- Joined
- Feb 19, 2013
- Messages
- 1,230
- Reaction score
- 297
Locked up
That makes it much easier to think about - thank you! Florida is a hard state in which to be a juror, in my opinion.
Locked up
Thanks Bernina, but looks like a few of us will be keeping our heads down.:floorlaugh:
otaI was spending a few minutes trying to "walk in her shoes". To see things from her perspective... and it's horrifying.
Picture this if you can...
You have suffered for years and years, tried all kinds of experimental treatments, making things worse instead of better.. You have become marginalized, ridiculed and shunned. You have reached wits end and have decided to end it all. You leave notes, kill your kids, and overdose....
Only to wake up the next morning and find you failed to die from the pills and are now forced to face the murder of your kids for the rest of your life. Sounds like something out of a Steven King Movie.
Got a question as I am unsure of FL law for institutionalizing those found NG-Insanity:
If she is institutionalized (hospital), can't she at some point recover from her insanity and be discharged?
Got a question as I am unsure of FL law for institutionalizing those found NG-Insanity:
If she is institutionalized (hospital), can't she at some point recover from her insanity and be discharged?
Got a question as I am unsure of FL law for institutionalizing those found NG-Insanity:
If she is institutionalized (hospital), can't she at some point recover from her insanity and be discharged?
She is not considered insane now. They are going for insanity at the time of the crime so if she is acquitted, I believe she will walk out of the court room a free woman. It would be considered "temporary insanity". She appears fine now, able to answer the judge, talks to her attorneys, etc. jmo
She is not considered insane now. They are going for insanity at the time of the crime so if she is acquitted, I believe she will walk out of the court room a free woman. It would be considered "temporary insanity". She appears fine now, able to answer the judge, talks to her attorneys, etc. jmo
She is not considered insane now. They are going for insanity at the time of the crime so if she is acquitted, I believe she will walk out of the court room a free woman. It would be considered "temporary insanity". She appears fine now, able to answer the judge, talks to her attorneys, etc. jmo