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Shoot-up I-270 - No Problem -- Insanity Plea!!

sandgk

Watson, Crick & A Twist
You just knew this was the way the dipshits lawyer would present the case -- I hope the Prosecutors office nail him -- kook or not.
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The bit about "only acting to reduce humiliating voices in his head" is what really irks me. It is total BS. I've seen the Franklin County PD's office pull of stunts like this before, and this one should not be allowed to fly.
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Lawyer: Ohio Shooter Was 'Not Rational'
Wednesday, May 4, 2005 2:10 PM EDT
The Associated Press
By CARRIE SPENCER
The man behind a string of highway shootings in which one woman was killed was "not rational," his lawyer said Wednesday in his closing argument, but prosecutors insisted the defendant knew his actions were wrong and should not be declared insane.

Despite claiming that he was only acting to reduce humiliating voices in his head, Charles McCoy Jr. deliberately picked shooting locations and took steps to avoid capture, Assistant Prosecutor Doug Stead told jurors.

"He knew what he was doing was wrong and he wanted to get away with it," he said.

Defense attorney Michael Miller insisted that McCoy was not sane.

If McCoy knew it was wrong to shoot at people while he was trying to get rid of voices in his head, he would be an evil person, Miller said in his closing.

"This boy is not evil. This boy is sick," Miller said. "This boy is not rational. This boy is psychotic."

McCoy's attorneys concede he was the gunman in 12 highway shootings in the Columbus area. Under his plea of innocent by reason of insanity, they must prove that his severe, untreated paranoid schizophrenia prevented him from understanding the shootings were wrong.

McCoy, 29, could face the death penalty if convicted of the most serious charge of aggravated murder in the death of Gail Knisley, the only person struck during the shootings in 2003 and 2004. She was a passenger in a car that was struck by a bullet.

If jurors find him insane, he would be sent to a mental hospital.

A prosecution expert testified Tuesday that McCoy did several things that showed he knew the shootings were wrong, including not shooting if a police officer was close, leaving shooting scenes quickly and moving his attacks to other roads after police focused on the stretch of Interstate 270 near his home where the shootings began.

"He told me he knew what he was doing was against the law," Dr. Phillip Resnick said. "He told me he didn't intend to hurt anybody, but he stopped caring if he did or not."

A defense psychiatrist, Dr. Mark Mills, testified Monday that McCoy could not have understood the shootings were wrong. He said McCoy was acting out of anger and frustration and thought the shootings would reduce the harassing voices in his head.

In his closing, Stead criticized Mills for only doing interviews and reviewing medical records without reviewing police reports.

"Dr. Mills came in here as an advocate," Stead said. "His methodology was seriously flawed."

Miller responded in his closing that Resnick focused only on McCoy's actions that indicated evasion.
 
This all happened in my neck of the woods and I gotta go with the insanity D on this one. What sane motivation was there?

Besides, this kid played football for Grove City and I know for a fact those kids are ALL crazy.
 
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Judge declares mistrial in Ohio shootings

Prosecutor to retry admitted highway gunman
Updated: 9:43 p.m. ET May 8
COLUMBUS, Ohio - A judge declared a mistrial Sunday in the case of a man who admitted to a string of highway shootings — one of which killed a woman — but claimed innocence by reason of insanity.

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</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>The hung jury came after four full days of deliberations in the trial of Charles McCoy Jr., charged with 12 shootings that terrified Columbus-area commuters over five months in 2003 and 2004.

Earlier in the day, jurors told Franklin County Common Pleas Judge Charles Schneider they voted twice on the issue of insanity and could not reach a unanimous decision. He ordered them to continue work — leaving two of the jurors with tears in their eyes — but sent them home about an hour later when the panel had again reached an impasse.

“We have no indication at this time that this will change,” jurors told the court in a note read by the judge.

The jurors, who were first summoned April 8 and heard eight days of testimony, were escorted out of the courthouse at their request and did not comment.

McCoy, who has remained stoic throughout the trial, stared straight ahead as jurors were dismissed. Earlier in the case, he cried only when his parents testified about the start of his mental illness.

‘Very disappointed’
Juror Bobby Collins, a retired police officer, said he was “very disappointed” when reached later by telephone. He declined to discuss deliberations. “There will be another trial, and I don’t want to taint that.”

The defense admitted McCoy was behind the shootings, as well as about 200 acts of vandalism involving dropping lumber and bags of concrete mix off of overpasses. But his attorneys insisted he did not understand his actions were wrong because he suffered from untreated paranoid schizophrenia.

County Prosecutor Ron O’Brien said he would retry McCoy, 29, who could have faced the death penalty if convicted of the most serious charge, aggravated murder, for the one death in the case. Gail Knisley, 62, the only person hit in the shootings, was killed Nov. 25, 2003, as she was being driven to a doctor’s appointment.

If found innocent by reason of insanity, he would be committed to a mental hospital until a judge ruled he was no longer a danger.

“We are extremely disappointed in the outcome,” said Knisley’s son Brent, reading a brief prepared statement by phone. “If there’s another trial and another trial and another trial, we will still be there.”

McCoy’s father, Charles McCoy Sr., thanked the jury for its work and said his family’s thoughts were with his son and the Knisley family.

Psychiatrists disagree
The case focused on two psychiatrists who disagreed whether McCoy met the legal definition of insanity: that a severe mental illness prevented him from knowing right from wrong.

The defense psychiatrist said McCoy was desperate to rid himself of humiliating voices in his head that called him a “wimp” for not standing up to mocking from television programs and commercials. He also said McCoy believed others could read his thoughts.

The prosecution’s psychiatrist said that, despite the delusions, McCoy showed he knew his actions were wrong by steps he took to avoid capture, such as leaving for Las Vegas when his father turned McCoy’s guns over to police. Investigators had learned about the weapons from a caller.

McCoy was arrested a few days later, on March 17, 2004.

During closing arguments, each side attacked the other’s expert.

Prosecutors said the defense failed to prove McCoy did not understand his actions were wrong because their expert believed McCoy’s story without checking it against the facts.

Defense attorney Michael Miller told the jury that prosecution expert Dr. Phillip Resnick focused only on McCoy’s actions that indicated he was trying to elude authorities and ignored other signs he did not know his actions were wrong.

The shootings frightened commuters and residents for months, as bullets struck vehicles and houses at varying times of day and night and at different spots along or near Interstate 270, the highway that encircles Columbus.

Most of the incidents took place near an interchange of the interstate and a highway where about 77,000 vehicles travel a day on average.
 
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CleveBucks said:
If he didn't know the difference between right and wrong, why did he flee to Vegas when his father turned his guns over to police? Why did he flee the scene of every shooting before the police could arrive?
Exactly, and when they put the cameras on the south outerbelt, why did he move down 71?
 
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CleveBucks said:
If he didn't know the difference between right and wrong, why did he flee to Vegas when his father turned his guns over to police? Why did he flee the scene of every shooting before the police could arrive?
Maybe the voices told him to :crazy:
 
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