Published: May 18, 2015 By

CENTENNIAL, Colo. 鈥 In the Aurora theater shooting trial, one of the only courtroom behaviors more persistent than defendant James Holmes鈥 eerily interminable chair swiveling is the repeated cry of 鈥渙bjection鈥 from the defense.

Public defenders seek a not guilty verdict for Holmes 鈥 who killed 12 and injured 70 when he attacked the Century 16 movie theater on July 20, 2012 鈥 by reason of insanity. They have so far objected to photos of victims鈥 wounds, witness testimonies they deemed 鈥渦psetting,鈥 and even a theater diagram marked in pen with the phrase 鈥渂loody victims.鈥澛

Judge Carlos Samour, Jr. overrules these objections so often that spectators probably wonder why the defense bothers objecting at all. The simple answer, as Judge Samour has reminded the jury at the request of the defense, is that they鈥檙e legally required to. But the reason is more complicated.

According to David Beller, president of the Colorado Criminal Defense Bar Association, the dialogue and drama that unfold in the courtroom tell only half the story.

鈥淭here are, for all intents and purposes, two trials going on,鈥 he said in an interview.

鈥淭he first is the trial in front of the jury,鈥 Beller said. 鈥淭he second trial that鈥檚 going on is that everything is getting written down and recorded for use in an appeal.鈥

Bob Grant, the now-retired attorney who in 1987 prosecuted Gary Lee Davis, the last man to be executed in Colorado, agreed.

鈥淏asically what the defense is doing is making their record,鈥 he said in an interview.

Everything that happens in the courtroom 鈥 every verbal exchange, every piece of evidence admitted and yes, every single objection 鈥 is recorded. After the trial, this record will be reviewed by the Colorado Court of Appeals. So although the jury, the defense and everyone 聽watching knows by now that Judge Samour will overrule most objections, the defense continues to raise them.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e not speaking to the jury,鈥 Beller said. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e speaking to the Court of Appeals.鈥

In his courtroom, Judge Samour gets to decide whether to sustain or overrule an objection. But when the months-long trial concludes, the 22 judges of Colorado鈥檚 Court of Appeals will review the entire case, looking for errors. And during this process, evidence that elicited an objection from either side will receive closer scrutiny.

Playing by the rules

The rulebook that governs what is admissible in Colorado courts is called聽.聽It鈥檚 based on the Federal Rules of Evidence, adopted by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1973, and contains rules on hearsay, witness testimony and the relevance of evidence.

David Beller compared it to a football rulebook: Though the rules are clear, there are situations that make things complicated.

鈥淚t鈥檚 sort of like a football that lands directly on the line,鈥 he said, admitting that he鈥檚 not a sports expert. 鈥淚s that a touchdown or not a touchdown? There鈥檚 a gray area to all of these rules.鈥

In the Aurora theater shooting trial, the defense鈥檚 objections most commonly cite Rules 401 and 403, both of which define relevance. 聽For a piece of evidence to be admissible, Rule 401 states, it must be relevant. That鈥檚 defined as 鈥渉aving any tendency to make鈥ny fact鈥ore or less probable than it would be without the evidence.鈥

However, Rule 403 states that evidence that is considered to be prejudicial, confusing, misleading or a waste of time is not always admissible, though it may be relevant. The defense thus must object any time relevance is in question.

鈥淚f the defense does not object to this stuff,鈥 Beller said, 鈥淭here can be an argument down the road that the attorneys were not effective in not objecting.鈥

It鈥檚 the judge鈥檚 job to decide whether the relevance outweighs these other qualities.

Judge Samour has demonstrated a tendency to favor relevance. He has repeatedly said that given the nature of the crime Holmes committed, some evidence of the damage he caused 鈥 including wounded victims, emotional trauma and blood 鈥 is to be expected.

鈥淗e has the constitutional right to a fair trial,鈥 Samour told the court. 鈥淗e doesn鈥檛 have the constitutional right to a sanitized trial.鈥

Beyond a reasonable doubt

According to David Beller, the prosecution is trying to emotionally manipulate the jury when it calls injured victims to the stand, or shows upsetting photographs.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a legally allowable way for the prosecution to tug at the heartstrings of the jury,鈥 he said. The prosecution promised in its opening statements that the jury would hear from every single victim, and so far, these emotional testimonies have been spread out.

鈥淭hey are strategically placing them throughout the trial so that the jury always remembers that emotion,鈥 he said.

That, Bob Grant said, may be another reason the defense raises so many objections.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e playing to the jury,鈥 he said. 鈥淭heir hope is that the jury will resent the fact that the prosecution is doing this.鈥

It鈥檚 worth noting that the jury has seen several graphic photographs that were not shown to spectators or the public.

So why is the prosecution spending so much time reliving the traumatic scene?

This case has never been about whether defendant James Holmes opened fire in a crowded movie theater nearly three years ago.聽He was arrested immediately after the shooting, wearing protective body armor and harboring explosive devices in his apartment nearby. He never denied the attack.

But it still falls to the prosecution to prove 鈥 beyond a reasonable doubt 鈥 that Holmes committed the crimes he is being charges with. 鈥淓ven if it鈥檚 not being disputed,鈥 Beller said, 鈥淭hey still have to prove the case.鈥

According to Grant, it also matters for sentencing. 鈥淭he impact on the victims is important to both the case in chief 鈥 the murder trial 鈥 and the penalty phase,鈥 he said. Evidence admitted now remains admitted for the penalty phase.

鈥淭he more they show the wonton disregard for life and the number of bullets, the more they show the impact,鈥 Grant said.