Marvin said:
Did they? If they did, it was probably because Rob Bell described Chris as an "adult autistic child."
I guess what I mean is, well... Chris has a disability. Because of this disability, he has no reasoning as to what's right or wrong, or rather, has an incredibly skewed sense of morality which is almost perpetually in his favor. Because of this, he decided one day that he was going to try and kill Snyder (because let's face it, you don't try to hit someone with a car just to slightly injure them.)
Normally in a court case like this they would likely deem Chris, at LEAST temporarily, to be a danger to the public and would often force him to undergo therapy and to be monitored by an authority figure, normally a family member or, if none are available/capable to take care of said person, a professional healthcare worker. And because Barb assaulted Snyder as well, she should have been deemed unable to keep Chris under control and, in fact, assisted him in carrying out the assault.
But this isn't what happened. In fact, the only thing (as far as I know) that Chris was required to submit to was a psychological analysis. He now lives with Barb, completely free and without therapy. I'm just wondering how they figured leaving Chris, who has shown that he is capable of "deciding" to commit a crime if he feels undignified, with someone who would actually HELP him do this rather than try to stop him.
I know I'm talking as if this were a court case about a child but when you really think about it, Chris is mentally just a child in a man's body.