James Holmes hears from angry movie theatre victims in sentencing phase

1James Holmes appears in court for the sentencing phase in his trial on Monday at Arapahoe County District Court in Centennial, Colo.
2Scores of victims of James Holmes's deadly attack on a Colorado movie theatre, now free to vent their feelings before the judge, are denouncing the defence team, the legal process and the single juror who blocked a death sentence.
3Throughout Holmes' three-month trial, if they were called to testify, survivors and family members were stifled by objections and court orders preventing them from veering off topic or saying too much about the searing emotional and physical scars the shooting has left.
4But they were finally allowed to speak without interruption when Holmes's formal sentencing opened Monday, offering testimony that was sometimes quiet and reflective, sometimes laced with anger and frustration.
5Tom Teves, whose son Alex was killed, called Holmes a pathetic coward and the defence attorneys "agents of evil" who were trying to advance their own careers.
6Robert Sullivan, the grandfather of the youngest victim, six-year-old Veronica Moser-Sullivan, called on Holmes to "do the correct thing for once" and petition the court to be executed by firing squad.
7James Holmes, far left, sits at the defence table during a statement reading by Kathleen Pourciau, far right, the mother of surviving theatre shooting victim Bonnie Kate Pourciau-Zoghbi.
8Unlike during the trial, witnesses spoke from a lectern facing Judge Carlos A. Samour Jr., rather than the jury box, which sat empty.
9Their voices were tearful and trembling.
10At the end of the three-day hearing, Samour will formally sentence Holmes to life without parole and up to 3,318 additional years on attempted murder convictions.
11Forty more people are expected to take the stand Tuesday and Wednesday.
12Jurors rejected Holmes' insanity plea and convicted him of murdering 12 people and trying to kill 70 others when he opened fire on a packed theatre in suburban Denver on July 20, 2012.
13The jury was divided on the sentence, with 11 favouring death and one favouring life without parole.
14Under Colorado law, jurors must be unanimous to impose the death penalty, so Holmes automatically got life.
15For the most part, Samour let them share their stories, no matter how long or off-topic.
16But twice he took the unusual step of chiming in, offering an impassioned defence of the jury and the process after the mother of one of the wounded said Holmes's life sentence showed more concern for Holmes than for his victims.
17"You can't claim there was no justice because it wasn't the outcome you expected," Samour responded.
18He said the jury was fair and impartial and that he tried his utmost to be the same.
19"And that's how you know it was justice," he said.
20The judge later delivered a forceful rebuke after Sullivan suggested that one juror might have improperly blocked the death penalty for Holmes by lying about her beliefs all along to ensure he got a life sentence.
21Samour said he understood the victims are hurting, but he said speculating on misconduct was unacceptable.
22"I don't have any basis in front of me or any reason anyone has put in front of me [to conclude] there was deception," he said.
23Other people told Samour about the physical pain, the grief and the despair Holmes' rampage caused.