In reading here, Bruce Fast seems to have suspected his son early on, and made that clear to LE. I'm not for a moment suggesting that the senior Fast had anything to do with his wife's murder, but I came across this case on TruTV (? used to be CourtTV), and saw a crawler that said that Bruce Fast asked for the death penalty for his son, but that prosecutors declined. I'm blown away by the fact that a father would seek the death penalty for his own son, no matter the circumstances. Is there more about this case that I don't know?
The son/defendant's motive seems to to be deep resentment at losing his inheritance, and he appears to have a long history of mental illness. Most people with an organic mental illness are not violent--was Thomas Fast the exception? I would've expected the son to have a personality disorder (anti-social behavior) rather than a bio-chemical mental illness (bi-polar or schizophrenia) if he resorted to murder to protect what he perceived as his $$.
Sorry for the jumbled thoughts. I'm really perplexed by this case.
The son/defendant's motive seems to to be deep resentment at losing his inheritance, and he appears to have a long history of mental illness. Most people with an organic mental illness are not violent--was Thomas Fast the exception? I would've expected the son to have a personality disorder (anti-social behavior) rather than a bio-chemical mental illness (bi-polar or schizophrenia) if he resorted to murder to protect what he perceived as his $$.
Sorry for the jumbled thoughts. I'm really perplexed by this case.