A Colorado judge on Wednesday formally sentenced James Eagan Holmes to 12 life terms without parole plus 3,318 years in prison for the July 2012 movie theater shooting in Aurora that killed 12 and wounded 70.
Holmes, a 27-year-old former grad student, received a life term for each person he killed. The additional years are for the attempted murders of those he wounded and for rigging his apartment with explosives.
"It is the court's intention that the defendant never set foot in free society again," Judge Carlos A. Samour Jr. said after imposing the sentence. "If there was ever a case that warranted a maximum sentence, this is the case. The defendant does not deserve any sympathy.
"Sheriff, get the defendant out of my courtroom please."
There was a smattering of applause as Holmes, shackled at the waist and wearing red prison garb, was led away from the courtroom where he has spent most of his days since jury selection began in January.
The sentencing brought to an end a long, emotionally draining trial that featured graphic descriptions of the gruesome crime scene and heartbreaking stories of the lives taken and shattered by Holmes' bullets.
The trial also focused on Holmes' mental illness. A notebook containing his rambling thoughts and detailed plans for the massacre, as well as hours of videotaped interviews with a court-appointed psychiatrist, dominated that part of the testimony.
Holmes revealed that he had been obsessed with killing people since his early teens. He said he studied neuroscience in part to fix his own "broken brain." He also said he contemplated suicide before devising a "life capital" plan that awarded him points for each life he took.
The defense portrayed Holmes as a victim of mental illness and brought forward a parade of witnesses who knew him as a sweet, academically gifted child. But prosecutors disdainfully portrayed him as a self-absorbed loser who lashed out violently after setbacks in his love life and his studies.
A jury rejected Holmes' insanity defense and convicted him of 24 counts of murder, 140 counts of attempted murder and a single explosives charge. But the jury could not agree on the death penalty; there was a lone holdout.
He received the only alternative on the 24 murder counts -- life sentences without parole, to be served consecutively. The additional years, which cover the attempted murder and explosives convictions, will be served consecutively to the murder sentences. The judge merged the two convictions for each victim into a single count.
More than 100 shooting survivors and friends and relatives of the people he killed offered heartbreaking testimony about their loss at the formal sentencing hearing, which began on Monday. Some called Holmes a monster and said he had cheated the executioner.
They spoke of holidays, weddings and graduations that won't be celebrated, and about depression, night terrors and survivor's guilt. Some have yet to set foot in a movie theater.
Holmes' mother, Arlene, apologized to the victims -- but he remained silent. She said he is remorseful as well, but his schizophrenia and the medication he takes make it difficult for him to express his feelings.
His defense attorneys have said they will not appeal Holmes' convictions or the sentence, noting that Holmes offered early on to plead guilty if prosecutors took the death penalty off the table.
Before issuing the formal sentence, Samour defended the criminal justice system, saying it worked even if some people were not happy that Holmes didn't receive the death penalty.
He said he understands why some survivors are disappointed and noted that the lone holdout juror showed more compassion toward Holmes than the defendant ever showed his victims.
"The jury was not able to return the sentencing verdicts you were hoping for," Samour said. "It feels like rejection. It feels like you were asking for something and were rejected. It feels like defeat."
He assured them it was not. He pointed out that the mandatory life sentences, and the decision not to appeal, means the case ends now and the victims can finally move on with their lives. Had Holmes gotten a death sentence, the case would have dragged on, possibly for decades.
"Either way you look at it, the defendant is going to die in the custody of a department of corrections," Samour said. "Death is certain, the only question is when."
He rejected criticism that the trial was a waste of time and money, since Holmes would have ended up with the same sentence had the state agreed to drop the death penalty in exchange for a guilty plea.
"Since when do we as a nation, as a community, put money ahead of everything else? When did that happen?" the judge asked.
He said the trial provided a platform for the community to know the people who were lost, and to learn about how such horrific, violent acts affect hundreds if not thousands of people. He said we were able to learn about the issue of mental illness and that we are still far from any real understanding about it. He said even the experts who testified would agree that the field of psychiatry has a long way to go.
Samour also noted that there was a fork in the road at which Holmes could have turned back, but didn't. That was when he was outside the theater and tried to call his therapist.
The judge took pains to mention each victim by name and offer up personal details provided by family members during the trial.
"We will never know what they would have accomplished. We will never know what impact they would have made in the world," Samour said. "The defendant robbed not only the family members and friends of these victims, he robbed the world of all these deceased victims would have accomplished."