Woman who stabbed classmate to please Slender Man can be released from
psychiatric hospital
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[January 10, 2025]
By TODD RICHMOND
MADISON, Wis. (AP) —
A Wisconsin woman who at age 12 stabbed her sixth grade classmate nearly
to death to please online horror character Slender Man will be released
from a psychiatric hospital, a judge ordered Thursday after a trio of
experts testified that she has made considerable progress battling
mental illness.
Morgan Geyser has spent nearly seven years at the Winnebago Mental
Health Institute. She has petitioned Waukesha County Circuit Judge
Michael Bohren, who committed her, for release four times since June
2022. She withdrew her first two petitions. Bohren denied her third
request this past April, finding she still presented a threat to the
public.
Geyser, now 22 years old, filed her latest petition in October. Bohren
decided to grant her release after a day-long hearing Thursday, finding
that she had maximized her treatment options at the facility and is no
longer a safety risk. He ordered the state Department of Health Services
to set up a plan to house her in a group home and supervise her for his
consideration at a hearing within 60 days.
The judge said that her crime was a “brutal, terrible offense” but
Geyser has since grown up and to be truly rehabilitated she must exist
as part of society.
“She's done what she's supposed to do,” Bohren said. “She appears to
have a good attitude.”
Geyser and Anissa Weier were 12 years old in 2014 when they lured their
classmate, Payton Leutner, to a Waukesha park after a sleepover. Geyser
stabbed Leutner 19 times while Weier egged her on. Leutner barely
survived.
The girls later told investigators that they attacked Leutner to earn
the right to be Slender Man's servants and they feared he would harm
their families if they didn't follow through.
Geyser pleaded guilty to attempted first-degree intentional homicide and
was sent to the psychiatric institute due to mental illness in 2018.
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Morgan Geyser appears in a Waukesha County courtroom Thursday, Jan.
9, 2025, in Waukesha, Wis. (AP Photo/Morry Gash)
Weier pleaded guilty to attempted second-degree intentional
homicide. She was also sent to the psychiatric center but was
granted release in 2021 to live with her father and was ordered to
wear a GPS monitor.
Three psychologists who have been working with Geyser since she was
committed to the institute testified at Thursday's hearing that
she's made impressive progress in just the last six months and
should be released.
Dr. Brooke Lundbohm testified that Winnebago staff weaned Geyser off
her anti-psychotic medications by early 2023 and she's suffered no
symptoms since then.
Dr. Deborah Collins said Geyser is always at risk of reoffending
simply because she almost killed someone but she has worked on her
coping skills, improved her emotional control and retreats into
fantasy less frequently. Collins added that Geyser told her that she
hates what she did to Leutner and can't forgive herself.
Dr. Ken Robbins told the judge that she could become dangerous if
she remained confined at Winnebago and lost hope.
“The longer she's there, at this point, the harder it's going to be
to re-integrate,” Robbins said.
Waukesha County Assistant District Attorney Ted Szczupakiewicz
argued that Geyser couldn’t be trusted, noting that she claimed
during evaluations last year that she faked her delusions about
Slender Man and actually attacked Leutner as a way of escaping her
abusive father. He hinted that was a ploy to make the release more
likely.
The judge shrugged that off, saying it's not unusual for mental
illness diagnoses to evolve.
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