Some victims to attend ceremony at Colo. theater
Topics: From the Wires, News
A woman and her grandson wait for a bus, near the fenced-in Century movie theater, the site of the deadly 2011 shootings, in Aurora, Colorado, Tuesday, Jan. 15, 2013. Victims and their families are being permitted to tour the Colorado movie theater where 12 people were killed and dozens were injured. The family visits, which began on Tuesday and will continue Wednesday, are to be followed by the Theater's reopening to the public on Friday. (AP Photo/Brennan Linsley)(Credit: AP)AURORA, Colo. (AP) — The Colorado movie theater where a gunman killed 12 people and wounded dozens of others reopens Thursday with a private ceremony for victims, first responders and officials — an event boycotted as insensitive by some who lost loved ones in the massacre.
Theater owner Cinemark plans to reopen the entire 16-screen complex in Aurora to the public temporarily on Friday, then permanently on Jan. 25. Aurora’s mayor, Steve Hogan, has said residents overwhelmingly support reclaiming what he calls an “important venue for Aurora.”
Former neurology student James Holmes is charged with 166 felony counts, mostly murder and attempted murder, in the July 20 massacre at a midnight showing of “The Dark Knight Rises.” Holmes has until March to enter a plea.
Details about Thursday’s ceremony — which was to include the showing of an undisclosed movie — were a closely guarded secret. Cinemark, of Plano, Texas, refused to comment on the remembrance, refurbishments to the theater, or security measures. Victims and invited officials also declined to comment.
Victims have filed at least three federal lawsuits against Cinemark alleging it should have provided security for the midnight “Dark Knight” premier on July 20 and that an exit door used by the gunman to get his weapons and re-enter should have had an alarm. In court papers, Cinemark says the tragedy was “unforeseeable and random.”
Those invited to attend Thursday’s event included victims, families, first responders, Hogan and Gov. John Hickenlooper.
Some victims said it’s important to reclaim the theater. Others called its reopening insensitive and refused an invitation to attend.
“The community wants the theater back and by God, it’s back,” said Tom Sullivan, whose son, Alex Sullivan, was killed. “Nobody is going to stop us from living our lives the way that we lived our lives before. This is where I live.”
Sullivan has said movies have long been a way for his family to gather together; his son’s trip to the latest Batman movie was part of a 27th birthday celebration.
However, Alex Sullivan’s widow, Cassandra Sullivan, has joined with those relatives who are boycotting the event. They called the Cinemark invitation “disgusting and insensitive” in a recent statement.
“They can do whatever they want. I think it was pretty callous,” said Tom Teves, whose son, Alex, was killed.




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