BlinkOfAnI
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What children?It may be her own memories, or it may be secrets the other child told her.
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What children?It may be her own memories, or it may be secrets the other child told her.
Dad picked it? Huh.
O Irony. [emoji20]
I like the granite.
Photo:
http://www.wfaa.com/mobile/article/...-in-our-arms-lifetime-in-our-hearts/498122397
I am surprised at the memory capabilities children have. Although some do block it out. Example: My internationally adopted daughter wasn't even 2 when adopted yet she has vivid memories at the age of 6 of names, songs and bad things at the orphanage, my domestically adopted daughter was adopted at the age of 12 and cannot remember the things that were horrible. I think I am most astounded at my younger daughter having memories since she was so young.
I don't know. Don't totally see how he could be completely submissive and also override her on adoption, if she was always opposed.
Still puzzling them out.
Weird. I just woke up... I dreamed about Sherin. All I can remember is group of people rescued her, a woman was holding her, she was laughing and smiling while the woman played with her and fussed over her. She looked happy, loved, adorable, radiant. [emoji259]
OT—
For those of you who haven't seen it there is a fun thread that asks how you came up with your screen name. Some of our regulars here have participated and I love the stories posted. (Yes I did explain grochyom) For those of you who haven’t please do. I would love to know more about the wonderful posters on this Thead that I have come to respect and appreciative so much. It is something to do as our informtion seems to be in a lull.
http://www.websleuths.com/forums/showthread.php?326153-What-is-the-story-behind-your-WS-name
Isn't she just a little older than Sherin? I am not sure that she would have too many memories of that time, except the one of being taken away from her parents.
Wouldn't that have been the greatest " ending " , ( or new beginning ) we could have hoped and prayed for ? To be reunited with loved ones ?
Did you maybe see a glimpse of heaven ? Certainly she is there, surrounded by all its serenity, beauty and love ?
She's touched so many lives that didn't know her in this life .... all MOO, but it gives me hope and comfort.
We don't know that she was always opposed. She might have agreed to the adoption thinking it would go well. Even once they had a biological child she might have thought Sherin would be another child to love her and adore her, and the added bonus of looking good for adopting a poor, abandoned child.
I would like to see their lawyers order psych evaluations for both of them, mostly because in my mind I think WM needs it in case it's relevant for him, in case he is mentally unable to defend himself, and in case he needs to serve his sentence in a psych facility, perhaps with the option of an early parole, but if it was for both of them, then maybe it could reveal some of the power structures in the marriage and in their 'parenting'.
I don't know about such things. I wouldn't expect a psych evaluation would be normal in a case like this, but his lawyers might find it useful in helping them understand their client, especially if there's a possibility that it might help them construct a defense argument for him...and it might be like in the Bella Bond trial where the lawyers from one side accuse the other side of the actual crime. From what the lawyers for WM have been saying I'm not really seeing signs of that defense other than, perhaps, when they have said that he's really a great father and that's the angle they want to portray...how can they do that with the evidence of the broken bones and suspicion of abuse from a doctor who specializes in child abuse? If they do intend to argue that WM is a 'great father', then they're going to 'have' to blame the abuse on Sini. They didn't really show that might be their primary argument when they defended the lack of pictures of Sherin in the home--I think the lawyers should have pleaded the 5th on that.
I think that the bar for competence is set pretty low. As in, absence of hallucinations, presence of reasoning ability, capability of discerning right from wrong. And if someone is found incompetent to assist in their defense, then they are sent to a secure treatment facility and evaluated regularly until the demonstrate competence.
Not guilty by reason of insanity would be something else again, and figure in at trial. That would focus on state of mind at the time the crime was committed--which at this point is a considerable span, possibly inclusive of the entire time Sherin was in their home, but certainly all of the time moving forward since the first CPS report. It would, I suppose, hinge on convincing a jury that during that time he was either incapable of understanding what was going on or unable to act to protect Sherin.
Pleading the 5th is an individual right, not an attorney's right. But the attorney was responding to a reporter's question, not giving testimony. He could have chosen to simply respond "no comment," or "we have no knowledge of the number of pictures in the home, " or whatever. But, it would seem, that the attorneys are attempting to create a persona for their clients, doing whatever they can to normalize them, provide reasonable explanations for actions, etc. Personally, I think he blew that one.
Yes, I was joking about the lawyers should have pled the fifth, because if their intention is to make WM sound like a good dad the lawyer comments about the lack of pictures of Sherin do not make him sound at all like a good dad.
I have no idea if WM is legally competent or not, but I do think it's important for his lawyers to know. The smile from WM to Sini did not strike me as a sign of competence. If the charges get upgraded, then I do feel it's very important to ensure competence is investigated by a psych evaluation prior to a possible dp trial. WM can clearly hold down a job, he has a job that needs a high working IQ, so he's not incompetent in that sense, but *if* there's a chance of emotional pressure from Sini that's altered his ability to think rationally, and if he is convinced in his own mind that he must take the rap for everything in that home...to me that's not full competence, but I don't know what the legal standards are for a person who's been 'brainwashed' in this way, and nor do I know if that has happened to WM.
This is a horrific case, I want to make sure the right person goes down for the right thing.
If Sini is the one who spent most of the time at home with Sherin, I think there's a very good chance she's been the primary abuser. From what we've heard she has shown zero concern for Sherin. I see signs of remorse in WM's expressions, but none in Sini. She didn't say they had to call the police the moment she allegedly woke that morning. When the police did arrive she seems to have given them the impression she was more concerned about the baby shower than her own baby being missing. I believe she knew Sherin was dead and there was no point searching for her, but who'd want to go to a baby shower if they were covering for their husband murdering their child? But if WM doesn't testify against her, how can they 'prove' to a jury, beyond a reasonable doubt, that she had any part in Sherin's abuse, death, or cover-up?
So, to me, that leaves WM as either co-abuser, willingly turning a blind eye or participating, or he's been 'brainwashed' to the point that he makes excuses for Sini, will protect her even to giving his life for her crimes as well as his own. I've never known a case like this where psych exams were called for or an insanity defense was used. But if he needs a couple of years of treatment in order to get to the point where he can tell the truth, what would that mean for a trial?
[FONT=&]At the time of her arrest, Patty Hearst weighed only 87 pounds (40 kg) and was described by Dr. [/FONT]Margaret Singer[FONT=&] in October 1975 as "a low-IQ, low-affect zombie"[/FONT]
[FONT=&]On March 20, 1976, Hearst was convicted of bank robbery and using a firearm during a felony. She was given the maximum sentence possible of 35 years' imprisonment pending a reduction at final sentence hearing, which Carter declined to specify.[/FONT][SUP][71][/SUP][FONT=&]Because Judge Carter had died, William Horsley Orrick Jr. decided on Hearst's sentence. He gave her seven years imprisonment, commenting that "rebellious young people who, for whatever reason become revolutionaries, and voluntarily commit criminal acts will be punished".[SUP][72][/SUP][/FONT]
If you want to take a look at the brainwashed defense look up the Patricia Hearst case. She was convicted for bank robbbery with the band of Sybionese Liberation Army that kidnpped her and held her hostage in 1874. She use the Stockholm syndrome and brought that condition into the public discourse.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patty_Hearst
BBM
Boy, her kidnappers held held her for a looooong time!
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I think that Patty Hearst was a total victim and I don't think that she should have served any time in prison for what she was forced to do to keep herself alive.
Feeling the spirit always gives us tinglesThis just makes me tingle. I think you are right -- I think the dreamer had a glimpse of heaven. It was so we could all hear how happy she is now.