Oh man. This guy has charges going back to his youth, continuing all these years.
A “stay at home dad”, he beat his wives, step kid, tore up a house with a baseball bat, harassment, burglary, robbery, theft.
Kansas, Florida, Maine, heroin, meth, bipolar diagnosis, court mandated counseling, it goes on and on. In prison then out, in rehab then out, repeat. Always with family and friends support, vouching in court to his progress, trying to help him “reintegrate back into society”.
But, “Probationer Eaton is likely to reoffend.”
They didn’t know what was going to happen. Good days and bad days. No one wants to think that one day the son they love could commit mass murder of family, friends, and strangers.
It’s so sad, they tried so hard to help him, all of his life. They underestimated what he was capable of. If only he hadn’t had access to those guns.
Joseph Eaton’s history of violence dates to his youth
In 2013, Eaton hoped to serve out his probation at his parents’ home in Florida. While he was granted probation, he was unable to move in with his parents because his father, David Eaton, refused to give up his firearms. Federal law prohibits a convicted felon from living in a home with a gun.
In January 2018, deputies responded to a call from his aunt, Kimberly Castejon, who said Eaton was “having a mental breakdown” and had a gun. She told police she believed he was going to shoot himself or others.
The Egers,
longtime family friends who lived in Bowdoin, were among those who vouched for Eaton.
“He’s becoming a fine young man,” Patti Eger wrote. “He’s doing his best to stay on the straight-and-narrow, and I see changes in him that will benefit him long term.”