Cinemark theater chain not liable in 2012
Colorado movie massacre
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[May 20, 2016]
By Keith Coffman
DENVER (Reuters) - The owners of a
Colorado movie theater where a gunman killed 12 people during the
screening of a Batman film in 2012 are not liable for the mass shooting,
a jury ruled on Thursday, in the first civil lawsuit stemming from the
incident.
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The Century 16 Theatre where a masked gunman killed 14 people at a
midnight showing of the Batman movie in Aurora, Colorado July 20, 2012.
REUTERS/Evan Semon |
Jurors ruled in favor of Cinemark USA Inc [CNKMAI.UL] in the
lawsuit filed by more than two dozen surviving victims of the
shooting and relatives of the dead, court spokesman Rob McCallum
said on Twitter.
Gunman James Holmes, who pleaded innocent by reason of insanity at
his murder trial, was found guilty last summer of killing 12 people
and wounding 70 when he opened fire during a midnight screening of
the "The Dark Knight Rises." He was sentenced to life in prison.
Lawyers for the plaintiffs argued that Cinemark and its
co-defendants, the theater's property owners, should be held liable
for various security lapses which they said had contributed to the
tragedy at the Century 16 Theater multiplex in Aurora, Colorado.
Plaintiffs' lawyer Marc Bern said in an email to Reuters that he was
"deeply disappointed" in the verdict and expected to appeal the
case.
"They failed to have armed security guards on the night of a
blockbuster movie premiere when they always have armed security on
Friday, Saturday and Sunday," Bern said.
"They failed to have CCTV on the perimeter of the building, they
failed to have roving guards around the building, they failed to
have silent door alarms on the auditorium exit doors," he added.
Attorneys for Texas-based Cinemark told jurors liability for the
carnage rested mainly with Holmes, not the theater owners.
Owners and managers of the theater could never have foreseen, nor
safeguarded against, such a seemingly random but meticulously
planned and violent attack, Cinemark's lawyers had said in closing
arguments on Wednesday.
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"Mr. Holmes was completely unpredictable, unforeseeable,
unpreventable and unstoppable," Cinemark lawyer Kevin Taylor told
reporters after the verdict.
Another lawsuit against Cinemark related to the shooting is pending
in federal court. Victims and survivors have also sued the
University of Colorado, including university psychiatrists who
evaluated or treated Holmes.
At the movie screening, Holmes opened fire with a semiautomatic
rifle, shotgun and pistol, after he had rigged his apartment with
bombs. His lawyers showed video of him naked and running head-long
into a jail cell wall during his criminal trial, saying he suffered
from schizophrenia and was not in control of his actions.
(Reporting by Keith Coffman; Writing by Sharon Bernstein; Editing by
Tom Brown)
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