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		 Second 
		sanity exam of accused Colorado cinema gunman completed 
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		[October 16, 2014] 
		By Keith Coffman
 DENVER (Reuters) - The sealed results of a 
		second sanity examination of accused Colorado theater gunman James 
		Holmes, which could determine if the long-delayed trial will begin this 
		year, were submitted on Wednesday, a court document shows.
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			 Holmes underwent a court-ordered psychiatric test last year after 
			pleading not guilty by reason of insanity to shooting dead 12 
			moviegoers and wounding dozens more inside a suburban Denver cinema 
			in July 2012 during a midnight viewing of the Batman film "The Dark 
			Knight Rises." 
 Arapahoe County District Court Judge Carlos Samour ordered further 
			psychological testing in February after ruling the first evaluation 
			was deficient.
 
 Samour said in a notice to prosecutors and defense attorneys on 
			Wednesday that the new 53-page report and videotaped interviews of 
			Holmes were ready for their review.
 
 The report could trigger more litigation, potentially delaying the 
			trial beyond its scheduled December start date, said Colorado 
			defense lawyer and legal analyst Mark Johnson.
 
			
			 "This could provoke a valid motion by either side to seek a 
			continuance for more investigation if it is contrary to the first 
			evaluation," he said. "The sanity determination is the centerpiece 
			of this entire case."
 Prosecutors have charged Holmes with multiple counts of first-degree 
			murder and attempted murder, and said they will seek the death 
			penalty for the California native if he is convicted.
 
 Lawyers for Holmes have acknowledged that the 26-year-old former 
			neuroscience graduate was the lone shooter, but claim he was in the 
			throes of a psychotic episode at the time.
 
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			While defense lawyers have challenged nearly every piece of evidence 
			amassed against their client, the case hinges on whether Holmes knew 
			right from wrong when he went on the rampage.
 Under Colorado’s insanity defense law, prosecutors must prove beyond 
			a reasonable doubt that a defendant was not insane at the time of 
			the crime.
 
 The results of the first evaluation have not been made public, but 
			prosecutors sought a second psychiatric examination, arguing that 
			the first one was incomplete and inadequate.
 
 Samour sided with prosecutors and ordered further testing, over the 
			objections of defense lawyers who unsuccessfully appealed to the 
			Colorado Supreme Court.
 
 (Editing by Curtis Skinner; Editing by Michael Perry)
 
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