Reading this case I can't help but feel like Rob Reiner took a very wrong approach with this child. To send him to 18 different rehab centers, the equivalent of boot camps, in his teenage years, far away from his family would do some serious damage to a normal child's psyche, let alone to one that is quite clearly struggling and needs guidance. It's also not really a great idea in the first place because you hardly want your teenage son to meet and associate with more hardcore veteran junkies which is basically most of the population in said rehabs. And finally - rehabs never work. Not unless the person himself wants to change and has realized in his own mind that this is bad for him. Nick obviously never reached that conclusion and possibly because he was never allowed to. He only "stopped" because it was either that or more rehab adventures. And obviously as we've seen - this approach doesn't work because it's a sure way to relapse. Sometimes money can't fix things. I'm not saying the opposite approach would have worked any better, he might have still been a lost cause regardless, but it's an interesting thing to think about.
As far as him being a schizophrenic who didn't know what he was doing. I doubt that. Drugs would have certainly lowered his inhibitions and removed the fear of consequences out of his mind, but you don't stab your parents to death just because you're having an episode. There's a deep rooted hatred there that the drugs might have manifested but they didn't create. And the timeline suggests that this wasn't something that happened in the spur of a moment but pre-planned. Not in the sense that he thought of it weeks or days in advance, only he knows that, but that after they had their argument at the party and whatever followed after (kicking him out or whatever), he consciously went to his house to kill them. And he certainly was of the right mind to know where he was going, how to get there and how to go back to his hotel which isn't a 5 minute walk. Checking in, cleaning himself also shows cognitive ability to know what he's done. And finally in the footage at the gas station you can see him checking out the police officer suggesting he knows he's done something wrong. The drugs might have pushed him over the edge but they certainly weren't the reason as to why he killed them.
Very good ideas here, Thanks. MOO There’s some basic addiction rules that the Reiner parents didn’t follow. Going to “18” 30day rehabs is not reasonable, no successful recovery program calls for repeating 30 day programs, so many times. Patients often relapse if they leave rehab too soon, the second time, it needs to be extended, 90 days minimum. Also, dealing with the mental illness, schizophrenia, get on the right meds.
When Rob and Michelle practiced tough love: Nick stayed in recovery center until stable, went to ongoing recovery groups, psych meetings, stayed sober as a rule to live in their house.
Unfortunately, boundaries were not held, and Nick was allowed to return to house, stay in guest house many times when he was using. He was living on the streets part of this time, so parents were worried, let him come home *for his own safety*. Unfortunately that put the *parents/ family members safety in jeopardy*.
Your second paragraph, MOO, many signs of consciousness of guilt for Nick, also, that it was premeditated.
I’m wondering if he wore gloves, thick jacket for the crime. According to hotel check-in. He looked tweaked, but no cuts on hands arms. Maybe even a hat, mask and glasses to avoid spatter, or defensive nails marks.
I still think Alan Jackson was brought on to frame the crime as insanity( schizophrenia, meth rage etc), at first. This stretches the beginning out, gives Alan more time. Nick goes to a mental hospital(gets out of LA Jail), get stable, then continue with the murder case in court.