- Joined
- Aug 1, 2013
- Messages
- 1,182
- Reaction score
- 993
This link didn't work for me but the one below did:
https://www.periscope.tv/w/1mnGekjAwYQxX
Clay is in the courtroom. Periscope is working for me, click on Detroit streaming hasn't started.
I'm so happy he's distraught. I hope the mental anguish only grows until he finally realizes he's going mad. I wish I could watch his down slope evolve. That would make great reality tv. I hate him.His attorney (Smith?) said Clay has been distraught and in confinement. He also has met with a psychiatrist and was prescribed meds.
Side note: You took this beautiful girl's life and you are distraught now? What about the two years you spent playing video games and robbing people? You're upset because you were CAUGHT and that's it!
Funny how he is suddenly distraught AFTER getting legal representation.He sure was competent enough to stand in front of the Bruck's a few days ago and deny bond. I had "hoped" he would do the right thing and spare them from having to be in court and listen to evidence and witness testimony and instead plead guilty with no fight. Looking at his little smirk in his mugshot I knew my hope would be shattered. .
Suspect in Chelsea Bruck's death to undergo competency hearing
Daniel Clay charged with second-degree murder
MONROE, Mich. - A 27-year-old man who is charged with second-degree murder in the death of a young woman who disappeared after a Halloween party in Monroe County in 2014 will undergo a competency exam...
http://www.clickondetroit.com/news/probable-cause-hearing-for-man-charged-in-chelsea-bruck-death
In Michigan....who picks the doctor or tester for these tests....the Court or the defense? IF it is the defense, can the state ask for an imdependent test? I can see defense games being played like in other cases. Thanks.
He was competent enough to hide his crime for 2 years; hiding her possessions, etc. All murderers aren't mentally ill. Spiritually ill, yes.
Expect all sorts of this baloney and all sorts of attempts to disparage Chelsea. It won't work. It will have the opposite effect.
This being said, I am still of the belief more than this miscreant were involved.
Someone commented on a news article something I've been wondering. DC has a history of drug use; if he were using at the time he was arrested, how does that work? Isn't detox a painful process? Would that explain his behavior and need for medication? How do jails handle people who suddenly are going through withdrawals?
Someone commented on a news article something I've been wondering. DC has a history of drug use; if he were using at the time he was arrested, how does that work? Isn't detox a painful process? Would that explain his behavior and need for medication? How do jails handle people who suddenly are going through withdrawals?
Both sides have the right to their own "experts " in my state..... in reference to who chooses the doctor to evaluate the person on trial. Also, at the correctional facility I work in, there are mental health professionals on staff.
As a nurse at a state prison, in VT, I know that we do very little for detox from drugs as alcohol is truly the only substance you can die from detoxing from. We provide the minimum comfort measures such as Tylenol for muscle aches, and immodium for the runs, as well as make sure to check vitals and keep fluids available. Basically the thought is, maybe if it sucks enough to sober up from they'll think about that before using again, and why should the state pay for an offender to have meds to help make detoxing easier on them? Don't like it? Don't use/don't go to jail.