Photo taken from Adult Friend Finder (AdultFriendFinder.com) profile of Aurora, Colorado movie theater shooter James Holmes. “Let’s just say he hasn’t shown any remorse,” a jail employee told the Daily News. “He thinks he’s acting in a movie EXCLUSIVE: Remorseless mass-murder suspect James Holmes was locked up alone Saturday over fears that the self-proclaimed Joker would become a target for other inmates. The man accused in the Colorado movie theater massacre was still behaving erratically on the day after his rampage at a midnight screening of “The Dark Night Rises” — the last film in the Batman trilogy. “Let’s just say he hasn’t shown any remorse,” a jail employee told the Daily News. “He thinks he’s acting in a movie.” A released inmate said Holmes’ behavior behind bars was increasingly irrational. “He was spitting at the door and spitting at the guards,” the inmate told The News. “He’s spitting at everything. Dude was acting crazy.” Holmes, 24, was also placed on suicide watch in solitary confinement before eating a jailhouse breakfast of grits and sausage, according to a cafeteria worker. Two other just-released inmates said the concerns of Arapahoe Detention Center officials over Holmes’ life were well-founded. “All the inmates were talking about killing him,” Wayne Medley, 24, said as he left the facility. “Everyone was looking for an opportunity. It’s all they could talk about.” Freed inmate Dima Danilov, 22, said the suspect’s face was covered with a red towel when he arrived at the jail about two hours after 12 people were killed and 58 wounded inside an Aurora, Colo., multiplex. Arapahoe County Jail in Centennial, Colo, where Holmes is being held in solitary. Holmes — who had dyed his hair red — was also wearing red clothing beneath the black body armor that terrified moviegoers saw when he opened fire early Friday morning, Danilov said. Jail guards “blacked out his windows with duct tape so no one could see him,” said Danilov. “He was cuffed in the back and had leg shackles. Six officers were walking him.” The deranged suspected killer, a former honors student and Ph.D. candidate, said nothing and walked slowly to his cell. Danilov said that if Holmes was released into the general jail population, “he won’t live to see Monday’s court appearance.” KEVIN HAGEN FOR NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Arapahoe County Jail in Centennial, Colo, where Holmes is being held in solitary. A released inmate said Holmes’ behavior behind bars was increasingly irrational. Holmes is due for his first court appearance on Monday morning. He could face the death penalty, if found mentally competent and convicted in the murder spree. Cops returned Saturday for a second day to Holmes’ suburban Denver apartment, which was rigged with chemical and explosive booby-traps by its jailed tenant before his rampage. Eleven of the victims shot during the midnight screening of “The Dark Knight Rises” remained in critical condition Saturday at Colorado hospitals. According to NYPD Commissioner Raymond Kelly, the mass killer declared that “he was the Joker, enemy of Batman” after the massacre ended. Holmes, who came to Colorado from California to continue his education, was armed with an AR-15 assault rifle, a Remington 870 shotgun and two .40-caliber Glock handguns. (Source: NY Daily News) … Read More
In Today’s America
Recently Time Magazine published a cover story depicting the U.S. Constitution passing through a paper shredder with the headlines “Does It Still Matter?” The article portrays the Constitution as an outmoded document that we should ignore to whatever extent is expedient to pursue someone’s vision of a better society. There is little doubt that America is in a constitutional crisis. … Read More
Findes kærlighed på nettet?
Hvor internetdating for få år siden levede en tabuiseret tilværelse er det i dag bredt velsignet og udbredt i befolkningen – 610.000 alene på Dating.dk. Men kærligheden på nettet lider under de sociale mediers særlige dynamik. Det er et udstillingsvindue, som vi pynter op, så andre stopper ved butikken. Her kan »man altid trykke på slettetasten«, som det lyder fra en bruger i vores undersøgelse om sociale koder og sprogbrug i internetdating, som vi har lavet til en opgave i Humanistisk Informatik ved Aalborg Universitet. Der viser sig en klar holdning blandt brugerne, at internetdating er smart, fordi det er ”fleksibelt” og ”man kan skrive med flere på en gang”. Det lyder jo næsten for godt til at være sandt. Her er altid en udvej. … Read More
The Globalist Infiltration: Obama, Israel and the Muslim Brotherhood
The global Elite’s puppets are beginning to show their true alliances and rat out each other in an obvious move to find some sort of false sense of security. Congresswoman Michele Bachmann recently accused Huma Abedin, aide to Hillary Clinton US Secretary of State, as being an infiltrated spy for the Muslim Brotherhood (MB). Bachmann says that the US government has been compromised by the MB and Abedin is working for “America’s demise”. … Read More
Havhekseblikket hos Blixen
Furesøens skønhed bliver snildt til Rungstedlunds lyksaligheder. Og når Karen Blixens mezzostemme lokker fra agterstavnen på Det Flydende Teater, så skal der mere end en Grete derhjemme til at holde fast i en Thorkild Bjørnvig. For Lars Junggreen er en vildt forførende Blixen. Ikke skyggen af dragqueen. Snarere et erotisk væsen af sin helt egen art – mere i familie med havfruer og sirener end med kvinder. Eller som Mette K. Madsens bortslyngede hustru omtaler hende i kraftfuld afmagt over for Pelle Nordhøj Kanns udmattede Bjørnvig: »Heks!« … Read More
Security increased at theatres following Colo. shootings, but many moviegoers undeterred
Some theatres and police around the U.S. stepped up security at daytime showings of the new Batman movie Friday after the massacre in Colorado, and while many fans were undeterred by the tragedy, others were nervous about going to see the film.Two police officers were stationed outside the AMC theatre in New York’s Times Square, which had showings of the “The Dark Knight Rises” beginning every 20 minutes. Later in the day, the officers gave way to a police cruiser that was parked out front with an officer in it.Jimmy Baker, 40, of Harlem had been waiting since about 9:45 a.m. for the 12:50 p.m. show. “I just felt bad for the people that had to be traumatized by this entire event,” he said. But “I didn’t feel like it had any kind of effect on me. … I’m just here to enjoy a good movie.”Stephanie Suriel, 21, of Brooklyn, waiting outside the same theatre, said her mother was slightly concerned about her going to see the film. But “I’m not nervous at all because I really want to see that movie.”Still, just to be safe, she said: “I’m going to sit in the back.”At the Regal Gallery Place multiplex in downtown Washington, moviegoers trickled into an 11 a.m. showing. Theater employees searched patrons’ bags and purses while taking their tickets.”I’m believing that it’s not related so much to the movie,” Steve Glaude, a 57-year-old federal employee, said of the shooting. “The movie may have been a trigger. It may not have been. We don’t know. I don’t think it was hero or villain emulation.”In Aurora, Colo., a gunman wearing a gas mask set off a gas canister and fired into a crowded theatre in the Denver suburb at a midnight opening of the movie, killing 12 people and injuring at least 50 others, authorities said.Christine Cooley, who works for the University of Florida at a campus installation near Tampa, Fla., said she and her 15-year-old daughter were stunned to wake up to the news. Cooley said her daughter has sworn off going to the movies.”It’s tainted the movie completely for her,” Cooley said. “It’s summertime. That’s a big movie time for teenagers. That movie is off the list now. Movie theatres in general are off her summer to-do list because of that.”Cooley said she tried to explain that the shooting was random and not an indication of security at theatres in general, “but I can see where she’s coming from. Why put yourself in harm’s way?”At the United Artists Riverview Stadium 17 in Philadelphia, a steady stream of people headed in for morning showings of “The Dark Knight Rises.” Staff members said that there was extra security, but that that was normal for big movies — and not because of the shooting in Colorado.Neal Mates, 38, a professed “film geek,” said: “Shootings can happen anywhere. … I think it’s silly to blame the film.”Executives of St. Louis-based Wehrenberg Theatres had discussions before dawn with managers of its 15 cinemas in Illinois, Missouri, Minnesota and Iowa, spokeswoman Kelly Hoskins said. She said the company feels comfortable with security already in place and plans no changes. She said she hopes other theatre chains don’t panic and cancel showings.”That just wouldn’t be good,” she said. “It’s like a terrorist attack — you don’t want them to think we’re all scared.”The National Association of Theater Owners said in a statement that its members are “working closely with local law enforcement agencies and reviewing security procedures.”___Associated Press writers Alex Katz and Christy Lemire in New York City, Ben Nuckols in Washington, Patrick Walters in Philadelphia and Jim Suhr in St … Read More
Mister Gaga spiller op
Natti Vogel synes at være i sit virkelige es, mens han en sval onsdag aften midt i juni står udenfor musikbaren Culture Fix i New York-kvarteret Lower East Side og taler med nogle veninder. Sangskriveren og musikeren er klædt i et nydeligt og temmelig konservativt beige jakkesæt. Under højre arm har han en lille hawaiiansk guitar, kaldt ukulele. En halv time senere sidder Natti bænket foran et klaver i en sal, hvis hvide vægge er prydede af små originale malerier. Det unge publikum sidder omkring nogle lange træborde og drikker øl af glas. Alle som én er de i aften dukket op med kort varsel. Det er kun et par dage siden, at musikeren har slået nyheden om aftenens optræden op på sin Facebook-side. … Read More

