What if police were warned that James Holmes might be dangerous at some point before he took guns to a Colorado theater and started shooting people? Surely he would have been arrested and many lives would have been saved. Right?
That’s the standard sort of thing we tend to assume, but it appears that police were warned about Holmes ahead of time and did nothing to stop him. Does this mean police are indirectly to blame for the shootings? This article from The Atlantic certainly implies something like that. It says the latest revelation is “bound to elicit even more frustration and anger.” The writer then says “it’d be infuriating” to learn that police had a warning and didn’t act on it.
What kind of world does that writer want to live in?
According to ABC News, a psychiatrist at the University of Colorado was worried about her patient weeks before the shooting occurred. So she talked to a university police officer, but we don’t know what (if anything) the officer did with the warning. What should police have done?

Experience with God taught me that my theology was too small
English teacher tells Wellesley grads: ‘You’re nothing special’ — not yet
Bernanke: Recovery ‘faltering,’ so let’s do more of what hasn’t worked
Next, this city is going to be selling lemonade and holding bake sales
Redemption of ’Bama’s Jalen Hurts illustrates what sports teach us
Finding your own authentic voice is riskier than copying everybody else
The real crime is how CNN is trying to manipulate what you believe
When you compromise principles, you soon won’t recognize yourself