Speculation time regarding the current affairs, allow me to play devil's advocate and state a position on Chris not getting the autism deferral.
Now I have to preface this with going off of what Chris has said and research I've done on the autism bill in Virginia.
One of the things Chris mentioned in that Heilberg was upset that Chris couldn't be placed anywhere, that could be something like a shortage of beds, which Chris had mentioned at his restoration visit to Western State Hospital. It could be that they don't have bed space because Chris isn't deserving of space because he isn't that far gone. His stint there was about a month, which really isn't that long of a time, basically an administrative time period of getting checked in, getting up to speed, and checked out, going right back to jail. It could be that they did treat him and went "Nope, this guy passed all our tests, he understands everything, why is he even here?" and put him back into jail because he's "normal enough".
One of the things I read in a piece about the autism defense bill was an advocate telling a story of someone with severe autism who was homeless, and charged with burglary because they needed a place to sleep that night, and that they weren't there to steal anything but didn't understand that it was wrong to do that because they really needed a place to sleep, thus it was wrong to charge and lock them up because of that.
Now with Chris, you could make the argument that he wanted sex and Barb was the only vagina around, and just couldn't comprehend that was wrong. Unfortunately Chris does understand that, and given how much Chris bragged about it, it wouldn't take a master in interrogation tactics to get Chris to feel proud of it and let slip something like "Yeah she said I was better than all the other guys, even my father!", or "No she didn't want it but I convinced her to go along with it".
If Chris was normal enough, it would make sense that Heilberg would be having trouble finding a place for him, especially if the local programs are filled up with actually crazy people. They could be telling Heilberg that no, we don't want him because he's not nuts. Heilberg has zero say on the mental health examination. He can't go "Oh no, you're wrong, Chris really didn't understand what he was doing at the time." He's powerless and has to go with whatever they deem Chris to be.
This review is a review in the courts. The judge isn't going to go to Region 10 and demand they put Chris in a home, and we have no idea if Heilberg even requested this, and this is the one of the first real tests of this new autism deferral. One thing that I read was that the courts will be provided with a full summary that some top people in Virginia's mental health system sign off on, so the mental health community who evaluated Chris will give their own recommendation, then the courts will make a determination. While Heilberg would probably get a copy, it's still up to the courts.
We also have precedent from the last time Chris was in trouble and had to take that deferment program which included trips to a psychologist. Chris mentioned to Null (or Marvin?) that his doctor was getting upset with him about him sperging on about his nonsense, normally doctors don't respond in that way. However they do respond in that way if they know the person is just making shit up but otherwise 100% fine, just isn't taking things seriously, which that deferment program eventually found with Chris. He was fine, he passed his tests, and he got his movie tickets and a rose from the judge.
Remember, Heilberg is not a medical doctor, he's a lawyer. While one look at Chris and five minutes talking to him may make him seem like he's nuts, Chris is unable to fake it with actual medical and psychological people examining him over a long period of time. It could be that medical professionals are going to rule him completely fine and able to face the music.