STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- NEW: Twenty people were still hospitalized Tuesday, six in critical condition
- The explosive setup resembled those used in Iraq and Afghanistan, an official says
- Holmes will be formally charged on July 30
The sophisticated setup at the sparsely furnished third-floor, one-bedroom apartment of James E. Holmes was meant to harm, or possibly kill, anyone who entered -- and tested the skills of bomb squad members charged with clearing it.
"Imagine that fireball
... you would have an explosion that would knock down the wall of
(nearby) apartments," the official said Monday. "That flame would have
consumed the entire third floor."
"By the time a fire truck
would have arrived, they would have arrived to a building that would
have been completely consumed in flames."
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The grenades were wired
in the kitchen to a control box, which bomb technicians used a robot to
disable by squirting water on it.
"It looked like
spaghetti," according to the official, who said it resembled explosive
setups more commonly used in Iraq and Afghanistan.
The control box has been sent to Quantico, Virginia, for forensic analysis at the FBI laboratory, the official said.
The setup appears to
have been "rigged" to explode, the official said. The forensic analysis
is expected to determine whether it would have done so had it not been
disabled.
The gasoline was divided into glass containers and gas cans to "enhance the thermal effect" of any explosion, the official said.
Over the weekend, Aurora
Police Chief Daniel Oates told reporters there was "evidence of ...
some calculation and deliberation" in the Friday attack at the Century
Aurora 16 multiplex.
Holmes received
deliveries over the past four months at his home and work addresses,
which may explain how he may have obtained some of the materials that
were used in the attack or found at his apartment, Oates said.
The University of
Colorado-Denver School of Medicine, where Holmes enrolled as a doctoral
candidate in its neuroscience program but later withdrew, was
investigating whether he received any of shipments while working as a
research assistant at the Anschutz Medical Campus in Aurora.
Authorities have been
tight-lipped about a possible motive in the case; police spokesman Frank
Fania told CNN that Holmes has been uncooperative with investigators.
The multiplex, where the
shootings occurred during a midnight premiere of "The Dark Knight
Returns," will remain shuttered at least until Wednesday while police
complete their investigation of the crime scene and allow the suspect's
defense team access to it.
On Monday, Holmes made his first court appearance.
Looking dazed at times,
Holmes -- who after the attack identified himself to police as "the
Joker" -- wore a maroon jumpsuit over a white T-shirt and gave little
indication that he was paying attention to the courtroom procedure that
ensured he will continue to be held without bond.
Booking photograph of James Eagan Holmes, accused of killing 12 in Aurora, Colorado Theater Shooting.
He was then led from the
courtroom and back to the Arapahoe County Jail, where he is being held
in isolation. Formal charges are expected to be filed July 30.
"The charges on which
the court found cause included first-degree murder," Arapahoe County
District Attorney Carol Chambers told reporters outside the courthouse.
She said prosecutors have a lot of work to do.
"I would say there's no such thing as a slam-dunk case," she said. "We're still looking at the enormous amount of evidence."
Deciding whether to pursue the death penalty is a long process that involves input from victims and their relatives, she said.
A capital case would require a finding of either extreme indifference or deliberation, she said.
Holmes is being held in
connection with the shootings that killed 12 people and left 58 others
wounded. As of Tuesday evening, 20 people remained hospitalized -- six
of them in critical condition -- in five area hospitals, hospital
spokespersons said.
Four of those killed
were active members of the the U.S. military. The Department of Defense
was flying flags at half-staff in their honor.
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