12 Killed in Shooting at Colorado Theater
 Witnesses
 to the shooting in Aurora, Colo., were brought to Gateway High School 
for questioning after a gunman opened fire at a midnight showing of "The
 Dark Knight Rises." More Photos »
Witnesses
 to the shooting in Aurora, Colo., were brought to Gateway High School 
for questioning after a gunman opened fire at a midnight showing of "The
 Dark Knight Rises." More Photos »
  
By DAN FROSCH, WILLIAM K. RASHBAUM, TIMOTHY WILLIAMS and MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT
AURORA, Colo. — A former neuroscience honors student dressed head to foot in body armor and brandishing three weapons, including an assault rifle, opened fire in a crowded theater at a midnight showing of the new Batman movie in a Denver suburb early Friday, killing at least 12 people and wounding 59 others, police and federal officials said.
The suspect, James Holmes,
 24, told the police after his arrest that he had booby-trapped his 
Aurora apartment with explosive devices, leading the police to evacuate 
five buildings in the neighborhood as they sought to disable what they 
described as “incendiary and chemical devices” that appeared to be 
rigged to trip wires.        
“We have an active and difficult scene,” said Aurora’s police chief, Dan
 Oates. “It may be resolved in hours or days. We simply don’t know how 
we’re going to handle that.”        
During the attack, witnesses said, Mr. Holmes entered through a side 
door of the packed theater wearing a gas mask. He set off two smoke 
devices before firing randomly at audience members, who had just settled
 into their seats. Within minutes, he was arrested in a parking lot 
behind the theater near his car, the police said.        
Mr. Holmes had apparently planned the attack for some time. In addition 
to the gas mask, he wore body armor and a helmet and was dressed 
completely in black. His gear included a throat protector, a groin 
protector, a bulletproof vest and leggings, and tactical gloves.        
He entered the theater with an AR-15 assault rifle, a Remington 12-gauge
 shotgun and a .40-caliber Glock handgun. A fourth gun, another Glock 
pistol, was found in his car. “This is the act, apparently, of a very 
deranged mind,” said Gov. John Hickenlooper of Colorado.        
A federal law enforcement official said investigators knew where at 
least two of the guns had been purchased, and suggested that they were 
bought recently, but would not say where or precisely when. Another law 
enforcement official said that information investigators had obtained 
about the purchase of the AR-15 rifle indicates that it was bought 
locally and apparently legally, as were the other guns, adding, “there’s
 nothing nefarious there.”        
The suspect was in possession of a clip with more than 20 rounds, a 
federal official said, that would have been illegal under an assault 
rifle ban that expired in 2004. The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms
 and Explosives has handed over information on where and when the guns 
were purchased to the police in Aurora. Investigators have uncovered no 
solid indications of a motive and no evidence of any past aberrant 
behavior.        
“He’s not on anybody’s radar screen — nothing,” the law enforcement 
official said, adding that investigators were sifting through social 
media sites in an effort to determine whether Mr. Holmes had ever posted
 anything that might indicate some violent tendencies. The second law 
enforcement official, speaking of Mr. Holmes, said: “This guy is 
somewhat of an enigma. Nobody knows anything about him.”        
The shooting took place at the midnight showing of “The Dark Knight Rises,”
 in a theater packed with families and children. It was not immediately 
clear whether the gunman ran out of ammunition or stopped shooting for 
some other reason.        
Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly of the New York City police, who 
dispatched officers to patrol screenings of the film in New York, said 
he had been told the shooting suspect had hair painted red and said he 
was the Joker. That detail could not be initially confirmed. The 
authorities believe that Mr. Holmes acted alone, and that the death toll
 may increase because some of the wounds were serious.        
Mr. Holmes’s family in San Diego asked for privacy in a statement released by the city’s Police Department.        
“Our hearts go out to those who were involved in this tragedy and to the
 families and friends of those involved,” the statement said. “We ask 
that the media respect our privacy during this difficult time. Our 
family is cooperating with authorities in both San Diego, California and
 Aurora, Colorado. We are still trying to process this information and 
we appreciate that people will respect our privacy.”        
Mr. Holmes’s only criminal history is a traffic summons, the authorities
 said. He earned a bachelor’s degree with honors in neuroscience in 2010
 from the University of California, Riverside, and was a graduate 
student in neurosciences at the University of Colorado at Denver’s 
Anschutz Medical Campus, although the university said in a statement 
that he was in the process of withdrawing. He was collecting 
unemployment, a federal law enforcement official said.        
A spokeswoman for the university, Jackie Brinkman, said that Mr. Holmes 
was dropping out because of academic problems. Ms. Brinkman said the 
university was unaware of any incidents with the campus police or 
disciplinary problems involving Mr. Holmes while he was enrolled.       
 
Billy Kromka, a pre-med student at the University of Colorado, Boulder, 
worked with Mr. Holmes for three months last summer as a research 
assistant in a lab of at the Anschutz Medical Campus. Mr. Kromka said he
 was surprised to learn Mr. Holmes was the shooting suspect. “It was 
just shocking, because there was no way I thought he could have the 
capacity to do commit an atrocity like this,” he said.        
Mr. Kromka said that Mr. Holmes was one of the quieter people in the 
lab. He spent much of his time immersed in the computer, often 
participating in role-playing online games.         
Mr. Kromka said that he never heard Mr. Holmes talk about a girlfriend 
or his life outside of work.  The police and witnesses described a scene
 of utter chaos inside the darkened, smoke-filled theater as bullets 
resounded loudly and people who had gone to see a PG-13-rated action 
movie were suddenly forced to scramble for cover as friends and loved 
ones were felled around them.        
Chief Oates said he did not know how many shots the gunman had fired, 
saying only that it was “many, many rounds,” one of which passed through
 a wall and wounded a moviegoer in an adjoining theater. Jordan Crofter,
 19, said he had felt lucky to have snagged a seat in the front row at 
the midnight screening. But about five minutes into the movie, he said, a
 side door swung open and a man in black wearing a gas mask calmly 
strode through.        
At first, Mr. Crofter thought perhaps the man was part of the show. But 
within a few seconds, he said, the man hurled two gas canisters down the
 theater aisle.        
“He walked in so casually, like he knew what he was doing,” said Mr. 
Crofter. “I heard two pops. Everyone was distracted. That was when the 
panic and the chaos started.”        
Mr. Crofter said that once he noticed that the man was also carrying a 
rifle, he ran in the opposite direction as fast as he could.        
“He started shooting, and everyone ducked and started screaming,” he 
said. “He looked like he was ready to go into battle. It was like he was
 walking around and having fun. Emotionless.”        
With the investigation in its earliest stages, the authorities said they
 were unsure what prompted the attack, or whether Mr. Holmes had ties to
 any hate groups.        
Mr. Holmes did tell the police that he had explosives at an Aurora 
residence, which led F.B.I. agents, along with agents from the Bureau of
 Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives and the local police to 
cordon off a North Aurora neighborhood, focusing attention on a 
third-floor apartment in a red brick building.        
Emergency crews perched on a cherry picker were seen breaking the window with an ax.        
The police described the apartment as being full of wires and what appeared to be explosive devices.        
“It’s something I’ve never seen before,” said Chief Oates.        
John Priest, who lives in an adjacent building, said that his 
21-year-old son had been in the movie theater with two friends during 
the shooting but was unharmed. The two friends, however, had been 
wounded — one was hit by a bullet in the buttocks and grazed in the leg,
 and the other was shot in the leg. Neither injury is life threatening, 
he said.        
“How could people do something like this?” Mr. Priest said. “I don’t understand this.”        
Aurora, which has a population of about 325,000, had only six killings in all of 2011, according to F.B.I. crime data.        
At Gateway High School, where the authorities have directed people to 
gather to get news about friends and family members, Rosemary Ratcliff 
said that she had so far been unable to find her son, Abdullah, 17, who 
she believes had been at the midnight screening.        
“I haven’t heard from him, and none of his friends are picking up their 
phones,” she said in a near-whisper as she left the school.        
The authorities have not released the names of the victims, but Pentagon
 officials said that two airmen and one sailor had been wounded in the 
shooting and that another sailor known to have been at the theater was 
still unaccounted for.  The Pentagon also said that the suspect was not a
 past or current member of the armed forces.        
The wounded were sent to six hospitals in the region, including 
Children’s Hospital Colorado and the University of Colorado Hospital.   
     
“The entire emergency department staff was called in,” said Dr. Comilla 
Sasson, who added that even though the emergency room was full before 
the shooting, it had admitted 20 victims who ranged in age from 3 months
 to 45 years. The victims’ injuries included gunshot wounds and shrapnel
 injuries, Dr. Sasson said. Nine people were in critical condition.     
   
At least three other people were in critical condition at other hospitals, officials said.        
The shooting erupted at the Century 16 Movie Theater during the first 
showings of “The Dark Knight Rises.” Throngs had gathered, some dressed 
as characters from the highly anticipated Batman sequel. The four 
screenings of the film were sold out, although it is not quite clear how
 many people were inside at the time.        
The police and witnesses said that after the gunman entered the theater 
through an exit door there was the smell of either pepper spray or tear 
gas in the theater as gunshots rang out.        
Jamie Rohrs, 25, was at the theater with his family, including his 
4-month-old toddler, Ethan, whom Mr. Rohrs held during the movie. A few 
minutes into the film, he said that he saw a flash.        
“You didn’t know if it was fireworks or what it was,” he said. “My first
 instinct was to get to the ground, get to the ground. I ducked. That 
was the first moment you knew something was going on.”        
Mr. Rohrs said that he jumped over his seat and crouched into the next row, his baby still in his arms.        
 “It was just chaos. You started hearing screaming. You looked up and 
people were falling. It was like a dream,” he said. “I was thinking, Do I
 lay him down? Do I play dead? If there is more than one gunman, is he 
going to go upstairs and shoot? Ethan’s crying. And we’re just laying 
there.”        
 Mr. Rohrs said he was stumbling and crawling through the theater, trying to figure out what to do.        
 “Do I run out the door? Is he going to shoot the baby? What am I to 
do?” he said, his voice quavering. “I didn’t drop the baby. I fell on my
 arms.”        
Finally, he said, he stood up to look for a way out and was able to escape as gunshots flashed to his right.        
President Obama, in Florida as part of a campaign swing, was notified of
 the shooting by his top counterterrorism adviser, John O. Brennan, at 
5:26 a.m., the White House said.        
“We do not believe at this point there was an apparent nexus to 
terrorism,” Jay Carney, the White House press secretary, told reporters 
on Air Force One.
 Mr. Obama returned to Washington on Friday afternoon, cutting short his
 Florida trip, his campaign said.In remarks at a previously scheduled 
stop in Fort Myers, Fla., Mr. Obama talked in highly personal ways about
 the tragedy. “My daughters go to the movies,” he said. “What if Malia 
and Sasha had been in the theater as so many of our kids do every day? 
Michelle and I will be fortunate enough to hug our girls a little 
tighter tonight.”He reflected on the fragility of life and the 
triviality of so much of what passes for daily existence, calling on the
 country to remember what really matters. “The people we lost in Aurora 
loved and were loved,” he said. “They were mothers and fathers, they 
were husbands and wives, sisters and brothers, sons and daughters, 
friends and neighbors. They had hopes for the future and they had dreams
 that were not yet fulfilled.”        
He asked for a moment of silence and asked the Florida crowd to “spend a
 little time thinking about the incredible blessings that God has given 
us.”        
Both Mr. Obama and Mitt Romney, the presumed Republican presidential 
nominee, said that they planned to pull television campaign ads in 
Colorado.        
The movie studio Warner Bros., which is owned by Time Warner, released a
 statement Friday morning saying that the company and the filmmakers 
were “deeply saddened” and “extend our sincere sympathies to the 
families and loved ones of the victims at this tragic time.”        
According to a Warner Bros. spokeswoman, the studio pulled its trailer 
for an upcoming film, “Gangster Squad,” which is set for release in 
September. In the trailer, which was shown at some screenings of “The 
Dark Knight Rises,” but not in the Aurora theater, men are seen shooting
 up the crowd in a movie theater.        
Mr. Kelly said he had stepped up security at all 40 locations in New York City where the film is playing. “A lot of young people are going to see this movie,” he said.        
Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg of New York, who has waged a national 
campaign for stricter gun laws, called on President Obama and Mr. Romney
 to address more concretely the issue of gun violence in their 
campaigns.        
“You know, soothing words are nice,” Mr. Bloomberg said during his 
weekly radio program, “but maybe it’s time that the two people who want 
to be president of the United States stand up and tell us what they are 
going to do about it, because this is obviously a problem across the 
country.”        

 
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