Aug 11 2022 - Case updated with "Waive right to indictment" and "transportation order" - Review scheduled for next year

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I said that. His bouts of depression. Chris has been incapacitated by depression for weeks.

They aren't absent. Almost all of the traits of narcissism are there, with the possible exception of passive aggressive (Chris isn't smart enough to be passive aggressive and his autism forces him to think literally about things.) The ones shared by autism get squared rather than doubled.

Socially withdrawn - He rarely left his house and only had friends who sought him out to exploit him. They don't get more socially isolated than Chris.
Sensitive to criticism - Mention anything remotely critical and Chris puts you on ignore.
Grandiose fantasies - This is self evident. The merge, Jesus complex, Sonichu being a major property, his own celebrity, etc.
Passive aggressive - The one that is least present as I said above, but the way he handled his apology to Snyder reeks of it. He went there to apologize by inferring that just because he said I'm sorry should be enough for Snyder to allow him back. Then "JEW!' out of the side of his mouth as he walks out the door.
Envious of others - Remember the guy who won the Parappa the Rapper contest?
Entitlement - Chris is off the scale. Everybody owes him everything he wants.
Fake compassion - look at the way Chris woos his gal pals. "IIIIIIVVVVVVYYYY!"

None of this, and none of the reasons why he raped Barb are thought out. Chris is simply reacting through the filter of serious autism and personality disorder. You look at the patterns and you know what's driving him.
In my experience of working with speds, a lot of this behaviour really does show up in autism/learning disabilities on the more severe side, and I don't think its to do with a personality disorder.

Social withdrawal i think is a very easy one to understand- with less understanding of others comes isolation, but also a lot of speds just don't care about making friends and socialising. I don't think chris was one of these people though- his social awkwardness just made it difficult for him to make friends, but he found interaction online instead. He may have been isolated from real people, but I bet chris felt talking with people online was just the same amount of socialisation as irl.

Sensitivity to criticism is extremely common in sped work- it goes hand in hand with not liking being told "no" and not getting their own way. If you go against their viewpoint, they get upset. I've worked with speds that you literally couldn't disagree with, or it would cause a meltdown, so you had to be very careful with your wording. You could view it as their self image crumbling ala narcissism sure, but with autism especially there is a big issue with emotional regulation, so when you tell someone "no" or give them negative feedback, that sadness and disappointment you and I might feel spirals very quickly into a meltdown for many autists. This goes for stuff like envy and anger too. Then, with the lack of social skills there's nothing to really hold back the reaction from the emotions. There's no filter.

Chris is very entitled, but that could easily be because he was spoilt and rarely told no as a child, and now he just expects everyone to give him what he wants as an adult. A common frustration in sped work is you have a good way of dealing with behaviours when the sped is at school/group, but when they go home the family don't continue the same routine so they just never learn to change the behaviour. Chris never had anyone to teach him anything like that, so he still has the child-like "but I want x, so I should be able to have it!" mentality (see: i want my toys @ trial).

I could go on, but tldr. Chris' behaviour is typical autist. Probably lv2, lv3 is usually non verbal level.
 
Your not dressed without some form of neckwear....
Ya know, I could actually see myself wearing a small and discrete metal Medallion-inspired pendant, like this
1058739-photography-necklace-Sonic-the-Hedgehog-Sonic-wing-bat-jewellery-fashion-accessory-loc...jpg
It could double as a keychain or whatever if you don't wanna be a sperg and wear it around your neck too.
 
Ya know, I could actually see myself wearing a small and discrete metal Medallion-inspired pendant, like this
View attachment 3595420
It could double as a keychain or whatever if you don't wanna be a sperg and wear it around your neck too.

Tricky, if Chris ever found out about it he'd call it people wearing his religious symbol as he fortold or some crap like that.
 
Ya know, I could actually see myself wearing a small and discrete metal Medallion-inspired pendant, like this
View attachment 3595420
It could double as a keychain or whatever if you don't wanna be a sperg and wear it around your neck too.
If I ever see any one of you in public wearing Christorian merchandise, I'm shoving you under the next train. Everyone who's retarded enough to post here should definitely keep that shit secret.
 
This whole thing is going to not only make actual autistic people look bad, but the fact that they really think they can use his condition as a defense to cut through some of the legal shit is laughable at best.

Chris isn't going anywhere near Branchland Court any time soon. He will either be in an institution or a heavily supervised group home.

This freak cannot be allowed out on the streets tbh.
"Laughable at best"? A literal statute provides for the possibility.
 
But it would of course be cheaper to not hire Chris.

Oh its worse than that. Hiring Chris would actually cost you money.

But if he was my boss's retarded nephew I could do it if he was willing to manage his expectations.

But then it would be costing your boss money, not you. That's a completely different situation. There are people who would happily spend all day with their finger on the button to Chris' shock collar. And getting paid for it? Bonus!


My point was that people who are otherwise unemployable by their inability to delay gratification are still capable of performing labor if they're paid immediately as they perform the work.

Meanwhile Chris resents work in general. Paying Chris is actually a disincentive to him because it turns something he might otherwise find pleasure doing into a job. The best example of this is the observed fact that paying Chris in advance for something is almost a guarantee he won't actually do it.

a gentleman never uses his fists when a Whip or Cane is handy

To be fair, AnOminous said he'd hit Chris, not punch him. He didn't say what he'd hit Chris with.

I've thought a Tie Pin would be a nice bit of Merch,

I couldn't personally pull it off, but I've thought about wearing a suit to a con with a tie in the same stripe pattern as The Classic and a Sonichu tie pin, just to see if anyone figures it out. It's the Chris-as-he-should-have-been cosplay.
 
In my experience of working with speds, a lot of this behaviour really does show up in autism/learning disabilities on the more severe side, and I don't think its to do with a personality disorder.

Social withdrawal i think is a very easy one to understand- with less understanding of others comes isolation, but also a lot of speds just don't care about making friends and socialising. I don't think chris was one of these people though- his social awkwardness just made it difficult for him to make friends, but he found interaction online instead. He may have been isolated from real people, but I bet chris felt talking with people online was just the same amount of socialisation as irl.

Sensitivity to criticism is extremely common in sped work- it goes hand in hand with not liking being told "no" and not getting their own way. If you go against their viewpoint, they get upset. I've worked with speds that you literally couldn't disagree with, or it would cause a meltdown, so you had to be very careful with your wording. You could view it as their self image crumbling ala narcissism sure, but with autism especially there is a big issue with emotional regulation, so when you tell someone "no" or give them negative feedback, that sadness and disappointment you and I might feel spirals very quickly into a meltdown for many autists. This goes for stuff like envy and anger too. Then, with the lack of social skills there's nothing to really hold back the reaction from the emotions. There's no filter.

Chris is very entitled, but that could easily be because he was spoilt and rarely told no as a child, and now he just expects everyone to give him what he wants as an adult. A common frustration in sped work is you have a good way of dealing with behaviours when the sped is at school/group, but when they go home the family don't continue the same routine so they just never learn to change the behaviour. Chris never had anyone to teach him anything like that, so he still has the child-like "but I want x, so I should be able to have it!" mentality (see: i want my toys @ trial).

I could go on, but tldr. Chris' behaviour is typical autist. Probably lv2, lv3 is usually non verbal level.
Level 2 for sure, Chris needed specialized care decades ago. Now we can just watch the destruction in real time.
 
I would enjoy making Chris work because I know he would hate it. :) Not to save money or try to teach him or better him, just to make him suffer a little. Physical violence doesn’t give me joy. Rapists scrubbing jail toilets is nicer.

Remember: Jesus was beat. Chris can incorporate that into his fantasies.
 
You have to be a friggin’ spy about it. Carefully throwing out code phrases to see if they’re in the know.

“Sonichu runs twice during the Stone Age.”

“…. What?”

“Oh nevermind.”

Because lord knows I’m not regaling anyone with the full saga of Christian Weston Chandler from start to finish. Well, sorta-finish.
"Hey I saw this crazy headline on [Twitter, Facebook, etc...] And it took me down a huge rabbit hole about this guy named Chris Chan it's pretty wild"
 
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"Hey I saw this crazy headline on [Twitter, Facebook, etc...] And it took me down a huge rabbit hole about this guy named Chris Chan it's pretty wild"
I've given a few, choice people the brief rundown. The entire story is so fucking weird that it's impossible to give even the most half-assed SparkNotes without inevitably sounding like you're equally retarded to care.

Anything beyond the most surface-level knowledge of Christory is bound to make you look weird as shit. I've carefully curated my image of someone who isn't half as autistic as I actually am, I'm not jeopardizing that shit.
 
@Phalanges Mycologist to be fair, who would even wear those here? In fact, I bet a higher percentage of Farmers have a taint piercing than a need for tie pins or cufflinks...
Turk's head cufflinks are the shit because you can't lose them. Also they have a vaguely racist name. You can also call them monkey fists.
 
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In my experience of working with speds, a lot of this behaviour really does show up in autism/learning disabilities on the more severe side, and I don't think its to do with a personality disorder.

Social withdrawal i think is a very easy one to understand- with less understanding of others comes isolation, but also a lot of speds just don't care about making friends and socialising. I don't think chris was one of these people though- his social awkwardness just made it difficult for him to make friends, but he found interaction online instead. He may have been isolated from real people, but I bet chris felt talking with people online was just the same amount of socialisation as irl.

Sensitivity to criticism is extremely common in sped work- it goes hand in hand with not liking being told "no" and not getting their own way. If you go against their viewpoint, they get upset. I've worked with speds that you literally couldn't disagree with, or it would cause a meltdown, so you had to be very careful with your wording. You could view it as their self image crumbling ala narcissism sure, but with autism especially there is a big issue with emotional regulation, so when you tell someone "no" or give them negative feedback, that sadness and disappointment you and I might feel spirals very quickly into a meltdown for many autists. This goes for stuff like envy and anger too. Then, with the lack of social skills there's nothing to really hold back the reaction from the emotions. There's no filter.

Chris is very entitled, but that could easily be because he was spoilt and rarely told no as a child, and now he just expects everyone to give him what he wants as an adult. A common frustration in sped work is you have a good way of dealing with behaviours when the sped is at school/group, but when they go home the family don't continue the same routine so they just never learn to change the behaviour. Chris never had anyone to teach him anything like that, so he still has the child-like "but I want x, so I should be able to have it!" mentality (see: i want my toys @ trial).

I could go on, but tldr. Chris' behaviour is typical autist. Probably lv2, lv3 is usually non verbal level.
About 90% of the autistbots I've ever met have had a fascination with public transportation like buses and trains. I wonder if Chris never developed this because he lived with his goober parents out in the sticks and wasn't exposed to a large level public transportation system.
 
Correct, it is "house rules". It's not very fair, but it's a "take it or leave" kind of thing. There is an interpretation that government-run homes are not allowed to do this, given the SCOTUS ruling, but that's still being debated.

Chris can also be prohibited from using the internet as terms of probation. SCOTUS has not ruled on this, so that is still up in the air. State courts have generally ruled in favor of internet restrictions on those on probation.

There is currently a case in Virginia concerning a man who was placed on indefinite/lifetime probation (an option in Virginia only for certain crimes, the normal cap is five years, incest is subject to the five year cap), and was prohibited from using the internet in private. Virginia courts have up until now upheld this.

Eventually this may be decided by SCOTUS, but for now in Virginia Chris can be prohibited from internet usage while he is on probation. This, however, would be unusual as his crime did not involve the internet, and he did not use the internet to communicate with Barb.
From my understanding if it's something he owns. Go wild, but with a shared computer it's house rules. They aren't limiting his freedom because he has other outlets and of course other forms of technology to communicate. I'm positive though if Chris does go to home. They aren't going to let his fatass sit hours on end. And if they catch a wiff of his sperg outs or tmi posts. I'm sure they're able to lock it down. They don't get paid enough to censor. I don't think there's going to be any limitations on the internet unless Chris is on the SOR. Even then it's merely going to be tabs on accounts and sites visited. I mean what's the probation officer going to do about Chris posting about DIRTY CRAPPED BRIEFS or his search history on incestral granny porn on the hub?
 
About 90% of the autistbots I've ever met have had a fascination with public transportation like buses and trains. I wonder if Chris never developed this because he lived with his goober parents out in the sticks and wasn't exposed to a large level public transportation system.
It might also be because they both drive and never travelled far so he didnt travel by train or plane. Even Autists in cities seem to have Special Interests based on things they're exposed to, like subways, streetcars and busses if the parents dont drive (or because they do, its a special occassion when they get on one) Elevators or esclators are common in malls, so Im kinda wondering why Chris didnt get fixiated on that.

If someone in his life cared enough, they could have used his interest in Cartoons to get him involved in claimation or animation, which would teach him delayed gratification, planning and working to a goal. Or his interest in computers to learn how to build them. Probably the Guidance Counsillor at his highschool was thinking along these lines when getting Chris to go to College for CAD but without extra supports like a social worker, Lifeskills class, etc. these few efforts were too late and in vain.

Edit : cause I have an autistic interest in Autists, I looked Up "autistic Special Interest percentage" and came across this study.


We also hypothesized that individuals with HF-ASD would have fewer socially-oriented interests and more solitary or object/sensory-focused interests than NT individuals and males with ASD would have different interest areas and more intense interests than females with ASD.

Results showed gender, age and IQ dont affect number of or intensity of Interests, so no telling if Chris is a failed female on that alone

the intensity of their interests is greater, and their interest areas are less likely to be socially-oriented (e.g., interaction with others) and more likely to be object or sensory oriented, consistent with our predictions

Interestingly, Chris' Interests result in the most social intereaction hes ever gotten, albeit negative.

This study doesnt really Go into Detail about oercentages of types of Interests, like what kinda objects they obeess over, which is what I was looking for.

HF-ASD group almost exclusively showing interests in a very particular item or object, sensory interests, collecting/hoarding things

Autism does run in Families...
 
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About 90% of the autistbots I've ever met have had a fascination with public transportation like buses and trains. I wonder if Chris never developed this because he lived with his goober parents out in the sticks and wasn't exposed to a large level public transportation system.
It might also be because they both drive and never travelled far so he didnt travel by train or plane. Even Autists in cities seem to have Special Interests based on things they're exposed to, like subways, streetcars and busses if the parents dont drive (or because they do, its a special occassion when they get on one) Elevators or esclators are common in malls, so Im kinda wondering why Chris didnt get fixiated on that.

If someone in his life cared enough, they could have used his interest in Cartoons to get him involved in claimation or animation, which would teach him delayed gratification, planning and working to a goal. Or his interest in computers to learn how to build them. Probably the Guidance Counsillor at his highschool was thinking along these lines when getting Chris to go to College for CAD but without extra supports like a social worker, Lifeskills class, etc. these few efforts were too late and in vain.
I think autists take an interest in public transportation because it's a complicated yet understandable system, especially trains. Short but wide history, interesting mechanics, complex schedules, and they GOTTA GO FAST. The whole system has many assets to dissect, analyze and understand, yet none of them are abstract - it's all basically numbers.

I can definitely see why people that have a hard time understanding and exploring abstract, emotional and social themes but have a need to fixate on details and mechanisms (that are intricate enough, like trains, but not as complex as, say, medical science) might be interested in that.

Chris on the other hand, well...
For starters, I simply think he is too stupid to understand something as complex as the ins and outs of public transportation. Secondly, Chris needs flashiness, and trains and buses are a bit too dull for that.
And most importantly, I think, Chris' head is already way too "full" to care about any other subject other than the detail-full lore of the fiction he is into. He has to memorize and understand all the story and lore of all those stupid kids' shows, movies and video games he loves so much, not to mention fucking CWCville and its' characters, which at this point probably has more characters and events than the Iliad and the Odyssey combined.
 
In my experience of working with speds, a lot of this behaviour really does show up in autism/learning disabilities on the more severe side, and I don't think its to do with a personality disorder.
Is the grandiose fantasy a part of typical autism? That is one of Chris's most prominent traits right now, and I don't see anything like that in any other tard online.
 
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