The University of Colorado Anschutz medical campus reported it found a suspicious package near building 500 before any employees arrived on campus Monday morning. The package was dealt with at that time and caused no evacuations. Later that afternoon, another suspicious package was reported where mail was sorted at the university. By 5 p.m., that package was still under investigation.
The packages were not sent by Holmes, but those that received the packages feared they might have been.
The source said police and FBI agents were called to the University of Colorado Anschutz medical campus in Aurora on Monday morning after the psychiatrist, who is also a professor at the school, reported receiving a package believed to be from the suspect. Although that package turned out to be from someone else and harmless, a search of the Campus Services' mailroom turned up another package sent to the psychiatrist with Holmes name in the return address, the source told FoxNews.com.
A second law enforcement source said authorities got a warrant from a county judge and took the package away Monday night. When it was opened, its chilling contents were revealed.
The source told NBC that the package contained writings about killing people, but could not go into more detail.
Police recovered the package on Monday after getting a search warrant for the medical center mail room and then getting a second warrant to actually open the package, the law enforcement source said.
"Officials at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus can confirm that the suspicious package discovered at the Facilities Services building on Monday, July 23, 2012, was delivered to the campus by the United States Postal Service that same day, immediately investigated and turned over to authorities within hours of delivery. This package prompted the buildings evacuation at 12:26 p.m. and employees were allowed to return by 3:06 p.m.," said Jacque Montgomery.
Call7 Investigator John Ferrugia reported Monday that three packages were received by CU -- all with John Holmes' name on them.
If Holmes' attorneys cannot convince the court that he is mentally incompetent, and he is convicted, they can try to stave off a possible death penalty by arguing he is mentally ill. Prosecutors will decide whether to seek the death penalty in the coming weeks.
Campus police, whose officers participate in the Behavioral Evaluation and Threat Assessment team, have said they had no contact with Holmes. Other team members reached in recent days declined to discuss Holmes.
University Chancellor Don Elliman told reporters this week that to his knowledge, We did everything we should have done in this case.
Michael Carrigan, chairman of the University of Colorado regents, said he couldnt comment on Holmes in particular and said he didnt know what might have brought him to the attention of the BETA team.
Source: http://www.thedenverchannel.com/news/31324092/detail.htmlCU Chancellor Don Elliman said at a news conference the school did everything properly. To the best of our knowledge at this point we did everything that we think we should have done, he said last week.
Michael Carrigan, chairman of the CU board of regents, told CALL7 Investigators that he did not know if Holmes had ever been discussed by the BETA team.
"It's the first I'm hearing about this," he said in a phone interview.
A CU spokeswoman declined comment on Fenton or any BETA team actions, citing a gag order.
http://www.thedenverchannel.com/news/31292454/detail.htmlA man accused in a mass shooting at a Colorado theater that killed 12 people and injured 58 more failed a preliminary exam before pulling out of the neurosciences program at Colorado University.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/polit...e-massacre/2012/07/27/gJQAsTwHEX_story_1.htmlIt remains unclear why Holmes had decided to leave the program in June. But university officials said it would not have been because he failed the hour-long oral exam that all first-year students must take, as some have suggested.
“We don’t really grade this exam pass-fail,” Ribera* said. “Either we tell the student ‘No problem,’ or we say, ‘We notice that there were deficiencies in this area.’ Then the chair of the graduate training committee talks to the student and together they come up with a plan to address that deficiency.”
http://www.wptv.com/dpp/news/nation...ist-called-threat-team-before-aurora-shootingDuring the period when, sources say, Fenton contacted fellow BETA team members, Holmes did not do well on an oral presentation on June 7.
Jacobson told the newspaper Holmes "should not have gotten into the summer program. His grades were mediocre. I've heard him described as brilliant. This is extremely inaccurate."
He said Holmes' high school transcripts showed Bs and no advanced-placement classes.
"The biggest thing I remember about him was -- we did a high school project, it was -- the end of -- the year project for AP European History class -- and that's when I found out he could play the piano. He's actually pretty good at the piano. He was just playing some old Irish stuff. But that's -- that's really the deepest I got to know about him."
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/23/u...ghted-by-aurora-shootings.html?pagewanted=allThe police apprehended Mr. Holmes outside the theater minutes after the shooting, still wearing the body armor. He had four guns with him. A law enforcement official said he also had tablets of Vicodin, a painkiller, in his possession.
Chief Daniel Oates of the Aurora police praised the arresting officers on the CBS program Face the Nation for noticing that Mr. Holmes gear was not quite like that of the other S.W.A.T. officers or he might well have escaped, mistaken for one of the responders.
Was he banned or did he chose to leave school?
http://www.foxnews.com/us/2012/08/2...er-release-colorado-shooting-suspect-records/