F.A.Qs about Jail, State Hospital, and Court

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I have a question, I know his stuff at 14blc is currently MIA and open to speculation but the items he has purchased from the Commisary and remaining ballence what happens to that if he is sent to a residential home? I know he has 2 rugs and a radio and two notebooks and some junk food but what happens when he's sent to such a palce does he get to keep it with him and the food dolled out back to him as a reward and the money he might be in credit for taken by the facillity?


Chris will go somewhere his tugboat can pay for. That place might be outside his price range.

Exactly this, especially it the court / legal system is paying it they will pay a set value for a minimum requirement of care the provider will cheap out on at every possible opportunity. That place looks like from the images somewhat reserved for people with families or estates that can pay for it - for a while at least who are both significantly more disabled than Chris and more well behaved.

He's always viewed himself as hugely superior to them because "high-functioning" meant "really smart" to him, not "meh he isn't as retarded as some other retards." It's going to drive him nuts to be treated exactly the same as the rest of the muppets. They also probably won't bother holding him down and recording his screams, just violate him and go to sentencing.

He will likely retreat in on himself after a while, Chris wouldnt see that he could be king tard he'd finally go right off the deepend trying to cope with his life and his vision of hell being manifest before him.

not to a-log too hard, but that sounds like it would be a worse situation for him than jail, so i'd be happy if that is his punishment.

It is, While I want Chris to finally feel some form of official lasting punishment, his real and lasting punishment will begin If / When he gets out and he can't go back to easy street and is going to have a very hard and diminished existence than what he enjoyed before and that Big Boy's have to sacrifice things to just survive, life isn't all recolurs and fuzzy wuzzies.

Look, I know I got off to a rocky start but I am finding my way here on this rocky terrain... LOLCOW and all of this troll stuff is new to me and I only just discovered Chris, let alone his crimes... It has all taken an abrupt turn to the south and it can be a bit sticky holding on to firm ground. I mean him/her no harm but I am infinitely fascinated. It's so much like watching a train wreck... If you watch the Geno docos it is a train-wreck that happens over the course of decades....

Look there is a thread here about the mods and Chris's gender read that, also don't get your knickers in a twist over he/she bollocks a lot of people here myself included have known of chris since the beginning and we know that he's not trans and not normal but if you feel like you have to call Chris she do it but beware of the consequences of doing so here in a open forum that runs off older rules of the internet that can and has given Twitter and Reddit mental breakdowns.

Bro, talk less, read more.

Also read this and take it to heart.
 
Look there is a thread here about the mods and Chris's gender read that, also don't get your knickers in a twist over he/she bollocks a lot of people here myself included have known of chris since the beginning and we know that he's not trans and not normal but if you feel like you have to call Chris she do it but beware of the consequences of doing so here in a open forum that runs off older rules of the internet that can and has given Twitter and Reddit mental breakdowns.
yea this place is #savage #killer #crazy
 
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I have a question, I know his stuff at 14blc is currently MIA and open to speculation but the items he has purchased from the Commisary and remaining ballence what happens to that if he is sent to a residential home? I know he has 2 rugs and a radio and two notebooks and some junk food but what happens when he's sent to such a palce does he get to keep it with him and the food dolled out back to him as a reward and the money he might be in credit for taken by the facillity?
The jail can't steal his stuff. He can take it with him if he wants (depending on if wherever he ends up allows it). Jails normally let you cash out unused commissary funds, though sometimes there's a transaction fee from whatever contractor is handling it.

In prisons it's usually considered good form to give your stuff to another inmate when you leave. Promising your stuff is a good way to have the favor of others. In jail, since people aren't there very long, people don't do that so much.

Anything you don't take with you or gift before release is either trashed or sold at auction.
 
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Group home.


No it isn’t. I wonder why people think it is.


What delusions? His goddess or Jesus makebelieve game? Why bother?


They’re not. They’re trying to contain him so he isn’t harming other people and making too much of a nuisance of himself.


If he did, it’s not that big of a deal. He might have paid some people to sit with him at lunch and walk him to the bus or whatever.

Chris was failed when people didn’t tell him No, when he didn’t face consequences for chimping out, when he wasn’t taught that he’s ordinary and unspecial. He should have been in autist school.
Why so serious LMAO. They aren’t going to try and contain him at this point as none of his charges are considered “violent” under law. They want him to keep getting his tugboat. If they didn’t he would’ve been sentenced to max time - 5 years. Which could’ve easily happened considering his record even if they are all non-violent offenses. And you can say discharging pepper spray was violent but he only got charged for the discharge, not actually hitting anybody. Yes he will be in a group home or halfway house or whatever you wanna call it.

If you don’t think paying a kid to be your sons friend is an issue then that’s sad. Maybe he would’ve been able to seek out a real friend and not embark on a 22 year long love quest.
 
The jail can't steal his stuff. He can take it with him if he wants (depending on if wherever he ends up allows it). Jails normally let you cash out unused commissary funds, though sometimes there's a transaction fee from whatever contractor is handling it.

In prisons it's usually considered good form to give your stuff to another inmate when you leave. Promising your stuff is a good way to have the favor of others. In jail, since people aren't there very long, people don't do that so much.

Anything you don't take with you or gift before release is either trashed or sold at auction.
The jail can do whatever it likes with everything he has. He's in custody and he's only entitled to things guaranteed by civil rights. If he gets tranferred, they can take every single item he brings with him into the trash right in front of him and there's nothing he can do about it. If he complains about to a lawyer, they can stop processing his mail. If he presses the issue, he can get green lit. It's jail, bro, and Chris raped his mother.
 
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The jail can do whatever it likes with everything he has. He's in custody and he's only entitled to things guaranteed by civil rights. If he gets tranferred, they can take every single item he brings with him into the trash right in front of him and there's nothing he can do about it. If he complains about to a lawyer, they can stop processing his mail. If he presses the issue, he can get green lit. It's jail, bro, and Chris raped his mother.
And then they'd be subject to a nice fat § 1983 lawsuit and wouldn't just have to pay for your shitty flip phone but your attorney fees as well, and there are plenty of lawyers who like gimme suits like that. And if they attempted to deprive you of your right to counsel under the Sixth Amendment, they'd be genuinely fucked. Yes, jails have done this, and they've paid a lot of money for it.

They can obviously dispose of contraband (anything prohibited), but you will get that (legal) shit back that they took when you went in.
 
And then they'd be subject to a nice fat § 1983 lawsuit and wouldn't just have to pay for your shitty flip phone but your attorney fees as well, and there are plenty of lawyers who like gimme suits like that. And if they attempted to deprive you of your right to counsel under the Sixth Amendment, they'd be genuinely fucked. Yes, jails have done this, and they've paid a lot of money for it.

They can obviously dispose of contraband (anything prohibited), but you will get that (legal) shit back that they took when you went in.
They get away with a lot these things because most people move on with their lives when they get out. A large portion just end up back in prison and retribution is a very serious possibility.
 
'"Waive right to indictment" and "transportation order" are listed on Chris's case file' what does this mean for a non-lawcel?
For serious crimes (in the constitution, "capital" or "infamous" crimes), you have a fifth amendment right for a jury of the citizenry to review the charges before you can be prosecuted for them. This is to discourage the state from harassing you with obviously bullshit charges.

You can waive that right if you want to speed things along (usually when you have a plea bargain lined up). The strange thing is that they went a whole year, until they *had* to indict him or let him go, so the hearing was scheduled and everything, and then it got canceled when he waived his right.

A "transportation order" is just that, an order to transport someone. That order can include multiple steps of transportation, so there doesn't have to be a separate order for every leg of a journey. When we're looking at the list of orders, we can surmise that the transportation orders each represent a set of decisions about how/where Chris should be taken somewhere.

I don't know the finer details of how this is done in Virginia, and how the orders are worded, so this is just a general explanation.

Barb gave informed and enthusiastic consent. It wasn't rape.
Even if that were the case, they were partners in a crime. They don't let the non-jailed co-conspirator come over to hang out with you in jail for the specific purpose of repeating that crime.
The jail can do whatever it likes with everything he has. He's in custody and he's only entitled to things guaranteed by civil rights. If he gets tranferred, they can take every single item he brings with him into the trash right in front of him and there's nothing he can do about it. If he complains about to a lawyer, they can stop processing his mail. If he presses the issue, he can get green lit. It's jail, bro, and Chris raped his mother.
They're entitled to deny him access to his property. They're not entitled to seize it (unless it's contraband or otherwise related to a crime). They can't deny him access to an attorney (and clergy).

Every time I have picked someone up who has been released from jail, their belongings have been dutifully given to them. Any time they were taken into custody, any belongings on their person that reasonably fit into an inmate property bag were stored.

I realize some places operate outside the law (mostly prisons), but chris is not in prison since he hasn't been convicted yet, and you don't want to do that to someone who has a competent attorney, which Chris does, at least until he's convicted. And if Chris did go to prison he could probably still get some help from a nonprofit that stans for troon retards.

And that's all irrelevant as it's looking like Chris is going to a tard home, not prison, so he'll be able to take at least some stuff with him into the home. Anything that's not allowed in the home he will have the option of having someone on the outside hold it, or have it trashed.
 
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No idea, not familiar with the drugs used to treat someone like Chris.

I think someone mentioned Thorazine if he becomes extremely uncooperative, but there are others he could be put on as a matter of course to make him more manageable but they have to by law maintain anything he's given as a therapeutic dose unless it's removed by a clinician so if he was on a anti-depressant they would keep giving it to him unless he was prescribed a replacement or something that would react badly with it.
 
I think someone mentioned Thorazine if he becomes extremely uncooperative, but there are others he could be put on as a matter of course to make him more manageable but they have to by law maintain anything he's given as a therapeutic dose unless it's removed by a clinician so if he was on a anti-depressant they would keep giving it to him unless he was prescribed a replacement or something that would react badly with it.
I am also assuming that Haloperidol can be used if Chris becomes uncooperative and a danger to himself and others. Afaik they use typical antipsychotics as sedatives. I am not sure however.
 
I am also assuming that Haloperidol can be used if Chris becomes uncooperative and a danger to himself and others. Afaik they use typical antipsychotics as sedatives. I am not sure however.

I think that's the other one I can recall someone mentioning, I don't think they would go right to the heavy hitters unless Chris was seriously throwing a tantrum an posed a danger to himself or others so they would likely just get the big burly blokes and hold him down and strap him in a chair like last time, but if he became a perennial misbehaver hey will start doping him up.
 
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