The judge refused to stop the release of Wisconsin women in mental health facilities for more than 10 years to stab the class to pleasing the fictional horror character “Slend Man.”
The 22 -year -old Morgan Geyser was 12 years old when she and Anissa Weier seduced Payton Leutner for violent attacks in May 2014. She has spent seven years at Winnebago Mental Health Institute and will be released earlier this year as a group’s house.
Three medical experts testified that the Hulls went in January that it was no longer a threat to the public. Her treatment will continue while she supervises her home.

WAUKESHA CIRCUIT Judge Michael Bohen ruled that the release of the intermittent cloth would continue as planned.
Bohren said under conditional releases, the intermittent stream will still be “actually supervised.” “When we were in the system from the point of view of freedom within the scope of the institution, it was a more strict way in the rules and restrictions on people.”
Bohren said, “There is no reason to stop the process of conditional release, and” the authorities will proceed with the conditional release program. “
The judge said the state did not meet the burden of evidence to prevent the release and evaluated the testimony from the intermittent cloth doctors who knew her. He said in the main petition to prevent her release that they did not change her view of her.
Boren said the testimony of the therapist who worked in an institution that “satisfactorily” in the liver Hull Cheon.
The intermittent stream allows the therapist to testify about his confidential conversation. The therapist said he did not have to worry about the attitude of the intermittent cloth for treatment, described it as very open when he was treated, and there was no concern about the behavior of the intermittent cloth.
Bohren also said he saw the evidence of a lie or deception in “no hidden agenda” or intermittent streams. He was satisfied with the communication with others in the institution and said it was “true and accurate.” He said she responded well to the question.
The agreement to stop the release of the intermittent cloth focused on the two controversies. A book where the dark theme read by Hull and She sends a violent man’s work while she is caring for in Winnebago Mental Health Institute. The prosecution of Abi Nicoli told the judge that the man was “sexually stimulated” as an intermittent crime.
Her lawyer, Anthony Cotton, told the judge that he had deliberately contacted the team to determine the release of the book and the man. He also said that Gan Hull has requested an order that does not come in contact with the man.
Bohren mentioned this book in court on Thursday, and the only testimony of the essence of this book called this book “humorous”, but he did not know the accuracy of the doctor’s claim.
“He basically put this book in context,” Boren said. “No one challenged that context.”
In relation to the man, Boren said that when he realized what he was doing, he seemed to stop contacting him.
“There’s nothing in the record that I didn’t do anything to encourage people besides sending a picture to him,” he said.
“I do not know that she is in a conditional release plan that there is a risk of being in danger or dangerous,” he said. Just because she participated in the contact, “It doesn’t mean she encouraged it.”
The police said the intermittent cloth and wire lured Leutner to the forest and stabbed her 19 times. The prosecution said the prosecution stabbed Leutner repeatedly while riding the EGN, the prosecution said.
Leutner’s parents’ parents said their daughter said, “Because I wanted to live.”
In the aftermath of the stab, he was mentally ill mentally, and in 2017 she agreed to guilty to attempt a one -degree intentional murder. She was sentenced to up to 40 years at a mental hospital.
WEIER, who has not stabbed Leutner, was sentenced to 25 years in a mental hospital but was released in 2021 in just four years in Winnebago Mental Health Institute.
The hearing is set to make a conditional release plan of the intermittent cloth at 10:30 am on March 21.