Current:Home > MarketsTrial of man who killed 10 at Colorado supermarket turns to closing arguments -Thrive Success Strategies
Trial of man who killed 10 at Colorado supermarket turns to closing arguments
View
Date:2025-04-17 23:15:32
DENVER (AP) — Lawyers are set to deliver closing arguments Friday in the trial of a mentally ill man who fatally shot 10 people at a Colorado supermarket in 2021.
Ahmad Alissa, who has schizophrenia, has pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity in the attack at the store in the college town of Boulder. His attorneys acknowledge he was the shooter but say he was legally insane at the time of the shooting.
Mental illness is not the same thing as insanity under the law. In Colorado, insanity is legally defined as having a mental disease so severe it is impossible for a person to tell the difference between right and wrong.
During two weeks of trial, the families of those killed saw graphic surveillance and police body camera video. Survivors testified about how they fled, helped others to safety and hid. An emergency room doctor crawled onto a shelf and hid among bags of chips. A pharmacist who took cover testified she heard Alissa say “This is fun” at least three times.
Several members of Alissa’s family, who immigrated to the United States from Syria, testified that starting a few years earlier he became withdrawn and spoke less. He later began acting paranoid and showed signs of hearing voices and his condition worsened after he got COVID-19 in late 2020, they said.
Alissa is charged with 10 counts of first-degree murder, multiple counts of attempted murder and other offenses, including having six high-capacity ammunition magazine devices banned in Colorado after previous mass shootings.
Alissa started shooting immediately after getting out of his car at the store on March 22, 2021, killing most of the victims in just over a minute. He killed a police officer who responded to the attack and then surrendered after another officer shot him in the leg.
Prosecutors said Alissa was equipped with an optic scope for his semi-automatic pistol, which resembled an AR-15 rifle, and steel-piercing bullets.
They accused him of trying to kill as many as possible, pursuing people who were running and trying to hide. That gave him an adrenaline rush and a sense of power, prosecutors argued, though they did not offer any motive for the attack.
State forensic psychologists who evaluated Alissa concluded he was sane during the shootings. The defense did not have to provide any evidence in the case and did not present any experts to say he was insane.
However, the defense pointed out that the psychologists did not have full confidence in their sanity finding. That was largely because Alissa did not provide them more information about what he was experiencing, even though it could have helped his case.
The experts also said they thought the voices he was hearing played some role in the attack and they did not believe it would have happened if Alissa were not mentally ill.
veryGood! (12)
Related
- Federal Spending Freeze Could Have Widespread Impact on Environment, Emergency Management
- Turning Food Into Fuel While Families Go Hungry
- Indonesia Deporting 2 More Climate Activists, 2 Reporters
- Ohio mom charged with murder after allegedly going on vacation, leaving baby home alone for 10 days
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Newsom’s Top Five Candidates for Kamala Harris’s Senate Seat All Have Climate in Their Bios
- The Bachelorette: Meet the 25 Men Vying for Charity Lawson's Heart
- As Solar and Wind Prices Fall, Coal’s Future is Fading Fast, BNEF Says
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- An Unlikely Alliance of Farm and Environmental Groups Takes on Climate Change
Ranking
- Don't let hackers fool you with a 'scam
- Rachel Hollis Reflects on Unbelievably Intense 4 Months After Ex-Husband Dave Hollis' Death
- Senate 2020: In the Perdue-Ossoff Senate Runoff, Support for Fossil Fuels Is the Dividing Line
- Rent is falling across the U.S. for the first time since 2020
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- Tom Brady Spotted on Star-Studded Yacht With Leonardo DiCaprio
- Supreme Court sets higher bar for prosecuting threats under First Amendment
- The Newest Threat to a Warming Alaskan Arctic: Beavers
Recommendation
New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
American Climate Video: The Driftwood Inn Had an ‘Old Florida’ Feel, Until it Was Gone
Senate 2020: In the Perdue-Ossoff Senate Runoff, Support for Fossil Fuels Is the Dividing Line
BMW Tests Electric Cars as Power Grid Stabilizers
This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
Kinder Morgan Cancels Fracked Liquids Pipeline Plan, and Pursues Another
Lawmaker pushes bill to shed light on wrongfully detained designation for Americans held abroad
Accepting Responsibility for a Role in Climate Change