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News / Nation & World

Colorado theater gunman’s sentencing caps grueling trial

Holmes formally gets life for killing 12, wounding 70

The Columbian
Published: August 26, 2015, 5:00pm
3 Photos
RJ SANGOSTI/The Denver Post via AP
James Holmes is led out of the courtroom Wednesday after being formally sentenced in Centennial, Colo. He was sentenced to life in prison without parole.
RJ SANGOSTI/The Denver Post via AP James Holmes is led out of the courtroom Wednesday after being formally sentenced in Centennial, Colo. He was sentenced to life in prison without parole. Photo Gallery

CENTENNIAL, Colo. — Belittled by the judge and jeered by spectators, James Holmes was sent to prison for the rest of his life Wednesday, while the survivors of his murderous attack on a Colorado movie theater wondered aloud how they would spend the rest of their days.

Judge Carlos A. Samour sentenced Holmes to the maximum — 12 consecutive life terms without parole plus 3,318 years — then made a final, contemptuous order: “Sheriff, get the defendant out of my courtroom, please.”

Samour described Holmes as an angry quitter who gave up on life and turned his hatred into murder and mayhem against innocent strangers.

Survivors and victims’ family members in the gallery cheered, and someone shouted “Loser!” as deputies took Holmes away.

The long, grueling trial came to its formal conclusion three years and 37 days after Holmes murdered 12 people and tried to kill 70 more during a midnight showing of the Batman movie “The Dark Knight Rises” in the Denver suburb of Aurora.

Samour, who was scrupulously respectful toward Holmes throughout the trial, launched into a withering condemnation of him as someone who knew right from wrong but “robbed the world of all the good these victims would have accomplished” and irreparably damaged the lives of hundreds more.

“It is almost impossible to comprehend how a human being is capable of such acts,” Samour said.

Outside the courthouse, prosecutors and victims broke into smiles and even cracked a few jokes, their relief obvious. But they also wondered what their futures would hold without the daily routine of the trial and the comfort they found in each other’s presence.

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“I’m relieved that it’s over, but I don’t think it will ever be over, you know?” said Rena Medek, whose daughter Micayla was among those killed. “I always have my daughter to think about.”

Kathleen Larimer only recently has been able to accept that her son, John, was murdered in the attack. She said the trial has become her life and she doesn’t know what moving forward will be like.

“Now that this is over, I have to go home and live with all that emptiness, and yet somehow be happy with life going on,” she said.

“The trial is over, and that thing will never see the light of day again,” said Caren Teves, whose son, Alex, was killed.

Samour was required to give Holmes life without parole, rather than the death penalty, after a split jury decided the sentence earlier this month. Prosecutors have said 11 jurors favored death and one voted for life without parole. Under Colorado law, jurors must be unanimous to impose the death penalty.

The 3,318 additional years were for Holmes’ convictions for attempted murder and an explosives count.

Colorado court system spokesman Rob McCallum could not say whether the sentence was a record for the state. He said it was the longest he was aware of.

Before sentencing Holmes, Samour tried to reassure victims who were upset at the lack of a death penalty that Holmes’ punishment would still be severe.

The judge also dismissed complaints that the trial was a waste of time, noting it gave family members and survivors an opportunity to tell the world about their ordeal. The case could have ended the same way more than two years ago, when Holmes offered to plead guilty if he could avoid the death penalty. Prosecutors rejected the offer.

As they departed the courtroom for the last time, survivors and relatives hugged and thanked prosecutors, law enforcement officers and a handful of jurors who were in the courtroom to observe. Some wiped away tears.

Victim advocates then collected dozens of colorful tissue boxes scattered about the courtroom floor and loaded them into a brown box. Therapy dogs that comforted witnesses were led out of the courthouse by handlers, one of whom patted the dog and whispered, “We’re done.”

Colorado prisons officials will determine where Holmes will be incarcerated after an evaluation that includes his mental health.

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