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James Holmes Jury Leaves Death on the Table

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James Holmes Jury Leaves Death on the Table The second phase of James Holmes' trial wrapped up today, and there will be a third. The jury decided the Aurora movie theater shooter should face a possible death sentence after considering the "mitigating factors." The Denver Post reports that the criminal trial, whose jury selection began in January, ranks... Reported by Newser 19 hours ago.

Aurora Theater Shooting: Jury Moves Toward Death Penalty in the Second Phase of James Homes' Sentencing

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Jurors will hear more testimony before finally deciding whether Holmes will live or die Reported by People Magazine 19 hours ago.

Jurors keep the death penalty option on the table in the Aurora movie theater shooting trial

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The jury in the Aurora, Colo., movie theater shooting trial said Monday that it would keep the death penalty as a possible sentence in the case, allowing the trial to continue into a final phase that will determine the convicted gunman’s punishment. Reported by Washington Post 19 hours ago.

James Holmes moves closer to death penalty as jurors reject leniency

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Jurors weighing James E. Holmes' fate moved one step closer to sentencing him to death Monday when they ruled unanimously that the gunman in the Aurora, Colo., mass shooting did not deserve leniency for killing 12 movie-goers and injuring 70 others. Reported by L.A. Times 19 hours ago.

Jury Finds Aurora Theater Shooter James Holmes Eligible for Death Penalty

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Jury Finds Aurora Theater Shooter James Holmes Eligible for Death Penalty The jury has declined to rule against ruling out the death penalty for James Holmes Reported by Mediaite 20 hours ago.

Aurora jury will continue deliberating death sentence for James Holmes

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Jurors have decided mitigating factors do not outweigh aggravating factors in the case of the killing of 12 people and wounding of 70 in a Colorado movie theater

A Colorado jury will continue deliberating whether to return a death sentence against James Holmes, convicted this year of killing 12 people and wounding 70 more when he opened fire in a movie theater in Aurora, Colorado.

Related: Aurora shooting jury: James Holmes's crimes satisfy first death penalty criteria

Continue reading... Reported by guardian.co.uk 20 hours ago.

James Holmes Jury Keeps Death Penalty Option

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Jurors in the sentencing phase of James Holmes’ trial for murder in the mass shooting of an Aurora, Colorado, movie theater voted unanimously on Monday to retain the death penalty as an option.

The trial now heads to its final phase, when lawyers for both sides in the case will make their last pleas to the jury, with testimony from survivors and victims’ families expected to be wrenching.

Following final arguments, the jury will render a decision on Holmes’ fate, which includes life in prison or death by lethal injection.

*Also Read:* James Holmes Found Guilty in Colorado Movie Theater Massacre

Last month, the jury found the 27-year-old guilty of killing 12 people and wounding at least 70 others just days before the third anniversary of the 2012 massacre, which occurred during a midnight screening of Christopher Nolan’s “The Dark Knight Rises.”

After a nearly three-month trial marked by gruesome crime-scene details and harrowing eyewitness testimony, the jury rejected the defense team’s argument that Holmes was not guilty by reason of insanity.

Holmes’ lawyers admitted he was the gunman in court filings, but argued that their client “was in the throes of a psychotic episode when he committed the acts.”

*Also Read:* Amy Schumer Responds to Open Letter About Lafayette Theater Shooting: 'Don't Worry I'm on It'

Monday’s decision comes days after John Russell Houser, 58, opened fire on a Lafayette, Louisiana, theater screening the Amy Schumer comedy “Trainwreck,” killing two and wounding nine. Reported by The Wrap 19 hours ago.

Jury Moves Closer to Death Penalty Sentence for James Holmes

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James Holmes, found guilty in the 2012 shooting rampage at an Aurora, Colo. movie theater that killed 12 moviegoers and injured 70 others, will face a possible death penalty sentence after jurors determined that mitigating factors of his life do not outweigh the heinous... Reported by Newsmax 19 hours ago.

Jury Rejects Mental Illness Argument for James Holmes in Aurora Theater Rampage

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The jury decided that evidence about Mr. Holmes’s severe mental illness and testimony from his parents did not outweigh the horror he unleashed. Reported by NYTimes.com 19 hours ago.

Watch: James Holmes Jury Keeps Death Penalty On the Table

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The jury found that the trial of Aurora movie theater James Holmes can move to the third phase of sentencing, with one option being the death penalty. Reported by ABCNews.com 19 hours ago.

Denver Post News Director to Lead Cronkite News at Arizona PBS

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Dale will be responsible for all news-gathering operations at Cronkite News at Arizona PBS

Phoenix (PRWEB) August 03, 2015

Kevin Dale, a senior editor who helped lead The Denver Post to a Pulitzer Prize and drive the newspaper’s digital transformation, has been named executive editor of Cronkite News at Arizona PBS, a multiplatform daily news operation and innovation hub operated by the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Arizona State University.

Dale will be responsible for all news-gathering operations, overseeing 15 full-time editor/professors and more than 120 students who produce daily news content on TV and digital platforms for Arizona audiences. Cronkite News is the news division of Arizona PBS, the state’s main PBS station. Reaching 1.9 million households, it is the nation’s largest media outlet operated by a journalism school.

With news bureaus in Phoenix, Washington and Los Angeles, Cronkite News produces a 30-minute daily newscast on Arizona PBS and a mobile-engaged digital news site at cronkitenews.azpbs.org. It serves as an immersive and innovative learning laboratory for students and a place of experimentation and innovation for the industry, where new models of news gathering, delivery and engagement can be tested.

Dale, who will hold the rank of professor of practice, will assume the newly created executive editor position Aug. 31.

"The mission of Cronkite News and the school of journalism is one of the most exciting things I've seen in media,” Dale said. “I'm profoundly honored to join this talented team. I can't think of anything more fun – and meaningful – than being part of a news organization that tackles innovation and storytelling on important subjects with the next generation of journalists."

Dale has more than 20 years of senior-level leadership experience. He is the second-ranking newsroom executive at The Denver Post, where he is responsible for digital and print content. He directed coverage of the Aurora theater shootings, which won the 2013 Pulitzer Prize for Breaking News. He also supervised two other reporting projects that were Pulitzer finalists – an investigation into the use of a marijuana derivative in the treatment of children with seizures and coverage of a devastating 2012 Colorado wildfire.

Under his leadership, the Post has become one of the nation’s most digitally forward newspapers, with a robust presence on the Web, mobile devices and social media. The Post is a top-10 newspaper on Facebook and has hundreds of thousands of Twitter followers.

Dale also helped develop the Post’s video strategy of live, taped and remote broadcasts. The newspaper produces Denver Post TV on the Web, providing broadcast-style news updates and video stories. Last month, Denver Post TV won four Heartland Emmy Awards, bringing its total to more than 30 in the past six years. A video project about homeless students is nominated for a 2015 national Emmy in the category of “new approaches” to news coverage.

Before being named news director at the Post, Dale was in charge of the newspaper’s Sunday edition, the ninth-largest Sunday newspaper in the nation. He also was responsible for the Post’s investigative reporting projects and led the Post’s coverage of the 2008 presidential campaign, including the Democratic National Convention in Denver. He began his tenure at the Post in 2000 as assistant managing editor for sports, overseeing coverage of major events that included Super Bowls and Olympics.

Earlier in his career, he was senior assignment editor for the sports department of USA Today, supervising coverage of sports business, investigations and features. He also served as managing editor of The Journal News in Westchester County, N.Y., managing editor of the Fort Worth (Texas) Star-Telegram, and deputy sports editor at the Los Angeles Daily News. He began his career reporting for several small newspapers in California and Kansas.

Dale holds a bachelor’s degree in journalism and mass communication from Kansas State University. He has served as a Pulitzer juror and is active in the Online News Association, the world’s largest association of digital journalists.

“Kevin brings to Cronkite News the perfect mix – a strong newsroom leader and collaborative team builder with unwavering journalism values who is also a bold and creative digital innovator constantly seeking out new ways to tell compelling stories and engage audiences,” said Christopher Callahan, Cronkite dean and CEO of Arizona PBS. “He is the ideal person to lead these tremendously talented student journalists and inspiring faculty editors.”

Dale joins Cronkite News just two months after Eric Newton, a leading news innovator and longtime executive of the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, joined the news organization as its first innovation chief. Reported by PRWeb 18 hours ago.

Families talk about loved ones in last step of Aurora theater trial

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Prosecutors plan to call as many as 16 witnesses during the final stage of the sentencing hearing in the Aurora theater shooting trial. Reported by Denver Post 14 hours ago.

Aurora man killed in Eagle County rollover crash on I-70

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A 65-year-old Aurora man was killed Monday night in a single-vehicle rollover crash on Interstate 70 in Eagle County. Reported by Denver Post 3 hours ago.

Aurora theater shooting trial, the latest from Day 62

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ARAPAHOE COUNTY — — Denver Post reporter Jordan Steffen's updates from Day 61 of the Aurora theater shooting trial at the Arapahoe County Justice Center in Centennial, Colorado. Reported by Denver Post 1 day ago.

Father of Colorado movie massacre victim says son was 'best friend'

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CENTENNIAL, Colo. (Reuters) - Tom Sullivan of Aurora, Colorado, said his murdered son Alex was his best friend and "every father's dream," and told jurors on Tuesday he often returns to the movie theater and sits next to the empty seat where Alex was killed in the 2012 massacre. Reported by Reuters 19 hours ago.

McDonald's® Happy Meals to Feature Monster Jam®

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McDonald's® Happy Meals to Feature Monster Jam® AURORA, Ill.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--For the first time ever, Feld Entertainment, Inc.® has collaborated with McDonald's® to bring Monster Jam® themed Happy Meals to over 14,000 McDonalds locations across North America. Reported by Business Wire 19 hours ago.

Victim in Aurora fatal shooting identified; suspect at-large

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A man who was fatally shot in an Aurora parking lot last week has been identified. Arthur Potts, 28, died of a gunshot wound to his chest and his manner of death is a homicide, according to Reported by Denver Post 18 hours ago.

Aurora theater shooting jurors hear tearful testimony from families

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CENTENNIAL — On the 62nd day of the Aurora theater shooting trial, jurors heard tearful testimony from the loved ones left behind. Reported by Denver Post 17 hours ago.

Father Of Theater Shooting Victim Now Sits In Son's Row At Movies

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Tom Sullivan of Aurora, Colorado, said his murdered son Alex was his best friend and "every father's dream," and told jurors on Tuesday he often returns to the movie theater and sits next to the empty seat where Alex was killed in the 2012 massacre.

Alex was celebrating his 27th birthday with friends at a midnight screening of a Batman film at a cinema in the Denver suburb. Twelve people died in the July 2012 attack by James Holmes, and 70 were wounded.

"He was every father's dream ... I took him everywhere," Sullivan said of his son, his voice shaking with emotion.

The retired postal worker said he and Alex, who worked as a bartender and was known as "Sully" to his pals, often attended concerts and college basketball and football games together. After Alex turned 21, he joined his dad for gambling trips to Las Vegas.Prosecutor Rich Orman asked Sullivan if the family had returned to the Century 16 multiplex since Holmes' rampage, and if they did anything there to commemorate Alex.

"Yes," Sullivan replied, saying they made sure they saw shows playing in the theater where the shooting took place.

"We go up and we sit in Alex's row, and we're sitting in row 12 and we leave seat 12 open for Alex, and ... we sit next to him," he told the court, his voice breaking again.

Several victims sitting in the public gallery wiped away tears as Sullivan spoke, and some hugged him when he came down from the witness stand.The jury is hearing from victims after finding on Monday that mitigating factors in the case do not outweigh aggravating ones. This decision makes the death penalty an option.

They will then deliberate again on whether Holmes should be executed by lethal injection. If they are not unanimous on the death penalty, he will serve life with no chance of parole.

After hearing hundreds of witnesses during a trial that began in late April, lead prosecutor George Brauchler said the jurors will now learn more about a handful of Holmes' victims, and get "just the faintest whiffs of the impact on those that are left behind.

"This is done so that you can have a complete picture," Brauchler said. "And when this phase is over, probably tomorrow, you can go back, factor this in ... and come back and render the only appropriate sentence in this case, and that is death."

Defense attorney Rebekka Higgs said the panel would have to live with their decision for the rest of their lives.

Were they convinced beyond a reasonable doubt, Higgs asked, that death was the appropriate sentence for someone who suffered a "psychotic break" that led to the deaths?

"Or is life without the possibility of parole for this young man, who has an illness that he didn't ask for, an illness that he struggled to fix, is life in a prison cell without ever being released a sufficient punishment? And we say yes."

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. Reported by Huffington Post 16 hours ago.

Aurora child care center closed by sex assault case

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A 20-year-old man faces allegations that he sexually assaulted a child at his mother's home child-care center in Aurora in 2010, according to a 7News report. Reported by Denver Post 11 hours ago.
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