Colorado shooting victims worried about suspected gunman’s defence

Victims of the Colorado cinema shooting and their families have questioned whether the focus of the trial will be on the alleged gunman’s mental health rather than the killings themselves.

Defence lawyers for James Holmes have disclosed their belief that the 24-year-old shooting suspect is mentally ill.

However, Shane Medek, whose 23-year-old sister, Micayla Medek, died in the gunfire on 20 July, said: “They keep talking about fairness for him. It’s like they’re babying this dude.”

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Holmes is accused of opening fire in the cinema, killing 12 people and injuring 58.

His lawyers disclosed their belief that he suffers from a mental illness on Thursday, when nearly two dozen news organisations asked a judge to unseal case 
documents. Defence attorney Daniel King argued that the seal and a sweeping gag order ensured fairness.

Analysts expect the case to be dominated by arguments over Holmes’ sanity, and the defence’s revelation was the strongest confirmation so far that mental illness will be a key issue. A court document previously revealed that Holmes was seeing a school psychiatrist, for unknown 
reasons.

Holmes, a former PhD student at the University of Colorado at Denver, sat during Thursday’s hearing with the dazed expression that he had in two previous court appearances.

“It doesn’t give him the right to do what he did,” said Chris Townsond, who attended the court hearing with a wounded victim. “I don’t care how mentally damaged he is.”

Mr King said Holmes sought out psychiatrist Lynne Fenton for help weeks before the 
shooting.

A new hearing was scheduled for next week to establish they had a doctor-patient 
relationship. The judge did not say when he would respond to the request to unseal the court documents.