This is not about keeping the courts tied up, it's about not rushing to try a particular case. I think it is a damned good reason not to be in a hurry to try a man facing the death penalty on one of the most serious crimes in the United States in the past several years. Both sides need to be fully prepared, as they will (very likely) only get one change to get this right. As long as he's in jail I see no problem with it.
Meh. Holmes has a long history of being treated for mental illness. The guy is a fucking fruitcake.
Seeking the death penalty for Holmes is just grandstanding & pandering to bloodlust by the DA.
Judged sane or insane, nobody will release Holmes from behind bars, ever. Death penalty or not, seeking it is a waste of taxpayer resources in light of the plea offer from the Defense.
That's why I've come to believe the death penalty is a waste of time and money (let alone the moral ambiguity of empowering the State to kill people with less than perfect accuracy.)
My friend was murdered by Nathan Dunlap in the infamous
Chuck E Cheese shooting also in Aurora back in the 90s. Like everyone, I was angry and sad for my friend, his family and for all of us. I signed the petition to ask for the death penalty at the funeral. That was some 20 years ago.
Eventually life moved on, and the fate of the murderer goes to the back of your mind. Then his execution date comes near, and everything is back in the news. Nothing you really want to remember. He's grown old and remorseful, but about 5 bullets too late.
Now it's a new controversy, more debate, even gets into the governor's race.
Honestly, i was much happier not ever having to think about Dunlap again. This far removed, his death serves no solice. It was better just knowing in the back corners of my mind he was rotting away somewhere.
Murderers don't deserve to live, OTOH the needed process for the death penalty just inflicts more wounds.
They should have just taken the plea and dropped this killer in the same hole Dunlap sits in and let everyone move on to remember the people they lost, not the person who took them.