15-year-old Anissa Weier, who admitted to participating in the
stabbing of a classmate to please horror character Slender Man when they
were only aged 12, will avoid prison after a jury determined Friday
that she was mentally ill at the time of the attack.
The decision means the Wisconsin teen will be sent to a mental
hospital rather than prison. A plea agreement calls for her to spend at
least three years at a hospital. Before jury deliberations on Friday,
Anissa Weier's attorney told the court his client was lonely, depressed
and "descended into madness," as he pleaded with a jury to send the girl
to a mental hospital rather than prison.



On Wednesday Melissa Westendorf who was appointed by a judge to evaluate Weier after her insanity plea, testified for the teen. Westendorf testified that she believed Weier suffered from a shared delusional disorder that left her unable to conform her conduct to the law when she and Geyser tried to kill their friend Leutner in 2014.
Weier's attorney, Joseph Smith Jr., asked why Weier, a good student, did not recognize that the belief in Slender Man and his powers to kill them or their families was a delusion and Westendorf answered: "First of all, she was 12", adding that Weier was influenced by a website focused on imaginary killers and boogeymen.
"If adults have trouble distinguishing fake news, 12-year-olds will, because their brains can't yet discern or analyze as well," Westendorf added.
A jury heard three days of testimony from
psychologists and detectives. The jury began deliberations Friday
morning. Weier's attorney, Maura McMahon, said during closing arguments
that Weier was lonely and depressed after her parents divorced and that
she latched onto Geyser. Morgan Geyser also admits her role in the
stabbing but has pleaded not guilty to attempted murder by way of
insanity. Her mental competency trial will begin in October.

McMahon said" "This sounds crazy, because it is. This was a real being to this child and she needed to protect those around her. At 12-years-old, she had no way to protect herself from (Slender Man) except for Morgan's advice and they swirled down into madness together."
Waukesha County Deputy District Attorney Ted Szczupakiewicz countered during his closings that the stabbing was calculated. He said the girls had planned the attack for at least four months. He asked jurors to consider why if the girls were so afraid of Slender Man they waited so long to attack Leutner. He also pointed out that Weier told a detective she wasn't frightened of Slender Man until after the attack, when Geyser told her she had made a deal with the monster that he would spare their families if they killed Leutner.
"It comes down to did she have to or did she want to?" Szczupakiewicz said. "It wasn't kill or be killed. It was a choice and she needs to be held criminally responsible."
Wisconsin law requires only 10 of 12 jurors to render a verdict on whether a criminal defendant wasn't responsible for her actions due to a mental condition. The jury spent all day Friday deliberating and concluded late Friday night.
On Monday, prosecutors rejected the argument and told
jurors both girls were aware of what they were doing when they turned
on Payton in the forest.
"They knew this was wrong. They understood what they were doing was wrong," attorney Kevin Osborne said.Source: LIB
No comments:
Post a Comment