The alleged gunman in the movie theater
massacre sent a package to a faculty member at the University of Colorado
medical campus that was found unopened in a mailroom Monday, law enforcement
officials said Wednesday.
A girl signs a message board at a memorial
across the street from the Century 16 movie theater in Aurora, Colo.
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Two law enforcement officials said that it
contained a "document" but that they did not know whether it was a
notebook detailing plans for violence, as Fox News reported.
One official said authorities hope the
document will shed light on how the attack was planned and carried out.
The officials declined to be named because
a court order bars investigators and others from talking about the case.
The package was sent before the rampage
that killed 12 people and injured 58 at a showing of the latest Batman movie at
a multiplex here early Friday, the officials said.
It was delivered by the Postal Service on
Monday and was immediately turned over to police, a statement issued by the
university said. University officials declined further comment, citing the
court order.
Discovery of the mail from James Holmes,
who recently dropped out of a neuroscience graduate program at the university,
was first reported by Fox News. It said the package contained a notebook
"full of details about how he was going to kill people" and drawings
of stick figures being shot.
NBC News reported that Holmes told
investigators to look for the package. The university disclosed earlier that it
had twice found packages that appeared to be suspicious after the shooting.
"The buildings were locked down for several hours while authorities
investigated. In both cases, the packages were deemed not a threat to safety on
the campus," the university said in a statement on its website.
The latest discovery raises questions about
whether Holmes' behavior had alarmed faculty or staff at the medical center
where he was a student.
John Banzhaf, a professor of public
interest law at George Washington University, said the discovery increases the
likelihood the university will be sued by victims "for negligent failure
to take appropriate steps to prevent the rampage."
He said mailing the package to a
psychiatrist, as Fox reported, could suggest that Holmes had seen the doctor
"in his professional capacity for therapy and/or counseling." He said
Holmes' withdrawal from the prestigious graduate program "by itself would
be a red flag" for a psychiatrist or psychologist, and that if Holmes was
being seen for therapy, the university may have had a legal obligation to pay
more attention to his mental condition.
"While it might seem unreasonable to
expect that a university would be able to detect signs of potential dangerous
mental instability in all of its thousands of students, a reasonable argument
can be made that it should have followed up at least somewhat when a student
suddenly and unexpectedly leaves a graduate program, gives up a substantial
financial stipend which is supporting his lifestyle, is forced to move from his
home, and consults a psychiatrist, — all major stressors," Banzhaf said.
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