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Mother of James Holmes chokes up on stand
01:20 - Source: CNN
Centennial, Colorado CNN  — 

James Eagan Holmes did not start out in this world as a psycho killer. The evidence his lawyers presented in court last week showed he once was a cute, happy little boy from a doting family, a nice kid who was gentle with his dog and his baby sister.

He was wanted, he was encouraged and he was taken to piano lessons and soccer practice and neighborhood birthday parties. He was at the center of a pack of exceptional boys who ruled his Northern California neighborhood and elementary school.

It all seemed so Norman Rockwell normal.

He did well in school and played basketball and video games. He went to the beach, on camping trips in the mountains and to Disneyland. There were family gatherings on Thanksgiving and Christmas and neighborhood parties on July 4 and Halloween.

He was a bit of a prodigy. After he finished his assignments in fifth grade, he and a classmate filled the time writing code and building a website for the school. His teacher, impressed, called him a “Renaissance child.”

The 13th Juror

  • With the experienced eye of a trained observer and an avid trial-watcher’s curious mind, Ann O’Neill is “The 13th Juror” for CNN’s audience. Follow @AnnoCNN on Twitter daily.

    By middle school, according to testimony, he was one of the top five players in the world at the video game Warcraft III. He also was starting to withdraw from people. Mental illness was always lurking in the background, Holmes’ lawyers say. It stole his childish joy, and ultimately any chance he had for a normal life.

    A convicted mass killer, he asked for mercy and didn’t get it. Jurors found that the mental illness he indisputably suffers cannot outweigh the horror of 12 murders. And so we move to the third and final phase of his sentencing trial. This time, jurors will hear more heart-rending testimony from the people who survived or lost loved ones.

    Holmes will at the very least spend the rest of his days locked up. It is possible he may be put to death.

    13th Juror: What drives a ‘perfect’ boy to kill?

    Mental illness was the reason Holmes opened fire in a crowded movie theater on July 20, 2012, killing 12 people and wounding 70, his lawyers insist. Mental illness turned a smart, shy boy into one of the worst mass shooters in recent U.S. history.

    Prosecutor George Brauchler argued that mental illness shouldn’t be used as a “shield” to protect Holmes from the punishment he deserves for taking so many lives in such a cruel manner. Holmes showed his victims no mercy.

    But in the second stage of the sentencing process, the defense commanded center stage. Holmes’ lawyers didn’t have to prove their points. But they had to persuade at least one juror that sparing his life is the right thing to do. It didn’t happen.

    Robert, Arlene and Chris Holmes are good people, the defense wants jurors to know, and they will miss their son and brother if he’s executed.

    This is a textbook capital defense work. It’s how attorneys try to save a life. They do everything possible to humanize killers, bringing in people who knew them as innocent children, not monsters. Holmes’ lawyers told jurors that if they are to hold his life in their hands, they must know everything about it.

    How a boy ‘lost his joy’

    He was just 24 when he killed the people in the theater. And so, the life story told in court was largely that of a child and teenager.

    Screens in the courtroom displayed Holmes’ birth announcement – a boy, 7 pounds, 5 ounces and 20 inches. He was “this miracle,” said his mother, Arlene Holmes. It was the first time she’d talked publicly at any length about her son, known to the world as the Aurora movie theater shooter.

    His was not a childhood of hardship and neglect. It was a childhood to envy.

    “He was planned for and wanted and hoped for and waited for,” his mother said. “We wanted a child and had one. It was what we prayed for.”

    He came into the world inheriting a bundle of family traits. Like his mathematician father, he was quiet, analytical and an academic overachiever. As he grew older, he also shared another trait – social awkwardness. He inherited his stoicism from his mother, who built a family culture that celebrated hard work and community service and frowned on weakness.

    But there was another family trait lurking in the background, and it showed its face as they boy grew into a man. Close relatives, including his father’s twin sister, had been institutionalized.

    “Mental illness can strike like cancer, without regard to your background, without regard to your status in life, without regard to how intelligent you are,” defense attorney Tamara Brady told the jury. “And when James Holmes was born, he had this psychotic mental illness in his blood. It was in his DNA.”

    He was the first grandchild. And so the jury saw videos with the grandmothers – sitting in a chair at the kitchen table, getting his first haircut. Standing on tiptoes by the kitchen counter, rolling out dough for gingerbread men. Hugging his baby sister and tentatively tapping out “Jingle Bells” with her at the piano.

    The jury saw his baby book, and a family history he put together in elementary school. Then came the report cards – usually with straight A’s – and a stack of school and team pictures.

    His father called him Jimmy, his mother called him Jim and prosecutors disdainfully called him “that guy.”

    The defense presented three dozen witnesses – neighbors, family friends, teachers, coaches, friends and classmates – who described a boy who never picked fights, was never angry and tried his best to blend into the background. He was able to remain invisible for a long time as he battled the demons within.

    A traumatic move

    His decline began when he was 12 and the family moved from Castroville, near Monterey, to San Diego. He had trouble making friends and began to withdraw into his room and his video games. His mother went door-to-door looking for playmates but, she said, the boys in their new neighborhood weren’t very friendly.

    She recalled how her boy “lost his joy.” She felt guilty that she couldn’t make him happy.

    Looking back, the defense said, what was chalked up to a tough adjustment was probably an early symptom of Holmes’ mental illness. By the time he was in high school, a cross-country coach had taken notice of his behavior. He kept himself apart and was so uncomfortable standing close to others that he wrecked the team photo.

    “He was of us, and not of us,” the coach said.

    His college years were uneventful. He had a handful of friends among the honors students and earned A’s at the University of California at Riverside. But he wasn’t very outgoing. The social highlight of his week was watching the television show “Lost” with his roommates.

    He didn’t get into the top graduate schools he applied to, and returned home, where he stayed up late, slept during the day and seemed rudderless until his mother insisted he get a job. He went to work at a pill factory, where co-workers noticed his tendency to stare off into space with an odd, faraway expression.

    A second round of grad school applications won him acceptance at the University of Colorado’s Anschutz Medical Campus in Aurora, a suburb of Denver. But instead of sailing through his courses with straight A’s, Holmes struggled for the first time.

    In 2012, he finally came undone, according to the defense. He was dumped by the first girlfriend he’d ever had, and he dropped out of grad school. He was losing the battle with what he called his “broken brain.”

    The prosecution portrays these setbacks as possible reasons for Holmes to lash out with violence. But the defense says they were merely triggers for psychosis.

    He’d come to the conclusion that his broken brain couldn’t fix itself, no matter how much neuroscience he studied. He couldn’t handle the social interactions required for lab work and presentations.

    His attention shifted to planning and carrying out a “mission” to increase his self-worth so he wouldn’t have to take his own life, the defense asserts.

    In a notebook that he mailed to a psychiatrist, he described a bizarre “human capital” theory, in which he could add value to his own life by taking the lives of others.

    ‘Genetically loaded’

    Within moments of hearing her brother had been arrested for the Aurora theater massacre, Chris Holmes knew things would get bad. She knew the police and FBI would invade her home looking for clues. She plucked a photo from a cardboard collage of her life that she’d made in the ninth grade. It was still in her room.

    The photo showed Chris with her big brother. They are young and grinning broadly as they floss their teeth. It was a favorite, and she didn’t want the authorities to take it from her.

    Holmes’ mother said she wished the psychiatrist who called her from Denver a month before the theater shootings had told her that he was talking about killing people. She would have dropped everything to rush to his side. “I would have crawled on all fours,” she said, breaking into tears.

    His father said he thought his son was “an excellent kid.” He didn’t understand how sick Jimmy was. He worried about him and was planning to take time off from work that August to travel to Denver to check on him. But by then, it was too late.

    The family’s testimony was heartbreaking, reminding everyone in the courtroom that the ripples of this tragedy extend in all directions.

    But it was the expert witness who cut to the core issue. Dr Jeffrey Metzner, a court-appointed forensic psychiatrist, testified that Holmes was “genetically loaded” for mental illness. None of what happened was his choice.

    Metzner diagnosed Holmes with schizoaffective disorder, a variety of schizophrenia that combines psychosis, hallucinations and delusions with a mood disorder such as mania or depression.

    Defense attorney Tamara Brady told jurors that her client’s withdrawn behavior in his early teens was symptomatic of the onset of mental illness. She also pointed out other examples of behavior that at the time was dismissed as shyness, or social awkwardness.

    But shy people don’t dye their hair orange, as Holmes did before the shooting. They don’t talk about “human capital.” They don’t pose for selfies in black contact lenses and body armor, with guns in their hands.

    In March 2012, he finally sought the help of a psychiatrist on campus. He stopped hiding his thoughts and stated that he was thinking about killing people. But a lot of mentally ill people do that, and the psychiatrist saw no evidence he’d actually act on those thoughts. Still, she wondered if he might be psychotic.

    Do we execute people who are mentally ill?

    Holmes was given medication, including Zoloft, which eased his anxiety, but also may have triggered a mania that led him to purchase guns, ammunition and ballistic gear as he rushed to complete his “mission,” Brady said.

    About four months after the theater shootings, Holmes had a serious psychotic break in jail. He licked the cell walls, smeared feces and performed somersaults with a paper cup balanced on his penis. He saw shadows and tried to get away from them.

    Holmes was and still is severely mentally ill, Metzner testified. But for that mental illness, the shooting rampage at the theater never would have happened.

    And so, 60 days of trial boils down to one question: Do we execute people who are mentally ill? How sick does a person have to be to deserve our mercy?

    Jurors had the unenviable task of sorting it out. The question before them, as written, posed a logical helix of double negatives:

    “Does the jury unanimously find beyond a reasonable doubt that the mitigating factors that exist do not outweigh the aggravating factors proven by the prosecution?”

    If the answer was no, the trial would have ended; Holmes would have received a sentence of life in prison.

    But the answer was yes,and that means the trial continues to a third phase in which the jury will have to decide between life in prison and the death penalty. This phase will feature shooting survivors and relatives of the dead talking about what they’ve lost and how their lives have been forever changed.

    One last time, the jury will confront this question: Should we execute people who are mentally ill?

    “I think Mr. Holmes’ actions on July 20 were the direct result of his mental illness,” said Metzner. “It all boils down to whether you believe he had a delusion or not.”

    Holmes’ insanity defense already has failed. The jury decided he knew right from wrong when he opened fire in the theater, and so he didn’t fit the definition of legal insanity. Jurors found him guilty and agreed prosecutors had proved four aggravating factors – things that place his crime among the worst:

    – He committed multiple murders.

    – He exposed others to great risk of death.

    – His crimes were especially cruel.

    – And he laid in wait, ambushing his victims.

    The defense raised more than 60 mitigating factors for the jury to weigh. It was not clear from their verdict which, if any, the jurors found to be true.

    Some were minor, and pale in comparison with the horrors of the crime. But Holmes’ mental illness caused those horrors, and they gave him no pleasure, Brady said in a passionate closing argument.

    ‘When does mitigation outweigh aggravation?’

    When does mitigation outweigh aggravation? Brady answered her own question: “When the mitigation is the cause of the aggravation. Mental illness caused Jimmy to shoot in that theater.”

    Prosecutor Brauchler, who presented no evidence during the second phase, urged jurors not to use mental illness as an excuse for Holmes’ crimes.

    “He made a decision to massacre, and he did,” Brauchler said. “Twelve dead from the community. Can anything outweigh that? No. No.”

    He counted off the victims, showing photos of the “Before” – happy people enjoying life – juxtaposed with grisly crime scene photos of the “After” – bodies crumpled and bloodied, some of them frozen at odd angles as they attempted to escape Holmes’ barrage of bullets.

    Brauchler’s closing argument, already disjointed, was thrown off by a courtroom outburst.

    “He’s wrong!” a woman shrieked. “Don’t kill him! Don’t kill him!”

    The woman was sitting in the public courtroom seats. Deputies, who had kept an eye on her, moved quickly to eject her. But she could be heard screaming from the hall. It was yet another unsettling event at a trial full of disturbing sights and sounds.

    The woman told deputies she was homeless. She seemed to have mental issues, saying she’d been harassed and forced to show identification to get into the courtroom.

    In fact, security at the trial is tight, and everyone is screened before entering the courtroom.

    The defense suggested it might be more “humane” to hospitalize the woman. But the judge held her in contempt of court and sentenced her to three weeks in jail, saying her actions were “extremely offensive to the authority and dignity of the court.”

    “It offends me as a human being,” she shot back, “that other human beings kill each other legally. You can’t justify murder with murder!” she shouted as she was led off to jail.

    The outburst seemed to underscore a major theme of the defense case: We as a society aren’t good at dealing with the mentally ill.