauchler and King made their final appeals to jurors Tuesday before handing over the case. Deliberations are scheduled to begin Wednesday morning.

Holmes slipped into the packed theater on July 20, 2012 - almost three years ago - and opened fire. Twelve people died and 70 were injured.

Defense attorneys are asking for a verdict of not guilty by reason of insanity, which would send Holmes to the state mental hospital for an indefinite commitment. Prosecutors say Holmes should be convicted of murder and executed.

Brauchler again stressed the heavy toll on unsuspecting victims who had gone to see the midnight premier of a Batman movie, "The Dark Knight Rises."

"They came in hoping to see the story of a hero dressed in black, someone who would fight insurmountable odds for justice," Brauchler said. "Instead, a different figure appeared by the screen. ... He came there with one thing in his heart and his mind, and that was mass murder."

Psychiatrist explains James Holmes' behavior before massacre

Many of the victims and family members in the courtroom wept as Brauchler showed photos of the dead and wounded and recounted their stories. Josh Nowlan, who was shot in the leg and walks with a cane, pressed his hands into his eyes and shook.

Jurors showed no emotion but craned their heads toward the gallery when Brauchler said one badly wounded victim, Caleb Medley, was seated there.

King urged the jurors to set aside the deeply emotional impact of the massacre and decide based on the wording of the statute. He repeatedly told them the courtroom was "the fortress of the law."

"Here in the fortress of the law, there is no room for hatred or revenge or retaliation," he said.

Holmes, now 27, does not dispute that he was the lone gunman who attacked the theater but pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity. His lawyers say schizophrenia so warped his mind he could not tell right from wrong, and that he was in the grip of a psychotic breakdown.

What James Holmes thought and felt during the massacre

"When he stepped into that theater, the evidence is clear that he could not control his thoughts, that he could not control his actions, and that he could not control his perceptions," King said.

King pleaded with jurors to believe that Holmes' mental illness was the sole cause of the attack. On the courtroom video screens, King showed multiple images of Holmes as he appeared in his first court appearance, wide-eyed with shocking orange hair.

"I would ask you to do good, be strong, and do the right thing," King said. "He's not guilty by reason of insanity."

Brauchler told jurors the evidence shows Holmes knew what he was doing was illegal and wrong and that he cannot be considered insane under Colorado law.

The prosecutor methodically reviewed Holmes' elaborate preparations, the horrific attack and finally his decision to surrender when he saw police closing in outside the theater.

Video evaluation reveals theater shooter's mindset during attack

"That is logical. That is rational, and that is anything - anything - but psychotic," he said.

Brauchler frequently pointed at Holmes, who sat impassively at the defense table, often looking at one of the three video screens in the courtroom.

"He knows it's wrong," Brauchler said at one point. "Wrong for him, wrong for society."

Both sides are trying to help jurors make sense of thousands of pieces of evidence and more than 250 witnesses who testified in the 11-week trial. With that information, it will be up to the jury to decide whether prosecutors met their burden of proving Holmes was legally sane.

Two state-appointed forensic psychiatrists who evaluated Holmes determined he was legally sane, despite severe mental illness. One of the doctors, William Reid, showed jurors nearly 22 hours of sometimes chilling videotaped interviews in which Holmes haltingly describes taking aim at fleeing moviegoers and longing to kill others to increase his own self-worth.

Brauchler ended his closing argument with a rhythmic summation of the psychiatrists' findings: "Sane, sane, sane," he said. Then he added, "Guilty."

The defense called its own psychiatrists who testified Holmes was insane.

The 12 jurors who will decide the case include nine women and three men. One of the men was a student at Columbine High School at the time of the 1999 shootings, but he told the judge during jury selection he could be fair, despite having been childhood friends with the shooters and going to the prom with a victim.

The seven alternate jurors won't participate in the deliberations but must remain available in case one of the other jurors can't go on.

The panel started with 12 jurors and 12 alternates, but five were dismissed during the trial.

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