DENVER, Colorado -
DENVER (AP) - A University
of Colorado psychiatrist whose clients included the former student
accused of the Aurora theater shooting reportedly tried to discuss the
man with members of a campus behavioral and security committee about a
month before the attack but the group never convened.
KMGH-TV, citing sources it
did not identify, reported Wednesday that psychiatrist Lynne Fenton
telephoned some members of the team about graduate student James Holmes
in early June. It wasn't known what Fenton reportedly wanted to discuss,
the station said.
Holmes dropped out of the
university on June 10. He was arraigned Monday on charges of killing 12
people and wounding 58 at an Aurora movie theater on July 20.
KMGH, citing unnamed
sources, reported that campus officials did not contact Aurora police
before July 20 and that the committee didn't meet to discuss Holmes
because he began the process to drop out of the school.
The university said
Wednesday it could not discuss the report, citing a court order barring
the school from releasing details about Holmes' yearlong tenure there.
The university did confirm
that Fenton was a member of a campus Behavior Evaluation and Threat
Assessment team, composed of faculty and staff, including campus police.
The team was created to address behavioral problems as well as
potential security issues involving members of the campus community.
Fenton couldn't be
immediately reached for comment, and it was not known if she had an
attorney. Members of the university team didn't return telephone
messages seeking comment.
On Friday, Holmes'
attorneys filed a motion that revealed Holmes was seeing Fenton. The
revelation raised questions about Holmes' year of study at the
university's medical campus and about possible motives behind the
shooting.
However, a court clerk
later blacked out that portion of the document and reposted the redacted
document online because of a judge's order to seal documents in the
case. State Court administrator spokesman Rob McCallum declined to say
if anyone directly involved in the case ordered the redactions.
The defense motion demanded
that a package allegedly sent to Fenton by Holmes, and received at the
university after the shooting, be kept sealed because of doctor-patient
confidentiality. It also demanded information on who may have leaked
information about its contents to some news media outlets that reported -
without named sources - that Holmes had written descriptions of an
attack in a notebook.
Arapahoe County District Attorney Carol Chambers disputed reports that a notebook contained descriptions of an attack.
District Chief Judge William Sylvester has sealed all court orders, search warrants, affidavits and the case file.
A hearing on the defense motion is set for Aug. 16.