DENVER — James Eagen Holmes came from a well-tended San Diego enclave of two-story homes with red-tiled roofs, where neighbors recall him as a clean-cut, studious young man of sparing words.
Tall and dark-haired, he stared clear-eyed at the camera in a 2004 high school yearbook snapshot, wearing a white junior varsity soccer uniform — No. 16. The son of a nurse, Arlene, and a software company manager, Robert, James Holmes was a brilliant science scholar in college.
The biggest mystery surrounding the 24-year-old doctoral student was why he would have pulled on a gas mask and shot dozens of people early Friday in a suburban Denver movie theater, as police allege.
In the age of widespread social media, no trace of Holmes could be found on Facebook, LinkedIn, MySpace, Twitter or anywhere on the Web. Either he never engaged or he scrubbed his trail.
A longtime neighbor in San Diego, where Holmes grew up, remembers only a “shy guy … a loner” from a churchgoing family. In addition to playing soccer at Westview High School, he ran cross country.
The bookish demeanor concealed an unspooling life. Holmes struggled to find work after graduating with highest honors in spring 2010 with a neuroscience degree from the University of California, Riverside, said the neighbor, retired electrical engineer Tom Mai.
Holmes enrolled last year in a neuroscience Ph.D. program at the University of Colorado-Denver but was in the process of withdrawing, said school officials, who didn’t provide a reason. The school later said in a statement that he left the program in June 2012.
As part of the advanced program in Denver, a James Holmes had been listed as making a presentation in May about Micro DNA Biomarkers in a class named “Biological Basis of Psychiatric and Neurological Disorders.”
In academic achievement, “he was at the top of the top,” recalled Riverside Chancellor Timothy P. White.
Holmes concentrated his study on “how we all behave,” White added. “It’s ironic and sad.”
From a distance, Holmes’ life appears unblemished, a young man with unlimited potential. There are no indications he had problems with police.
Somehow, the acclaimed student and quiet neighbor reached a point where he painted his hair red, called himself “The Joker,” the green-haired villain from the Batman movies, according to New York City Police Commissioner Ray Kelly, who said he had been briefed on the matter.
Police asked Ben Lung, 27, who lives in the same apartment building as Holmes, whether he had seen anyone with “noticeably dyed hair.” Lung said he had not.
Authorities say Holmes arrived at the theater dressed in black, outfitted in a gas mask, ballistic helmet, vest and leggings, black tactical gloves and protectors on his throat and groin. He was armed with an assault-style rifle, a shotgun and Glock handgun.
Police said he started his attack by tossing two gas canisters into the theater, where he had bought a ticket for the midnight showing of “The Dark Knight Rises,” the new Batman movie.
A federal law enforcement official, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the ongoing probe into the rampage, said Holmes bought four guns from retailers in the past two months.
Holmes bought his first Glock pistol in Aurora, Colo., on May 22. Six days later, he picked up a Remington shotgun in Denver. About two weeks later, he bought a .223 caliber Smith & Wesson rifle in Thornton, Colo., and then a second Glock in Denver on July 6 — 13 days before the shooting, the official said.
A high-volume drum magazine was attached to the rifle, an assault weapon, the official said. Aurora Police Chief Dan Oates said that a 100-round drum magazine for the rifle was recovered from the scene.
“I’m told by experts that with that drum magazine, he could have gotten off 50 to 60 rounds, even if it was semiautomatic, within one minute,” Oates said at a news conference. “And as far as we know, it was a pretty rapid pace of fire in that theater.”
Julie Adams, whose son played junior varsity soccer with Holmes, said her son remembered little about the suspect, which was unusual for the tight-knit team.
“I don’t think many of the kids [teammates] knew him. He was kind of a loner,” she said.
Jackie Mitchell, a furniture mover who lives several blocks from the suspect’s apartment building in Colorado, said he had drinks with Holmes at a bar on Tuesday night, though he showed no sign of distress or violence.
After Holmes approached him, “we just talked about football. He had a backpack and geeky glasses and seemed like a real intelligent guy, and I figured he was one of the college students,” Mitchell said.
When Mitchell saw Holmes’ photo after the shooting, “the hair stood up on my back,” he said. “I know this guy.”
Holmes is not talking to police and has asked for a lawyer, according to a law enforcement official briefed on the investigation. The official spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the case. Police found jars of chemicals in Holmes’ booby-trapped apartment with wires nearby, the law enforcement official said.
When he surrendered meekly in the movie house parking lot, Holmes told authorities what he’d done at his residence in the Denver suburb of Aurora, the third most populous city in Colorado.
“Our hearts go out to those who were involved in this tragedy and to the families and friends of those involved,” Holmes’ family said in a statement Friday. “We ask that the media respect our privacy during this difficult time.”
San Diego Superior Court spokeswoman Karen Dalton said there were no records found under his name, not even for a traffic ticket. Riverside County prosecutors also have no criminal record for him, said John Hall, a spokesman for the district attorney’s office. The only mark on his record in Aurora was a speeding summons from October, Oates said.
On Friday morning, police escorted the suspect’s father from the family’s San Diego home. The mother stayed inside, receiving visitors who came to offer support.
San Diego police spokeswoman Lt. Andra Brown spoke to reporters in the driveway of the Holmes’ home, on behalf of the family.
“As you can understand, the Holmes family is very upset about all of this,” she said. “It’s a tragic event and it’s taken everyone by surprise.”
Blood reported from Los Angeles. Associated Press contributors to this report include Elliot Spagat and Julie Watson in San Diego; Eileen Sullivan, Alicia A. Caldwell and Pete Yost in Washington; Tom Hays in New York; Amy Taxin in Orange County, Calif.; Colleen Slevin in Denver; and Eric Carvin and AP researcher Judith Ausuebel in New York.



I’ve always wondered why one would need a 100-round magazine. Now we all know!
One word: Zombies!
But in all seriousness having a 100 round drum mag at the range can be a lot of fun, as long as it does not jam.
Crapola….
We think you are full of crapola….. You have not a clue…..
What difference does the magazine make? If no one else is able to defend themselves, a 10 round would have done the same thing. Changing magazines takes no time.
You havent a clue do you?
Someone with a CCW permit and a sidearm may have have been able to stop this nut. But, no let’s ban ALL guns and this wouldn’t have happened now would it? Ban fertilizer and diesel fuel because that’s what Timothy (now DEAD) McVey used wasn’t it?
I highly doubt a CCW permit holder and I am one would have been able to do anything. He was wearing a lot of body armor and a ballistic helmet. You then have to factor in the tear gas, it was dark and chaotic. Any CCW permit holder would have been out gunned and most likely ended up dead their selves.
Maybe several would have been able to do something if they had know the correct armor target points. The number of CCW holders is to low though. It would be much better if it was 1 in 8.
I’d rather have a piece with me than not. What I carry is going to knock him down even with the body armor.
Amen to that! It may not kill him, but my carry gun would knock him off his feet! (And I’m a woman!) Without the armor, I could blow him out of his socks! It would have been very hard for him to keep shooting when he;s flat on his back!
Keep telling yourself that Abby but the truth is you are 100% wrong. The real world works a lot different than the movies.
Kevin, you don’t know for sure that Abby couldn’t at least have messed him up enough to slow down, if not stop his attack. Sure, Abby might not have made a difference, but we can be certain that with NOBODY to challenge him, he was going to do a lot of damage.
I think the one thing that would have kept me from returning fire (I don’t carry, btw) is that I would have thought, as did many other theater patrons, that it was some kind of publicity/PR stunt, especially given the circumstances, which would have slowed down any kind of counter response. In the dark, it would have taken several moments to see bloody, blown apart bodies that were shot up enough to realize that what was going on was not some kind of staged act.
Still I know a fair amount of well-trained people that carry, so assuming there are others out there similarly trained, I can be fairly confident that once such a person realized it was a real attack that they were enduring, an effective, if not slightly belated counter-attack response could have been realized.
And I can be fairly confident they would have not stopped the attack and have been killed. I myself would have 10 rounds to start off with and then two more mag’s with 9 rounds each. So I have a total of 28 rounds and a lot of those that do CCW do not carry any extra ammo.
28 rounds against a man with a shotgun, an AR-15 and a Glock who also has on a lot of body armor and is wearing a ballistic helmet. I have no body armor or helmet and I don’t have a gas mask.
Sorry but the chances of even a highly trained person coming out the victor is not very favorable.
Ok you knocked him off his feet but haven’t stopped the threat. So all you really did was make you target number 1 to him. Remember a person armed with a rifle and has body armor is going to win against a person with a handgun and no armor.
As close as this guy was to his victims, why didn’t the whole crowd think to tackle him and beat him senseless?
That’s what i don’t understand, a theatre is a pretty confined space, and you can’t cover every side at once. Of course none of us knows how we will react in that situation, but if several people rushed him you’d stand a chance of knocking him down.
I have to fly all the time for work, and I guarantee if someone starts acting threatening on an airplane, the entire cabin will jump them regardless of what they have for a weapon!
Similar to what I said up-thread, I think there were several important moments/seconds lost because people simply couldn’t figure out that this was a real attack with a crazed attacker versus some kind of PR stunt orchestrated with the opening of the movie, whether it was a sanctioned PR stunt or not. Sadly, if I were that close to this guy, I think it most likely I’d have been killed before I really realized what was going on.
I mean the very nature of the movie itself would seem to be a natural tie in to such an attack (staged and fake, of course.)
That is if you can get off a shot and what do you carry? Remember you would have been going up against a man with an AR-15.
Problem is that it is dark, loud and confusing….No one is expecting something like that.
Putting aside the question of the firearms for the moment, I think this speaks to how easily some people can become detached from reality in this day and age of virtual screens and games everywhere. Movies, the Internet, and video games, along with the gift of so much free/leisure time in our society, combined with an economy that sometimes demands people spend years and years in classrooms and laboratories sequestered away doing highly, highly specialized things in order to make or train for a living, can really test the coping skills of many people. Combine that with the faceless, anonymous living styles demanded by much of the contemporary US/American, suburban landscape that put many roads and cars between people meeting face to face in real-life situations, and we get this.
(All too much of the US, particularly the more recently developed parts of the US in some parts of the West and South, have the most forlorn, suburban landscapes I’ve ever seen – Such places bear little resemblance to the mixed-use, human-scale cities, towns and villages that have managed to survive in New England, from before the Automobile Age, at least in some form.)
Granted, this guy is certainly the very extreme example among millions of his generation who manage life in this modern virtual world better than he, but apparently, one lost mind is all it took at that theater.
Do you realize how many people in the USA own firearms that are law abiding citizens.
I’m more concerned with people that suffer from mental illness, like Mr Holmes.
He was studying neuroscience, I’m wondering what kind of chemicals are in those jars in his apartment. Neuroscience is the scientific study of the nervous system. Traditionally, neuroscience has been seen as a branch of biology. However, it is currently an interdisciplinary science that collaborates with other fields such as chemistry, computer science, engineering, linguistics, mathematics, medicine and allied disciplines, philosophy, physics, and psychology.
Yes, the anti gun force will be at it hot and heavy….
Do I believe there are people out there that shouldn’t own a gun, YES.
These anti gun people have tunnel vision and are not seeing the big picture.
Mr. Holmes suffers from metal illness and was highly educated. He could have murdered
a lot more then 12 people using other means besides a gun..
He is a sick pup….
I’ve never thought of that, but you make a good point. As smart as he was, I’m sure he could have devised something far more destructive.
Yes, and the pro-gun, everyone-should-defend-themselves crew is also at it.
The anti gun crowd is crazier than this nut job…
What a stupid and offensive thing to say. So having a political position is now tantamount to killing and injuring this many people? So disgusting.
You need to relax bud…… You offend too easily….
Okay, well tell that the to those who lost their lives.
Guns dont kill people, only wack jobs with guns…. This guy is a fruit cake bottom line, because SteveyDee said so…
Did I say otherwise? No. What I said was that you’re a disgusting person for implying that people with a differing political opinion than you are essentially the same as a mass murder. That’s ridiculous. You can disagree with someone without making these awful and offensive character smears. Grow up.
You seem to be the only one offended, maybe you are the one who needs to grow up..
Explain why that’s a reasonable thing to say. That someone who is pro-gun control is “crazier” than this mass murder.
Get over it will you, I dont need to explain anything…
Remember the weapon of mass distruction, the Patriot act, etc. etc. sometimes thing aren’t all what they seem.
We need guns more then ever, to protect the people and their freedoms.
Bunch of comments just disappeared.
Probably because they were pro gun. Can’t have that on the BDN!
Absolutely correct!
So true…
Good to know this scumbag was such a great guy! Hate to think he was evil or anything.
It’s the quiet ones you’ve got to watch out for! And this guy is SCARY smart!
Boy O Boy, do we ever need a federal Death Penalty! If he is crazy that would be the only cure.
No can do, the bleeding hearts are set against it, they think its wrong, they would rather coddle and nurture this guy back into society.