Judge Accepts Insanity Plea in Colo. Shooting Case

Judge Accepts Insanity Plea in Colo. Shooting Case

(AP) Judge accepts insanity plea in Colo. shooting case
By DAN ELLIOTT
Associated Press
CENTENNIAL, Colo.
A judge has accepted James Holmes plea of not guilty by reason of insanity in the Colorado theater shootings.

Tuesday’s decision sets the stage for a lengthy mental evaluation of Holmes, who is accused of fatally shooting 12 people and injuring 70 in a packed Denver-area movie theater in July.

The evaluation could take months. Holmes is charged with multiple counts of murder and attempted murder. Prosecutors are seeking the death penalty.

Holmes’ lawyers repeatedly have said he is mentally ill, but they delayed the insanity plea while arguing that state laws were unconstitutional. They said the laws could hobble the defense if Holmes’ case should ever reach the phase where the jury decides if he should be executed.

The judge rejected that argument last week.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP’s earlier story is below.

The suspect in the Colorado theater massacre could enter his long-expected insanity plea at a hearing Tuesday _ though the case could also veer off on another tangent as his lawyers seek the strongest possible defense.

Judge Carlos Samour Jr. has indicated he will allow James Holmes to change his plea from not guilty to not guilty by reason of insanity.

But it’s possible that Holmes’ lawyers could ask the state Supreme Court to hear their arguments that state laws on the insanity plea and the death penalty are unconstitutional. That could delay the case for a few days if the high court refuses to take the case, or longer if the justices accept it.

Holmes is charged with staging a meticulously planned assault on a packed movie theater in the Denver suburb of Aurora in July. Twelve people were shot and killed, and 70 were injured.

Holmes faces more than 160 counts of murder and attempted murder. Prosecutors are seeking the death penalty.

Holmes’ lawyers say he wants to plead not guilty by reason of insanity _ considered his best hope of avoiding the death penalty, and possibly his only hope, given the weight of the evidence against him.

But since late February, they have argued in motions and at hearings that state laws on the insanity plea and on death penalty could hobble the defense if the case gets to the point where the jury decides whether Holmes should be executed.

The laws state that if Holmes does not cooperate during a court-ordered mental health evaluation, he cannot call expert witnesses to testify about his mental state during the penalty phase of his trial. The defense said the law’s restrictions are unconstitutional and that the definition of “cooperate” is vague.

Samour rejected those arguments in a ruling issued Wednesday.

Holmes needs court approval to change his plea because a judge entered a standard not guilty plea on his behalf in March.

Once the plea is finally entered, the judge would advise him of its consequences and then order Holmes to undergo the sanity evaluation, which could take months.

An insanity plea will also renew a legal battle over whether prosecutors should have access to see a notebook that Holmes mailed to a psychiatrist before the shootings.

Media reports have said the notebook contains drawings depicting violence.

The defense has resisted allowing prosecutors to see the notebook, saying it’s protected by doctor-patient privilege.

If Holmes pleads not guilty by reason of insanity, prosecutors will argue that state law entitles them to see the notebook. Defendants who plead insanity are required to turn over some medical and mental health records to prosecutors.

The notebook is one of several issues that have consumed the court’s attention in the 10 months since the shootings. Hearings have been held on the source of a leak to a Fox News reporter about the notebook. The two sides exchanged testy motions about a proposed plea deal that apparently failed to materialize. Holmes has also been taken from his jail cell to a hospital twice for psychiatric treatment, apparently forcing the postponement of one hearing.

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Follow Dan Elliott at http://twitter.com/DanElliottAP

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