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  • 16
    Jan
    2013
    1:53pm, EST

    First suit filed against University of Colorado in Aurora shooting

    Arapahoe County Sheriff via AP

    Aurora massacre suspect James Holmes, shown here in a photo released by the Arapahoe County Sheriff's Office. A federal lawsuit has accused the University of Colorado of failing to stop his rampage.

    By Tracy Connor, Staff Writer, NBC News

    The widow of an Aurora massacre victim has filed a lawsuit against the University of Colorado, claiming a school psychiatrist could have prevented the slaughter by having cops lock up student James Holmes after he "fantasized about killing a lot of people."

    The case could be the first of several actions against the university, which received 11 notices of possible lawsuits from victims' families before a 180-day deadline for state filings expired this week.

    "I believe any lawsuits would not be well-founded either legally or factually," university counsel Patrick O'Rourke said, adding that he could not comment further because of doctor-patient confidentiality.

    The suit filed Monday in U.S. District Court in Denver by Chantel Blunk, wife of Navy veteran Jonathan Blunk, alleges that Dr. Lynne Fenton "knew that James Holmes was dangerous" after the grad student told her on June 11 that he wanted to kill.


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    "Fenton had a duty to use reasonable care to protect the public at large from James Holmes," the suit says.

    Fenton notified a campus threat-assessment team about her concerns, but turned down a police officer's offer to arrest Holmes and put him under a 72-hour psychiatric hold, court papers say.

    Blunk was one of 12 people killed when Holmes allegedly opened fire during a midnight screening of "The Dark Knight Rises" on July 20. The 26-year-old father of two died shielding another moviegoer from bullets.

    It appears the claims in his widow's suit are based on published reports about Holmes' meeting with Fenton and the actions she took afterward, since much of the evidence in the case is still under wraps.

    The suit doesn't specify damages except to say it's more than $75,000.

    Tom Russell, a University of Denver law professor, said Blunk’s was filed in federal court because she lives in Nevada, but it’s subject to the same restrictions as an action in state court. That includes a limit on total damages to $600,000 for all plaintiffs in cases against the government.

    It's unclear how many of the 11 notices the university has received will result in suits, but Russell said he thinks the chance of success of any potential suits is low.

    Although what Holmes said to Fenton has not been made public because of doctor-client privilege, it appears that it was vague enough that the psychiatrist would not have been legally bound to act on the threat, Russell said.

    Ed Andrieski/AP

    Chantel Blunk, widow of Jonathan Blunk, shown on the left after a preliminary hearing for James Holmes this month.

    Holmes reportedly sent a notebook to Fenton that may contain more specifics, but since the psychiatrist didn't receive it until after the rampage, she can't be held liable for what's in it, Russell added.

    "A lawsuit against the shooter himself is a winning lawsuit," the professor said. "But he has no assets."

    Several families have also filed lawsuits against Cinemark, owner of the movie theater, which is set to reopen Thursday.

    A judge has given prosecutors the go-ahead to put Holmes on trial, but he won't be arraigned until March. In the face of overwhelming evidence, he's expected to mount an insanity defense, which would remove doctor-patient privilege and reveal more about his dealings with Fenton.

     

     

    138 comments

    Greed, just pure greed. Just because someone fantasizes about something is no reason to lock them up. If we do then we have become the thought police and who is the one who decides if a thought is cause enough to have a person locked up.

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    Explore related topics: aurora, university-of-colorado, dark-knight, james-holmes, theater-shooting
  • 10
    Dec
    2012
    7:02pm, EST

    Court hearing in Colorado theater shooting zeroes in on James Holmes' notebook

    AFP - Getty Images file

    A photo of Colorado theater shooting suspect James Holmes released Sept. 20, 2012.

    By Jack Chesnutt, NBC News

    A Colorado court on Monday heard testimony of police involved in the investigation of James Holmes, suspect in the July 20 shooting rampage in an Aurora, Colo., theater that left 12 dead and 58 wounded.

    The pretrial hearing in Denver focused on a package that Holmes sent to a University of Colorado psychiatrist, but that never reached its destination. It was discovered in the campus mailroom several days after the mass shooting.

    Defense attorneys for Holmes are trying to determine who leaked information about the package to Fox News, which reported that it contained a notebook detailing violent plans.


    As the day came to a close with no admission of the leak, defense attorneys said they planned to subpoena Fox reporter Jana Winter who wrote about the notebook's purported writings and drawings, citing an unnamed law enforcement source.

    "Inside the package was a notebook full of details about how he was going to kill people," the source reportedly said according to Winter's report. "There were drawings of what he was going to do in it — drawings and illustrations of the massacre."


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    Holmes' attorneys called the University of Colorado four days after the attack and asked the school to return the package, according to testimony on Monday. They contend the disclosure about its contents violated a gag order.

    Holmes appeared in court wearing a full beard, a prison jump suit and shackles. He remained silent during the hearing.

    Holmes was wide-eyed as he has been in previous court appearances. He looked around the courtroom, which was full for the proceedings.

    There were about half a dozen shooting survivors and family members of victims present in court.

    Monday's hearing was delayed from Nov. 14 after Holmes was sent to a hospital for an injury, according to the Denver Post. Citing unnamed sources, the Post reported that Holmes had injured himself by ramming his head into a wall at the Arapahoe County jail. At Monday's court appearance, there was no apparent sign of injury.

    In testimony Monday, bomb squad officers said the package, addressed to the psychiatrist Dr. Lynne Fenton, was X-rayed for explosives and checked for biohazards after its discovery in the university mail room on July 23.

    According to testimony, once the package was "cleared," five witnesses were present as the notebook was taken out of a plastic evidence envelope.

    Watch US News crime videos on NBCNews.com

    Campus police Chief Doug Abraham removed the notebook and Aurora police detective Alton Reed "thumbed through it" to examine "burned currency" in the pages of the notebook. Three other officers were present: campus police Cmdr. James Myrsiades, campus police officer Dale McCauley and Aurora police officer Jason McDonald.

    All the witnesses said they could see that there was some writing in the notebook. Only McDonald testified that he could see some of the text.

    The shooting happened at the Century Aurora 16 theater during a screening of the Batman film "The Dark Knight Rises." Holmes was arrested in the theater parking lot shortly after the shootings and told officers his apartment contained explosives, police said. That information prompted evacuation of Holmes' apartment building and those surrounding it while law enforcement teams disarmed what they said was the jumble of wires and explosive devices set to detonate by trip wires.

    Holmes is charged with two counts of murder for each of 12 dead shooting victims, two counts of attempted murder for each of the injured, and one count of possession of explosives.

    Legal observers believe the case will be dominated by arguments over Holmes' sanity.

    Holmes allegedly began stockpiling weapons and ammunition for the shooting perhaps months before the incident. About a month before the shootings, Holmes had withdrawn from a Ph.D program in neuroscience at the university. There are varying accounts of whether he was a formal patient of Dr. Fenton.

    NBC News' Kari Huus and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    40 comments

    I have no doubt that he has some mental issues, but I don't think he's truly crazy (psychotic). Someone who is truly insane wouldn't have it together enough to meticulously plan, purchase weapons for and kill innocent people.

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    Explore related topics: featured, aurora, university-of-colorado, dark-knight-rises, james-holmes, theater-shooting
  • 9
    Dec
    2012
    2:17pm, EST

    Police: 2 University of Colorado students arrested for feeding pot brownies to classmates, professor

    Two Colorado University students are facing multiple felony charges after campus police say they fed marijuana-laced brownies to their unsuspecting classmates and professor. KUSA's Nick McGurk reports.

    By NBC News staff

    Two University of Colorado students have been arrested for allegedly feeding marijuana-laced brownies to their unsuspecting classmates and professor, police said.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Thomas Ricardo Cunningham, 21, and Mary Elizabeth Essa, 19, baked the pot-laced brownies for the class as part of a "bring food day," the University of Colorado Police Department said in a news release on Sunday. The professor and classmates were unaware that the brownies contained tetrahydrocannabinol or THC, the active ingredient in marijuana, police said.


    On Friday morning, officers were called to the Hellems Arts and Sciences Building on the Boulder campus on a report of a professor who was complaining of dizziness and going in and out of consciousness.Paramedics transported her to a hospital.

    Later that afternoon, a student's mother notified campus police that her daughter, who had been in the professor's class, was having an anxiety attack and was at a hospital. On Saturday, a second student told police that she felt like she was going to "black out" after the class. Her family took her to the hospital for evaluation.

    An investigation revealed that the three hospitalized victims - and five other classmates - were suffering from the effects of marijuana, police said. The three hospitalized victims have since been released.

    Watch US News crime videos on NBCNews.com

    Cunningham and Essa were interviewed by police on Saturday evening and admitted that the brownies contained marijuana, police said.

    They were arrested on suspicion of four felonies: second-degree assault, inducing consumption of controlled substances by fraudulent means, conspiracy to commit second-degree assault and conspiracy to commit inducing consumption of controlled substances by fraudulent means.

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    389 comments

    With rocket scientists like these two "students" on the loose do we really want to continue to let people 18 years old vote...I think maybe 30 would be a better minimum age option.

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    Explore related topics: education, marijuana, crime, pot, featured, boulder, university-of-colorado, brownies
  • 5
    Dec
    2012
    7:43pm, EST

    University of Colorado emails on theater shooting reveal suspect's romance, fear on campus

    AFP - Getty Images file

    James Eagan Holmes is accused of opening fire July 20 on a crowded theater at a showing of "Batman: The Dark Knight Rises" in Aurora, Colo., killing 12 people.

    By Kari Huus, NBC News

    Aurora shooting suspect James Eagan Holmes was briefly in a romantic relationship with a fellow graduate student, but she was out of the country when the theater massacre took place, according to records released Wednesday by the University of Colorado.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The university released more than 1,500 emails from Holmes’ accounts, and another 2,300 emails in its system that that referenced Holmes — a response to Freedom of Information requests from KUSA, an NBC affiliate in Denver, and other news outlets.

    About 1,000 of the emails that mention James Holmes were redacted, the Denver Post noted, and at least 1,200 emails written by Holmes were not released because the university deemed them private student records, and thus not subject to disclosure Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act, KUSA reported.

    The messages provide some new details about Holmes and the university's response to the tragedy, in which the former neuroscience student is accused of opening fire on a crowd at the July 20 premiere of "Batman: The Dark Knight Rises" in Aurora, Colo., killing 12 people and wounding 58.


    Watch US News crime videos on NBCNews.com

    Among the revelations contained in the newly released documents was that Holmes had been romantically involved with another student in his graduate program, referenced in an email apparently written by an instructor or another student.

    "Yeah, he was a grad student here, and, it turns out, had a brief romantic relationship with one of the grad students in my program last fall," the mail reads. "She, fortunately, it turns out is in India right now. She knows, and is pretty freaked out."

    In an email, Holmes asks to participate in an fMRI study — which stands for "functional magnetic resonance imaging." In another he expresses interest in a family-medicine residency position.

    Some of the email is the missives that flew back and forth as the details of the Aurora shooting emerged, with writers expressing horror and dismay.

    "[Holmes] could have done this on campus instead of the movies," wrote one research assistant.

    Once the university realized Holmes was a student of theirs, they instructed staff and students to not post on Facebook or Twitter about him.

    Prosecutors pursue two-track strategy against James Holmes in Colorado massacre

    What is not included in the emails are those that deal with Holmes' mental health history, the crime and any personal communication involving Holmes.

    KUSA continues to review the emails. Many of the pages have the phrase "Privilege — Redacted in Full."

    Holmes was arrested in the parking lot of the Century Aurora 16 theater shortly after the shootings and told officers his apartment contained explosives, police said. That information prompted evacuation of Holmes' apartment building and those surrounding it until law enforcement teams could disarm the jumble of wires and explosive devices set to detonate by trip wires.

    He is facing two sets of first-degree murder charges for each of the of 12 deaths. He is also charged with 116 counts of attempted murder, as well as one count of illegal possession of explosives, according to court documents.

    NBC News' M. Alex Johnson contributed to this report.

    Slideshow:

    File - Ted S. Warren / AP

    A memorial to the theater shooting victims went up July 24 in Aurora, Colo.

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    59 comments

    People like Texas Conservatism make me glad I moved out of The U.S. and only vote there now. (voted for Obama :D ) These types of people can seem very normal and then just explode. If they were so easy to spot, then nobody would ever pull this kind of stuff off as everyone around them would notice.

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Reporter Kari Huus joined msnbc.com at launch in 1996 after 7 years reporting from China. In recent years, she has focused on domestic issues, playing a key role in msnbc.com series including The Elkhart Project, Gut Check America, and Rising from Ruin--on the recovery of two Mississippi towns after Hurricane Katrina. Huus has also covered a wide array of international stories, including China's 2008 earthquake, the Asian economic crisis, the fal …

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