Aug 9 2022 - Continuance on Grand Jury, defense filed motion for autism disorder deferred disposition

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The bill's patron (sponsor) is a Republican.

History of Bill
State Senator Stuart

And it passed 89-7 (4 did not vote, 2 of whom intended to vote yes).
Votes
It really is a pretty reasonable approach for a lot of cases. I'd be curious to know if it has ever been used in a felony case, especially a felony sex offense involving incest.

Not sure what Autism Speaks might have to say about motherfucking being associated with "the spectrum" but it is what it is.
 
He probably going to a group home which will be worst then prison for chirs as he will be with all the other slow in the mind as he calls them
I don't think so. I don't think any group home has the resources to handle him.
Remember, after the time at the Ward he now has a entry in his file that he 0, fucks with the other patients 1, can not be controlled, 2, need physical restraints to calm him down.

I don't see any group home that can deal with this. One quick look at his file and the group home operator will "lol, no way in hell".
 
I don't think so. I don't think any group home has the resources to handle him.
Remember, after the time at the Ward he now has a entry in his file that he 0, fucks with the other patients 1, can not be controlled, 2, need physical restraints to calm him down.

I don't see any group home that can deal with this. One quick look at his file and the group home operator will "lol, no way in hell".
True, plus there is really no evidence to suggest Chris will get deferred disposition, it could just as likely be a Hail Mary play by Heilberg hoping for the best but expecting the worst. After all it doesn't hurt to try.
 
Hell, specifically in the most recent letters, Chris outright says he believes Barbra to already be dead but the body just won't die.

Chris seems to have extremely bleak and pessimistic views on old age (which isn't at all an uncommon thing in our society - I remember someone here making a write-up about what "normal" aging was for people in their 60s without dementia, which was completely absurd and made out people who have barely reached old age at all to be half-retarded). A year or two ago he said it was amazing that Barb remembered something from her childhood, which... really isn't amazing if you know anything at all about old age. Even with Alzheimer's, long-term memory remains rock solid for a long time. My grandmother experienced zero decline in her long-term memory until five years after her diagnosis.

Whether she has dementia or not, calling her "already dead" is jumping the gun. She's walking around, she's capable of speaking, she's capable of responding appropriately to things people say. This isn't like 2003 Ronald Reagan or something, who was basically comatose (The Onion posted an article after his June 2004 death titled "Reagan's Body Dies," which was probably in bad taste but still basically true; Barb isn't there yet).
 
I don't think so. I don't think any group home has the resources to handle him.
Remember, after the time at the Ward he now has a entry in his file that he 0, fucks with the other patients 1, can not be controlled, 2, need physical restraints to calm him down.

I don't see any group home that can deal with this. One quick look at his file and the group home operator will "lol, no way in hell".
actually many group homes do deal with clients who have outbursts as well as criminal records, sex offenders etc. many group homes are just that: they are high intense ''support'' of a mental ward or institution, in a house in a neighborhood, but they are very high needs and supervision. not all group homes area group of functional gimps who take care of things and just have an aide come in a couple times a week to check in on em or to help make dinner or help with doing checkbooks and shit; . their are many different levels and types of group homes .
 
In Virginia until July 1, 2025, cases can only be expunged or sealed after a case has been dismissed, dropped, or found not guilty. Until then, the law is not in effect.
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This can only mean one thing - Chris is OUT.
 
In Virginia until July 1, 2025, cases can only be expunged or sealed after a case has been dismissed, dropped, or found not guilty. Until then, the law is not in effect.
View attachment 3582677
This can only mean one thing - Chris is OUT.
I'm noticing that the dismiss, drop, or not guilty in the first paragraph only refers to expungement. Which makes sense that it can only be done on disposed cases.
 
I'm noticing that the dismiss, drop, or not guilty in the first paragraph only refers to expungement. Which by definition can only be done on disposed cases.
This is the full article. According to the article Expungement and Sealing have no legal difference in Virginia. They're two terms meaning the same thing.
 
In Virginia until July 1, 2025, cases can only be expunged or sealed after a case has been dismissed, dropped, or found not guilty. Until then, the law is not in effect.
View attachment 3582677
This can only mean one thing - Chris is OUT.
That only says that you can request a case be sealed if you were found not guilty. It says nothing about a judge's authority to seal ongoing cases.
 
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