CO - Mass shooting at King Soopers, 10 fatalities including 1 LEO, Boulder, 22 Mar 2021 *arrest*

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Experts: Boulder supermarket shooting suspect not competent, court says - Sentinel Colorado

Oct 11, 2021

[..]

The initial evaluation report was not released but, according to a filing by prosecutors, the experts provisionally diagnosed Ahmad Alissa, 22, with an unspecified mental health condition that “limit(s) his ability to meaningfully converse with others” and concluded that he is not currently able to assist his lawyers in defending him. Alissa gave “superficial responses” to questions about hypothetical legal situations which indicate a “passive approach to his defense” and “potential overreliance on his attorneys,” according to excerpts from the report included in the prosecution’s motion last week for a second evaluation.

Competency involves both whether defendants can understand legal proceedings and whether they have the ability to work with their lawyers to defend them. It’s a separate legal issue than a plea of not guilty by reason of insanity, which hinges on whether someone’s mental health prevented them from knowing right from wrong when a crime was committed. Court hearings are mostly put on hold when a judge finds that a defendant is incompetent but can resume if and when their condition improves, including through treatment.

While prosecutors said that the evaluators found that Alissa understood the legal process, his lawyers disputed that. The defense, also citing the evaluation report in a filing, said Alissa was fixated on the possibility of the death penalty in the case even though that is not a possibility. Colorado ended the use of capital punishment last year. He also thought the judge, rather than a jury, would decide his fate, the defense said.

Judge Ingrid Bakke had ordered state’s mental health evaluation after Alissa’s attorneys questioned his competence based on an evaluation by their own expert.
 

Court records indicate his next internal review hearing is set for Oct. 11 and the status review hearing is scheduled for Oct. 21.
 
7/21/22

Alissa has for months been undergoing mental health treatment at the state hospital. He was previously found incompetent in October 2021 and December 2021.

When he was found incompetent to stand trial in April, an evaluation indicated there was a “substantial probability that he will likely be restored to competency within the reasonable future and may be restored to competency and remain competent with the use of medications.”

District Attorney Michael Dougherty said in December he was “100% confident the day will come when he’s held fully responsible.”

Court records indicate his next internal review hearing is set for Oct. 11 and the status review hearing is scheduled for Oct. 21.
 

The suspect in the 2021 shooting at a Boulder, Colorado grocery store is being ruled too incompetent to stand trial.

A district judge said at a competency hearing on Friday that the state’s mental hospital evaluated Ahmad Alissa and reached that conclusion.

The judge also said the state doctors are hopeful he could be restored to competency in the future.
 

3/22/23

A Boulder judge ruled prosecutors can't use an expert they chose to conduct a neuropsychological evaluation on the accused King Soopers shooter.

They wanted the expert to help determine whether the suspect's lack of participation in mental health treatment is a conscious choice or a manifestation of symptoms of his illness.

[..]

Prosecutors made the request for a neuropsychological evaluation to the judge early in February, saying they needed to determine whether the accused shooter's apparent lack of participation in treatment to restore his fitness to stand trial is a choice not to comply, or a manifestation of mental illness symptoms. He has been diagnosed with schizophrenia, a filing by his defense attorneys last month revealed.

"The Court, the People, and Defense Counsel lack the authority to dictate the treatment of Defendant during his restoration treatment," Bakke wrote in an order Monday. "Therefore, the court orders that the People shall not bring in their own board certified forensic neuropsychological expert to perform a neuropsychological evaluation on Defendant."

[..]

In objecting to the evaluation request, defense attorneys said his severe symptoms limit his ability to interact, render him resistant to medication and make him unlikely to have the ability to participate in a neuropsychological evaluation.

Four experts have already found him unfit for trial: Two in his initial competence evaluation, one chosen by prosecutors and a fourth hired by the defense attorneys.
 

[On Wednesday, Boulder District Attorney Michael Dougherty's office said the Colorado Department of Human Services had recently provided a re-evaluation report that concluded Alissa had been "restored to competency."

The district attorney has filed a motion asking for a judicial finding that he is competent and for a preliminary hearing in the case to be scheduled as soon as possible.]
 

[On Wednesday, Boulder District Attorney Michael Dougherty's office said the Colorado Department of Human Services had recently provided a re-evaluation report that concluded Alissa had been "restored to competency."

The district attorney has filed a motion asking for a judicial finding that he is competent and for a preliminary hearing in the case to be scheduled as soon as possible.]
Good news! May justice prevail.
 

Seems to me the defense is playing the LS 'competency evaluation card' here where they've obliged the Court by using the State evaluator(s) and probably hoped to use a private evaluator to deem the defendant was not restored to competency-- and prevent the court proceedings from moving forward.

While there's no question the defendant is guilty of gunning down more than ten individuals, I think this is all about the defense pausing and buying time-- with the hope the horrific incident will be further from the minds of the public (jury pool). JMO

Colorado's 'King Soopers' was my introduction to the American grocer and I still remember the bakery women and store cashiers from my University days. xx
 
DENVER – The court overseeing the case of the suspect charged with killing 10 people at a Boulder King Soopers in March 2021 will determine whether he is mentally fit to proceed to trial by early October, a judge ruled Tuesday, after denying a surprise motion from the defense for a second competency hearing.

The ruling came nearly a week after the state found 24-year-old Ahmad Al Aliwi Alissa competent to stand trial after nearly two years of delays due to the suspect being deemed mentally incompetent since December 2021.

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