Trial date set 6 years after fatal movie theater shooting

Retired police captain allegedly engaged in argument about cellphone

A trial date is set for a man accused of a fatal shooting at a Florida movie theater in 2014. Curtis Reeves Jr., 77, will face a second-degree murder charge in the trial slated to begin Oct. 5. Reeves is accused of shooting Chad Oulson after an argument inside the Cobb Grove 16 movie theater. Just two years before, in 2012, James Holmes killed 12 people and injured 70 others at a movie theatre in Aurora, Colorado.

A trial date has been set for a retired police captain accused of fatally shooting another man during an argument about a cellphone at a Florida movie theater in 2014.

Curtis Reeves Jr., 77, will face a second-degree murder charge in the trial slated to begin Oct. 5 in Pasco County.

Prosecutors and defense attorneys agreed the trial would likely last three weeks.

Reeves is accused of shooting 43-year-old Chad Oulson after an argument escalated at the Cobb Grove 16 movie theater in 2014.

Police said both parties were at the theater to see the movie “Lone Survivor.”

Witnesses said previews of upcoming films were still being shown when an argument began. Reports said popcorn was thrown, a handgun was flashed and Oulson was shot in the chest.

Just two years before, in 2012, James Holmes killed 12 people and injured 70 at a movie theater in Aurora, Colorado.

He was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.

Reeves' attorney, Richard Escobar, sought to delay the trial until January 2021 during a hearing Wednesday, the Tampa Bay Times reported.

“Sir, I think you might want to reconsider that," said Pinellas-Pasco Circuit Judge Kemba Lewis. “This court is not inclined to go into 2021. Really and truly it's not."

Reeves had sought protection from prosecution under Florida's “stand your ground" law, but after a two-week hearing in 2017, a judge ruled he was not eligible for immunity. Shortly thereafter, the state changed the law, switching the burden of proof from the defense to the prosecution. Reeves' attorneys argued the change warranted a redo of the hearing. So the case was stagnant as the judge waited for guidance from the Florida Supreme Court about whether a new hearing was required.

In December, the court ruled that cases that had already conducted hearings did not need to have do-overs.

Escobar sought to keep the case off the trial calendar, suggesting they reconvene in six weeks after he'd had a chance to find out when witnesses might be available. He said there are 127 witnesses.

He also listed a number of trials he has scheduled through the end of the year.

“I think this case should take precedent,” said Assistant State Attorney Glenn Martin, who had asked the trial be set for the spring. “We’re all busy.”

They agreed on the October trial date, and a status hearing was set for March.

After the hearing, TJ Grimaldi, the attorney for Oulson’s widow, Nicole Oulson, told the Times it was clear Escobar was trying to delay.

Reeves was 71 when the shooting took place. He will be 78 if the trial starts as scheduled later this year.

“I think it’s almost reprehensible that this thing is still going on six years later," Grimaldi said. "'I think it’s an absolute joke to continue to say that they need more time to do things.”