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Aurora Theater Shooter Offers To Plead Guilty To Avoid Death Penalty

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DrForester

Kills Photobucket
http://www.9news.com/news/article/326782/339/Theater-shooting-Suspect-may-plead-guilty

Defense attorneys representing Aurora theater shooting suspect James Holmes have offered to have him plead guilty and spend the rest of his life in prison in exchange for avoiding the death penalty, 9NEWS has confirmed. This is only an offer from the defense team.

The two-page filing released on Wednesday goes on to say the prosecution has yet to accept the deal because "it may choose to pursue the death penalty." The deal hinges completely on the prosecution's willingness to take the death penalty off the table.

"Mr. Holmes is currently willing to resolve the case to bring the proceedings to a speedy and definite conclusion," the filing reads.

The defense says if the case goes to trial, they would explore Holmes' mental health more and could bring up his mental status at the time of the shooting as a defense.


A similar plea deal was offered for the Tuscon shooting case. The death penalty was taken off the table, and the suspect will spend the rest of his life in prison.

LEGAL ANALYSIS

On March 12, legal experts thought the defense's statement that they were not ready to enter a plea may be part of a larger strategy to avoid the death penalty. The shooting suspect James Holmes had the option to change his plea to not guilty by reason of insanity, and he can wait to do so until after prosecutors announce whether they will seek the death penalty.

"This just allows the defense to think through how they want to proceed," Dan Recht, a Denver defense attorney who is following the case, said. "The odds are the prosecution is going to pursue the death penalty and literally Holmes' life is at stake, so they want to be able to think through all the pleas they can offer."

That makes it easier for the defense to plan its best case. Holmes could plead insanity and would wind up in a mental hospital indefinitely - and would never face execution - if the jury finds in his favor.


Holmes could also simply plead innocent, and he wouldn't have to give prosecutors potentially incriminating medical records and statements made to doctors.

On March 12, there was another clue. At one point, in saying they weren't ready to enter a plea, defense attorney Daniel King said, "We have ongoing work scheduled. We're doing the best that we can."

King said he couldn't reveal what the work was, or say when it would be finished. But he did hint that the defense might have its own expert conduct a mental evaluation of Holmes. He said that if Holmes pleads not guilty by reason of insanity, the court would have to order a state mental evaluation, and "whatever evaluations we're doing would be truncated."

BACKGROUND

On March 12, James Holmes sat quietly as a packed courtroom waited for a plea that could help shed light on a deadly shooting rampage in a crowded Colorado movie theater last summer.

Instead, his lawyers told the judge they weren't ready to enter a plea - despite numerous delays since the July 20 attack that killed 12 people and injured 70 at a midnight showing of "The Dark Knight Rises."

A barely audible gasp rose from dozens of family members and victims.

"So, how am I supposed to make an informed decision?" Judge William Sylvester asked pointedly, his gaze fixed on King, before the judge entered a not guilty plea on Holmes' behalf.

Victims were relieved by Sylvester's action.

"It's been since July," Marcus Weaver, who was shot in the arm and lost his friend Rebecca Wingo in the attack, said. "We're just so thankful we're able to move forward."

Attorneys on both sides left the March 12 hearing without commenting. They are under orders from the judge not to speak about the case.

As he has done in past hearings, Holmes sat silently through the March 12 proceedings. He wore a red jail jumpsuit and sported a thick, bushy beard and unkempt dark brown hair. When he walked into the courtroom, he looked at his parents, Robert and Arlene Holmes. They sat silently at the front of the room and left without comment after the hearing.

THE CASE

Prosecutors say Holmes planned the assault for months, casing the theater complex in Aurora, amassing a small arsenal and rigging potentially deadly booby-traps in his apartment.

Then he donned a police-style helmet and body armor, tossed a gas canister into the theater crowd and opened fire, prosecutors said.

Nearly eight months later, the defense has dropped hints about Holmes' mental state but has given no clear statement on whether he would plead insanity.

Holmes, a former graduate student at the University of Colorado, Denver, had seen a psychiatrist at the school before the shootings.

In early March, his lawyers revealed that he was taken to a hospital psychiatric ward in November because he was considered a threat to himself. Holmes was held there for several days and spent much of the time in restraints.

The judge scheduled the trial to start Aug. 5, setting aside four weeks.

Whether and when Holmes will change his plea remains uncertain. His lawyers would have to ask the judge to set a hearing for a new plea.

Coincidentally, Colorado's legislature is currently debating getting rid of the Death Penalty in Colorado. Colorado has only executed one person since the 70's and only has 3 people currently on death row, so it's not something used often.
 

Reiko

Banned
Lock him in a room with Bale.

tdkr-tragedy-christidxitt.jpeg
 

jtb

Banned
If it weren't for the media frenzy, insanity shouldn't have even been on the table in the first place.
 

I'M FINISHED!

Um exCUSE me Sakurai but CLEARLY the best choice for Smash Bros would be my fav niche character HOWEVER you are clearly INCOMPETENT and
I thought the Joker wasn't afraid to die?
 

D4Danger

Unconfirmed Member
Surely the jury would see through an insanity plea considering how calculated the attack was. I'd continue to push for the death penalty.
 
I don't hope that he's executed...I wish he never existed. It'll probably cost me $5 in taxes to keep him alive all told, and frankly I've been "swindled" out of less.

If someone did want to execute him, then my vote is against it, but don't expect me to go out and protest for that son of a bitch. If he lives, he can rot in a hole somewhere.
 

DrForester

Kills Photobucket
I'm due for jury duty so I'd rather avoid having to go down along with the entire city to try and get a jury pool. Let him plea guilty. Last time I was on jury duty I almost got seated for a case that was for the driver involved in one of those death row inmates (but this was not a death penalty case).

I wonder if he actually cares about getting the death penalty or if his lawyers are just doing their due diligence.

Story implies he is willing to plead guilty.
 
That would be the best possible outcome IMO.

Don't force the families to go to trial, don't create a media circus, don't spend a ton of cash on a trial, just lock him up for life.
 
Defense attorneys

Why is this defense attorneys, plural? What is there to defend, esp. when the only route is a simple insanity plea? Why is the state wasting that kinda money on this guy? That being said, dude deserves nothing less than life w/o parole in a cold cell.

If he didn't blow his brains out then and there, all signs point to him being a cowardly prick.

Morbid, but probably right.
 

Stumpokapow

listen to the mad man
So, notwithstanding that I don't agree with the death penalty, I don't see how the state has an incentive to accept that kind of proposal. He'll be found mentally fit, and the evidence of his guilt isn't in doubt. It's not like a sexual assault in a state with no rape shield law where the victim might want to avoid a trial in order to avoid the pain.
 

Apath

Member
Can't the prosecution agree to the plea deal, but the judge isn't legally bound to follow through?

This could be entirely based off an episode of Law and Order I may or may not have seen years and year ago.
 

Slime

Banned
I would actually be OK with this. He's so young that life imprisonment would be a sufficiently agonizing punishment for him. Not crazy about him having any say in his own fate, but as long as he rots slowly and is miserable, I'm satisfied. Death would be getting off too easy, even if he deserves it.
 

numble

Member
So, notwithstanding that I don't agree with the death penalty, I don't see how the state has an incentive to accept that kind of proposal. He'll be found mentally fit, and the evidence of his guilt isn't in doubt. It's not like a sexual assault in a state with no rape shield law where the victim might want to avoid a trial in order to avoid the pain.
It costs more to implement the death penalty than incarceration for life. Even more expensive in this case, when the alternative in lieu of costly death penalty trial and appeals are not almost-as-expensive life sentence trials and appeals, but an uncontested plea of guilty. You also have to weigh in the fact that there's a chance Colorado might do away with the penalty anyway.
 

DrForester

Kills Photobucket
It costs more to implement the death penalty than incarceration for life. Even more expensive in this case, when the alternative in lieu of costly death penalty trial and appeals are not almost-as-expensive life sentence trials and appeals, but an uncontested plea of guilty. You also have to weigh in the fact that there's a chance Colorado might do away with the penalty anyway.

I really don't care if they get rid of it here in Colorado or not. Reading into it, the state has been incredibly reserved with it the past 30+ years. There's only been 4 people since the 70's and their guilt has never been in question.
 

bonercop

Member
Y'know, beyond moral considerations: if I had to choose between death or spending the rest of my life in prison... I'd choose death over that, easily. Just saying.
 

DrSlek

Member
Y'know, beyond moral considerations: if I had to choose between death or spending the rest of my life in prison... I'd choose death over that, easily. Just saying.

Yup. If he wants to avoid death by going to prison, let him. After a week in prison he'll be regretting that decision.
 

Derrick01

Banned
I hate that he even has an option to plead guilty or not guilty when we know for a fact he fucking did it. Even more that it grants him a "benefit" if he admits it when we all know it.
 

Darkmakaimura

Can You Imagine What SureAI Is Going To Do With Garfield?
Yup. If he wants to avoid death by going to prison, let him. After a week in prison he'll be regretting that decision.
Besides that, if he does get the death penalty, wouldn't be a rather long time before he's executed? Maybe 10 - 20 years?
 

teh_pwn

"Saturated fat causes heart disease as much as Brawndo is what plants crave."
Life in prison.

If life extension make it in time, put him on the short list so he can fulfill his sentence.
 

DrForester

Kills Photobucket
Besides that, if he does get the death penalty, wouldn't be a rather long time before he's executed? Maybe 10 - 20 years?

One person on Colorado's death row has only just recently exhausted his last appeal and could have an execution date set sometime soon. He killed 4 people in 1996. The other two on death row in the state are both more recent convictions, both having to do with the murder of two prosecution witnesses (the one who killed them, and the one who ordered their executions). Who knows when they might be executed.
 

DrForester

Kills Photobucket
Denied, for the time being.

http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/201...mes-guilty-plea-offer-as-publicity-stunt?lite

Colorado prosecutors say an offer by lawyers representing mass-murder suspect James Holmes — to plead guilty in exchange for not seeking the death penalty — amounts to a publicity stunt and may violate a gag order attorneys signed in the case.

Holmes is accused of killing 12 and injuring 70 movie-goers at the premiere of a Batman film in Aurora, Colo., on July 20.

On Wednesday, defense lawyers filed a motion in Arapahoe County Court saying that Holmes would be willing to plead guilty and spend the rest of his life in prison if there was no chance he’d be executed.

But Thursday, prosecutors reacted sharply in a 12-page motion of their own in which they denies that defense’s filing constituted a legitimate offer, accusing the defense of improper "attempts to involve this court in plea negotiations."

Arapahoe County prosecutors also questioned whether the defense was acting in "good faith" and if their plea-deal filing was "a calculated attempt to improperly inject the issue" into the public debate over the case.

The prosecutors said they have tried but never received a real plea offer or enough information from the defense on a possible plea bargain.

In their filing, prosecutors cite a statement from the head of the Colorado Public Defenders Office, Doug Wilson, to the Associated Press suggesting that district attorneys might not have told victims and families of the shooting that a plea offer was on the table. Prosecutors say those comments by Wilson might be in violation of the judge's gag order to attorneys in the case.

Legal experts say the case — in which Holmes, 25, is accused of 166 felony counts of murder, attempted murder and other felonies — pivots on whether the former grad student was legally insane when he opened fire in the crowded midnight screening of “The Dark Knight Rises.”

Though Holmes’ defense lawyers had hinted at an insanity defense, they have given no definitive indication of how they would plead in the case, NBC station KUSA reported. The judge entered a not guilty plea for Holmes during his March 12 arraignment.

The next hearing in the case is set for Monday. Prosecutors earlier were expected to announce if they would seek the death penalty by then, but now it remains unclear.

A trial date has been set for Aug. 12.
 

TxdoHawk

Member
Looks like this deal is officially off the table:

CENTENNIAL, Colo. | Prosecutors said Monday they will seek the death penalty for James Eagan Holmes in the deadly Aurora theater massacre, formally rejecting an offer last week to plead guilty if his execution could be taken off the table.

Arapahoe County District Attorney George Brauchler said he reached the decision after his staff spoke with more than 800 victims and relatives of those killed in the July 20 shooting, which left 12 dead and 58 injured.

“In this case, for James Eagan Holmes, justice is death,” said Mr. Brauchler, who was elected district attorney of the state’s 18th Judicial District in November.

Sad to see them go this route. I'm not against the death penalty in theory, but they had an opportunity to lock this loser away and avoid years of torment the families will now inevitably suffer thanks to the trial + appeals.

And in the end, if years later they finally strap this guy into a chair and lethally inject him, as he quietly passes away the families that insisted on death will realize the same thing everyone else does: Killing, even justifiable killing, doesn't make it better. The fundamental problems lurking behind James Holmes don't magically go away when he becomes a corpse, just like the tragic deaths of the innocents he killed didn't accomplish whatever his twisted mind thought they would.
 

GTI Guy

Member
Prison time would be worse for him. He'd likely get some prison justice dealt to him and he'd be killed in a much more painful way by other inmates.
 
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