Prosecutors release mass killer James Holmes' creepy Match.com profile

Screenshots from the Colorado DA show James Holmes' Match.com dating profile. Screenshots from the Colorado DA show James Holmes' Match.com dating profile. Photo: Rich Orman, Colorado DA Photo: Rich Orman, Colorado DA Image 1 of / 8 Caption Close Prosecutors release mass killer James Holmes' creepy Match.com profile 1 / 8 Back to Gallery

Evidence released by the Colorado prosecutors showed a bloody crime scene and homemade explosives in the apartment of Aurora theater shooter James Holmes’. The Araphoe County District Attorney's office also released a more unusual piece of evidence: Screenshots of Holmes’ online dating profile that went live several days before the shooting.

The Match.com profile was created on April 19, 2012 but published on July 11, 2012. Holmes killed 12 people and injured 70 in an Aurora, Colo. movie theater on July 20, 2012. Holmes received 12 life sentences in August, with no possibility for parole.

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The profile was introduced as evidence during the trial that Holmes knew the shootings were wrong and that he was not insane. Holmes asked at the top of his profile “Will you visit me in prison?” Another line says: "I spend a lot of time thinking about the future, mind (equals) blown."

Nothing else from his synopsis seems to foreshadow the killings. The rest of the profile sounds more matter-of-fact or jesting. He lists “Dumb and Dumber” and “Star Wars” as his favorite movies and enjoys TV shows like “Party Down” and “How I Met Your Mother.”

He jokes that his favorite book is “Where’s Waldo” and the first thing people notice about him are “My soul penetrating eyes. Woah that’s deep.” His profile said Holmes was looking for women to get a beer with and also “lookin’ for sexy times.”

READ MORE: Timeline of James Holmes' shooting trial

Holmes’ ex-girlfriend broke up with him several months before the attack during a showing of the “Dark Knight Rises.” They had dated while Holmes, 27, was a neuroscience graduate student at the University of Colorado.

A motive for the mass killing was never completely determined, but Holmes said dating troubles were a factor, not the reason. In a notebook that became part of trial evidence, Holmes wrote failures with women and with jobs “were expediting catalysts, not the reason. The causation being my state of mind for the past 15 years.”

See images from Holmes' dating profile and evidence from the trial (warning: graphic) in the gallery.