Brain-eating cannibal back in public life after 10 years

ZeroCool@feddit.ch to News@lemmy.world – 343 points –
Brain-eating cannibal back in public life after 10 years
the-express.com

A man who killed and ate a man has been released back into public life after ten years.

Tyree Smith, from Bridgeport, Connecticut, killed a homeless man and then ate his brain and eyeballs according to officials.

The horrific case made headline news, with Smith found not guilty of murder by reason of insanity after a July 2013 trial.

In lieu of a stint behind bars, Smith was ordered committed to a state psychiatric hospital for 60 years.

But now, ten years after the grim incident, the state Psychiatric Security Review Board said Smith was ready to be transitioned back into the community.

Smith has been released from the facility, Connecticut’s most secure, as of writing.

He will be living in a Waterbury group home, and is not allowed to associate with anyone involved in criminal activity.

The board stated in its report: “Tyree Smith is an individual with a psychiatric illness requiring care, custody and treatment.

“Since his last hearing Tyree Smith has continued to demonstrate clinical stability.

“Mr. Smith is medication compliant, actively engaged in all recommended forms of treatment, and has been symptom-free for many years.”

During the trial, Smith’s cousin Nicole Rabb claimed he arrived at her Connecticut home in December 2011, talking about Greek gods and ruminating about needing to go out and get blood.

When she saw him the next evening she noticed what appeared to be specks of blood on his pants and that he was carrying chopsticks and a bloody ax.

Smith then allegedly told Rabb he killed a man and ate his brains in the Lakeview Cemetery while drinking sake, and grimly warned he intended to eat more people.

A month later, police found Angel Gonzalez's mutilated body in the vacant apartment on Brooks Street in Bridgeport where Smith had lived as a child.

Police later recovered the bloody ax and an empty bottle of sake in a stream bed near the Boston Avenue cemetery.

The defense's case rested on the testimony of Yale University psychiatrist Dr. Reena Kapoor, who testified that Smith had kept his lust for human flesh after his arrest, even offering to eat her.

Kapoor claimed Smith suffered from psychotic incidents since childhood and heard voices that told him to kill people.

She then said the voices ordered Smith to eat the victim's brain so they would get a better understanding of human behavior and the eyes so that they could see into the "spirit realm."

Kapoor added that Smith went to Subway after eating the man's body parts.

The report on Smith’s release said: “He denied experiencing cravings but stated that if they were to arise, he would reach out to his hospital and community supports and providers.”

188

Some of y’all really need to figure out the difference between punishment and rehabilitation…

And which one actually works.

Stop stroking your hate boners and start advocating for real solutions. You don’t fix pain with more pain. All that does is exacerbate the cycle.

It's not about pain, at least not for me. If he was in the most comfortable psych hospital in the world, where they fluffed his pillows and shined his shoes, if he ate better and slept better than I do, that would be fine. But releasing him?

I mean, he's going to a group home. He's likely going to be carefully managed for the rest of his life. This is more of a reduced level of monitoring.

I hope that's true, but I've known group homes that are... somewhat lax. The state of mental health care (and funding) in this country does not inspire hope regarding his monitoring.

I suppose we just have to hope that he's not lying about not having urges. As someone with mental illness, I've lied my socks off to avoid the psych ward before.

At least in my state, mental health group homes vary widely by supervision level. Some allow you to come and go like it’s a private home, others are under lock and key.

He's likely going to be carefully managed for the rest of his life

Let's fucking hope

Likely is the key word. Some group homes have strict supervision while others have effectively no supervision at all.

The problem is we don't care enough to have psych facilities like that. Which is why we have an entire wing of the emergency department at my hospital dedicated to holding people who are doing nothing but waiting for a bed at one of the trash facilities we actually do bother to provide. No real treatment in the emergency department except meds, but also not safe enough to send them home. Scary that there's somebody now who needs the bed in that facility more than this guy does.

I'll say I'm proud of this country the day we provide good, comfortable lifelong treatment facilities for people like this, alongside quality rest homes for our elderly. We have the resources to do it, and the fact that we don't is an absolute indictment of our society.

We did have psych facilities for a long time, but a lot of abuse was discovered, and our fix for it was to close all those facilities down and release everyone, who mostly just became homeless.

it's a complicated issue, and we need to get society on board with the idea of treating mental health (to both a sufficient and humane degree) in addition to physical health. moving away from the institutionalization model was intended to ensure people weren't just locked away to rot at the state hospital under the "supervision" of indifferent or hostile caretakers.

without community support and with the move toward profit-driven healthcare, people aren't going to get what they need. now our institutions are just literal prisons instead of asylums.

but anyway, i know you know most of this already (the shortcomings of the profit-driven model), as someone working in healthcare.

The problem is our justice system only focuses on the punishment part. Rehabilitation is either non-existent for most inmates or completely inadequate. The likelihood of this man being mentally stable enough to be safely reintegrated into public life is extremely small.

He didn't go to prison though, he went to a pysch ward, seems like exactly the kind of thing you'd be advocating for.

So the fault lies with the inadequacy of the justice and healthcare system. But my point still stands - simply locking someone away does nothing to actually help.

maybe not... a high profile case like this may well have attracted the attention of more competent psychiatrists, or motivated his care team/state to seek it out. it also seems possible to me that his psychosis was very treatable with the right meds, but that he had not been able to access that care previously.

so yeah. mental health care is health care, and in this case it's important not only to the well-being of Mr. Smith but to his community as well. i agree with you that, for the american "justice" system, most cases are treated as it punishment is the correct response.

The US justice system unfortunately runs on emotion and punishment rather than rehabilitation, thanks in no small part to the whole privatized prison system. The average American would rather see someone suffer than get the help they need. This is a particularly strong mindset ironically among the conservative religious, but there are plenty of liberals who think that way too. This country needs reform on so many systems...

what exactly is the solution to a fucking murdering cannibal?

Serious mental health treatment, rehabilitation, and medication. Extensive monitoring by mental health professionals, routine check-ins… Basically what they’ve done.

I’m not saying just release the dude, wash their hands of him, and say “good luck”…

He ended someone’s life. That alone should remove him from society forever.

Now his entire release hinges on him being compliant with his meds to not end someone else’s life.

12 more...

What are "real" solutions, in your opinion? What do you feel should be done for the victims and their loved ones and family?

Nothing can really be done for them. Locking him up won’t do anything for them, either. One could argue for some form of restitution, but then you’d have to ask if they even want anything from the guy.

The real solutions are adequate mental healthcare and access to medication, as well as routine monitoring and check-ins. All following an extensive inpatient treatment and rehabilitation program… So, basically what they’ve done here. Fighting pain with more pain doesn’t do anyone good. It’s entirely reactionary. Locking someone up for life does not help anyone.

Helping the person get the treatment they so desperately need does.

I am not talking abou the perpetrators, though. I wanted to know what should be done to care for the victims of violent crimes.

Like I said - restitution.

Locking someone up doesn’t do anything for the victims or their families..

Also, just take a look at wrongful conviction rates - and that’s just the confirmed ones… How many do we miss?

Are we really willing to let so many innocent people be locked away or even killed? Debts can be repaid for a wrongful conviction, but a prison sentence cannot, and a death sentence- well, duh.

Again, like I’ve said - and I feel like a broken record with this - prison does not help anyone. If anything, it makes things worse. I mean, you’re really gonna try to tell me that locking a bunch of convicts together for years or decades at a time and then just dropping them back into society once they’re done is a good idea??? No.

Help. Support. Therapy. Proper monitoring and, if necessary, medication. THAT helps. Don’t look at the “what”, look at the “why”.

We need to STOP the cycle of institutionalization, and START reforming people into productive members of society.

Also, it’s way fuckin cheaper on the taxpayers, if that’s what you care about

I only care for the victims and I still didn't get an answer. "Restitution", what does that entail in detail? What's your concrete plan of action to help the victims of violent crimes? How do you stop them from getting revenge? How do you handle them if they do take revenge? What happens with criminals who are repeat offenders? What about those were people know they plan an attack on someone?

People like you pretend to care for people but I never get an answer to these questions. Victims are blissfully ignored in your crusade to help and protect violent criminals. It's just an interesting observation you can make all the time.

estitution (noun):

  1. the restoration of something lost or stolen to its proper owner.

  2. recompense for injury or loss.

  3. the restoration of something to its original state.

Didn’t think I had to spell it out for you…

Obviously in this circumstance it would be definition number 2.

What kind of recommendation do you suggest if someone eats your husbands brain for example, or rapes you? What if someone wants, as decompensation, that the other person suffers as much as they did? What if they want a sum of money the person can not pay? What if they want the person to go to prison for life?

I don't want to live near a city that a fucking psychotic brain eating killer is free to walk the streets! That's absolute madness

You definitely do already and just don't know it.

Evidently you don’t understand the prevalence and severity of mental health issues, cause this could happen anywhere…

Unfortunately our healthcare system is so fucked up, and society is full of people like you that would rather hurt people than help them, that this sort of thing is only exacerbated.

Stop being part of the problem. Be part of the solution.

The dude ate someone's fucking brain, you live next to him if you're fine with that

Rather him than you

Besides, if he likes me I’m less likely to be on the menu

You, however 👀

In this issue I refuse to be liberal. If your mental illness causes you to kill and eat people, you don't get to rejoin society. If I was the mentally ill cannibal, I would never want to be out. Same thing happened up here in Canada, we have cannibals and terrorists running around free cause they're "rehabilitated" and the rest of us? Fuck us and our safety

Same thing happened up here in Canada

And look at all the crime he's committed. Oops, wait, he hasn't.

They wouldn't tell us if he did. All this situation has taught me is that if I wanna murder someone, eat part of them. I'll get away with it with a slap on the wrist and some pills

Naw this dude is damaged goods. What happens when they cut his meds or if he stops taking it? Other peoples brains gonna be looking very tasty in that group home.

No, this a death penalty thing and that's a mercy. You kill a guy and eat his brains there's no coming back, just kill the bastard cheaply and use the resources to rehabilitate someone that can readjust like a drug user.

Planets fucking full anyways to keep a cannibal alive tbh. Make room for good people.

Technically cannibals would be one solution to a full planet.

Lol you ain't wrong. Maybe we can air drop a bunch into a gated community somewhere 🤔

So, resolve a murder with more murder… Yeah, that’s a real great solution

That's kinda how we dealt with shit for millenia. One thing about humans is we are very good at making more.

Too bad the guy who got his brain ate can't be rehabilitated.

One thing about humans is we are very good at making more.

By that logic, let the man keep eating brains. Let the man eat YOUR brain. You’re clearly not using it, and we can always just make another person to replace you, right?

Fine! But I get to try to kill him first. If he can beat me he can have my stupid fucking brain. Being alive sucks anyways. You're doing me a favor. One less wage slave for the corporations OH NO!!!!!!

Planets fucking full anyways

Piss off with this Malthusian bullshit, will you?

Never been stuck in traffic huh?

A problem easily avoided by using more space efficient modes of transportation, and also not particularly relevant to my objection that overpopulation is a Malthusian myth.

Which will never happen because you'd have to rip up cities and replan them.

But whatever I'm sure your gonna say it's a "matter of resource distribution" not a space problem but I'll just say this, we will never solve the distro problem because of greed.

Plus every new person born is gonna generate a shit ton of carbon. They're gonna need a place to live. That's space that used to be an ecosystem.

So idk maybe you want the planet to be turned into Courascant (one big planet sized city). Sure there's space for trillions of humans if we stack em up high! Good luck feeding them.

I feel like there's a lot of steps between rehabilitating a chronic shoplifter and a guy who killed and consumed a guy's brain. Even if someone is rehabilitated should they escape punishment? Should we not punish people for what they do to others?

Sometimes the lessons that stay with you longest are learned through pain. Sometimes you need to feel hurt to understand it.

If the guy was truly determined by actual professionals (aka: not you) to be fit to return to society, then what’s the issue?

What gain does anyone get from unnecessarily punishing him longer? It’s just a waste of time and resources to inflict pain on an individual because people can’t accept that someone can change.

Punishment does very little in the way of teaching a lesson. Do some actual research.

Edit: furthermore, this was an incident of mental illness and a severe psychological break. You can’t punish that out of someone. That makes no sense. This man needed serious help, got it, and has been compliant with his treatment.

He wasn't punished. He was "found not guilty of murder by reason of insanity" and placed in a state psychiatric hospital. That's not punishment, that is treatment and care. That's also why he is being released - they have determined that he is stable enough to be back in society. (I have my doubts that he will remain stable without being in a psychiatric hospital but I guess we'll all see.)

"What gain does someone get from unnecessarily punishing him longer?" Safety. If you have someone who commits a premeditated murder (insane or not). Then granting them the opportunity to do it again is a serious risk.

Additionally, schizophrenia doesn't just completely go away. Most cases are episodic, the fact that he is fine now does not mean he's "cured". You at the very minimum need to be able to force continuous treatment until his death.

The fact that punishing people serves little utility, doesn't mean that you should release murderers. The fact that protecting society by imprisoning people, "punishes" the people does not mean that you shouldn't protect society by imprisoning people.

You clearly don’t understand any of the psychology behind this. Stop pretending you do.

While I trust professionals in many things, I'm not sure how much experience they have dealing with cannibals who harbor murderous intent. Can you honestly say to me that what little money and resources it takes to keep this single man locked up is worth the possibility of him doing it a second time? What's a second life worth? Ten years?

I think people like you are a hair from being as insane as the people they lock up. Not all crimes should be forgiven and cold blooded murder is at the top of that list. Sure, he should be allowed to earn more freedoms but released back into society?

Absolutely fucking not.

There's a wide gulf of distance between someone with antisocial personality disorder or psychopathy who fully intends to murder another person and someone experiencing profound psychosis to the point that they don't even know that their own actions are real. This guy was found not guilty by reason of insanity in the first place because he's the latter and not the former. The latter can be safe in public, if adherent to medication regimens, therapy, and monitoring. The former must be housed away from the public for life.

I say that as a healthcare professional with experience with both people who have severe psychiatric disorders and also people who are in prison. The original court found this man actually did not have murderous intent and that makes all the difference.

I think people like you are a hair from being as insane as the people they lock up.

Better look over your shoulder then, buddy. We’re everywhere

I think people like you are a hair from being as insane as the people they lock up.

Since I fully agree with what the commenter you're replying to said, I'll assume you're lumping me into that group too.

Sure, call me insane. Call me crazy. Call me fucking nuts and say I need a straight jacket. Whatever floats your boat.

You're not one of the people that can lock me up though and it's pretty clear why. So just remember that "crazy" motherfuckers like me are driving next to you on the freeway, shopping behind you in the grocery store, living down the hall, etc. We could lose it at any point!

Fear of what you don't understand and ignoring expert opinions are destroying society. Which side of that would you like to be on?

Plus, you're talking to another human being, it's just fucking disrespectful.

4 more...

Your comment was good and all but really I just want to tell you I love your profile picture. Don’t see enough ODST love out there. The Superintendent was such a great idea

Hell yea! Still sad there was never a sequel, it was such a unique experience

4 more...

sadfasfasdf

Ten years is the price of someone else's entire life? There should be no system in which robbing someone of their future so deliberately should be washed away.

He wanted to eat someone. You don't have to murder to get access to a corpse. Cold blooded murder should not be seen as 'correctable'. A man lost his entire life. He loses only ten years. Fuck that.

asdfasfadsf

Murder is 20 to life. How did he get half the minimum sentencing? Ah, plead insanity and then wiggled around the system by getting a clean bill of health so long as he stays on his meds.

What happens if he misses a dose? Hell I missed mine today because I got busy. My blood pressure is a little high but he might decide to kill and eat someone.

Why the fuck is that an acceptable risk to you?

asdfasfsda

Man murdered another man, consumed his brain, and got out in half the minimum sentencing time. There is no further context or situation that remedies this, despite how desperate you are to do so.

People who had weed on them get more time then this. My last comment got downvoted but when he does it again I will be here to say I told them so.

That’s just an argument for legalizing weed.

I'm still in disbelief that people are comfortable letting a literal axe murdering cannibal back into society because a small group of people think he's all better now. I really don't give a shit if he's all better now. The amount of people who do this are small enough they shouldn't get a second chance with society.

Did you read the party where he was sentenced to 60 years? The system was ready to keep him for basically his whole life.

I'm ready to reform criminals and the insane for anything but murder or especially violent crimes. Nobody's life should be gambled on whether or not we have a perfect understanding of mental health. I get that you disagree but I can't comprehend how. I wouldn't want this guy in my city let alone my state.

“I’m for reforming people, but only if I think it’s okay :)”

-you, essentially

What they said actually had meaningful nuance. We should be more careful when it comes to potential murder.

You realize he's going to be in a group home, right? It's not like he's just being let out on the streets.

So either he's able to leave the group home freely which defeats what you just said entirely or he doesn't get to leave and it's just prison with extra steps. I don't get your point.

1 more...
1 more...
1 more...
1 more...

Maybe you missed the part of severe mental health issues?

This guy didn’t just wake up one day and decide “hey, I’m going to eat someone :)”

Do everyone a favor and don’t comment on things you clearly know nothing about.

Cool - he shouldn't be welcomed back into society if those issues are to fucking murder and eat someone. I don't give a shit how enlightened you think you are, someone should not suffer because you have a boner for "giving everyone a chance at recovery :)" The group of people insane or malicious enough to premeditate their kills is small enough I'm comfortable putting them in a box until they die so nobody else has to be murdered with a fucking axe and eaten you absolute loon.

Well it’s a good thing you don’t make these decisions :)

Try being less sadistic

1 more...
1 more...
6 more...
18 more...

He ate a man’s brains and eye balls.

Eww gross.

He went to subway after eating the man’s body parts.

EWWWWW! GROSS!

The American punitive view vs. a rehabilitative one is terrifyingly real in these comments. It was an awful awful thing that happened, and he should be monitored the rest of his life, but if it is determined by medical professionals (a.k.a. not you) then he deserves to lead a full life, and have the opportunity to contribute to a society that he caused harm too instead of being a cost to taxpayers everywhere for the rest of his life, while he is medicated and able to rejoin society, that harms everyone even more in the long run.

This man should have had the health supports he needed before this ever happened, likely something exacerbated by the US medical system.

Also to dispel some common myths:

  • Due to legal fees, it costs significantly MORE to sentence someone to death in the US (sidenote, also one of the few 1st world countries still conducting the backwards barbaric practice), than the cost of them continuing to serve life in prison; it is not the "cheap" option.
  • Insanity pleas on average 1) yield longer sentences in mental facilities than similar cases where there was no insanity plea, b) if not successful in getting an insanity sentence yield longer jail sentences on average. From a criminal judicial standpoint, there is very rarely any advantage to pleading insanity, and it's even rarer still that someone actually gets it when they were not in fact insane. The testing, and level of evidence needed far exceeds what you can gather from a casual read and comment online. It is a hugely rare thing legally, we just tend to hear about them as they're represented in the media at disproportionate rates compared to standard trials.

To all my American friends, not shitting on you, you're a wonderful country, of largely wonderful people, but with some bad bad bad policies that I hope will improve in coming years.

Love,

Your hat.

  1. yield longer sentences in mental facilities than similar cases where there was no insanity plea

Is that including the actual length of the sentence rather than the title amount which is reduced later? Seems like 60 years to 10 years is a much larger reduction than is usual for prison sentences.

I'm not 100% sure, that's a good point, I'll look into this. I agree in this case is does seem that way, but be careful for falling prey to making conclusions on a sample size of 1, there are outliers in any data sample. To be sure there are without doubt cases where the insanity plea yield shorter sentences, but from my education on the topic it's always been my understanding that this is the case on average (to be clear, this isn't through internet articles or word of mouth on Facebook, this was from multiple sociology and criminal psychology courses taught by PHd educated individuals. As a disclaimer while I have a Masters in Psychology and have done original research in political psychology, my main field is not criminal psychology specifically).

I looked for a solid while and couldn't verify the claim of my past professors, I found one study in New Zealand contradicting this claim specifically saying that on average NGRI (not guilty by reason of insanity cases) served shorter sentences (note the wording of "served" referring to how much time they actually served, rather than just the sentence as you were asking about initially) on average in murder cases compared to other individuals with serious mental illness that did not receive NGRI sentences. However they take this as evidence (since it's based on actual time served, rather than the initial sentence), that murder cases treated as NGRI are a positive vs. putting these same individuals in prison given the taxpayer pays for them to be incarcerated for a shorter period of time, AND alongside this results in a lower likelihood of future reoffending upon release. Some things I found across studies was 1) there is heavy racial and gender bias present in when NGRI pleas are granted, 2) recidivism rates are generally lower in NGRI cases upon release.

Thanks for raising this point, I learned some things!

Links below:

https://sci-hub.se/10.1002/cbm.2120
https://sci-hub.se/10.1016/j.fsiml.2020.100033

I believe that is the case where the defendant was found guilty, unlike here. In this case, the person was found not guilty of murder, yet still was held for 10 years.

But wasn't he found not guilty because of the insanity plea? If he hadn't pleaded insanity, presumably he would get a different sentence. My question is whether that would likely have been longer or shorter than the 10 years he ended up serving.

The unfortunate reality is our system doesn't typically rehabilitate anyone. So, it's understandable that people are incredulous. I wish things would change. Never seems to be much political interest in how prisoners are treated.

Regular people thinking they know more than experts + internet forums. Name a more iconic duo.

Justice is not only about rehabilitation, a punitive component serves the common good.

That may sound barbaric, but consider an alternative where prisoners are released as soon as they are rehabilitated (i.e. when it is clear that they no longer pose a threat to society):

  • A man is killed by a drunk driver. The driver is fully repentant and it is very quickly clear to all that they will never drink again, much less drink and drive. The driver is released as soon as this is clear.

  • The man's son is horrified that the driver was punished so lightly. He kills the driver in revenge. But it is clear this will never happen again, you can only lose your father to drunk driving once. The killer is soon released.

  • The driver's son is horrified that his father's killer was punished so lightly. Since nobody else will do anything, he kills his father's killer in revenge. Clearly he can never do this again ...

See the problem? Judicial punishment isn't about some vague societal bloodlust, it's an intercession that prevents unsatisfied victims from taking matters into their own hands and starting an endless vendetta.

This is the most idiotic whataboutism I've ever seen. You know there are other countries that focus on rehabilitation, countries that do not have repeat offenders like we do, right? Stop justifying a clearly broken system with theoretical nonsense, especially when that nonsense is already disproven elsewhere.

There are certainly countries that strongly focus on rehabilitating prisoners, which is admirable.

But even in countries like Norway, which is a good example of the above, prisoners are not automatically released once they are rehabilitated or no longer deemed a threat. They must always serve a certain fraction of their sentence regardless, which demonstrates that at least part of the original sentence was punitive in nature.

This is true to an extent, I think the focus there (if done correctly) isn't on being retributive so much as ensuring a very safe "err on the side of caution" buffer that often means longer times spent imprisoned than the exact point that they are rehabilitated.

1 more...
1 more...
1 more...

All my data points relied on actually data and trends rather than needing a highly unlikely hypothetical. Furthermore, the only issue with your hypothetical is the continuing view of the killers being a retributive one as well, they, and anyone with a retributive view on crime is the problem. The goal of our justice system is not (at least in most of the developed world), the US excepted and should not be to make another human suffer until, paraphrasing your own words, the original victim is satisfied.

The goal of the justice system is partly rehabilitative and partly retributive. This is true throughout "the developed world".

People can be sentenced to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole in the UK, Italy, Austria, and the Netherlands among other places. That sentence is incompatible with a purely rehabilitative justice system.

3 more...
3 more...

If the antipsychotics are working, then fine. This dude was truly cracked at the time to both admit it to people and offer to eat his doctors.

Taking the story at face value, imagine how horrible you'd feel knowing what you'd done. I really hope they are doing better now but fuck having those memories.

What nobody ever cares about are the victims. I would rather worry about how his victims poor family feels knowing he got away with it and is free, while their relative is dead and eaten

Well now I'm confused cuz I thought Lemmy didn't want a vindictive criminal justice system? If he caused problems by being unwell and is now well after treatment, why should he continue to be punished by being held against his will?

I think your mistake is in thinking that Lemmy is a single person with a single train of thought.

Any stats on the recidivism rate for the mentally ill who are treated and cleared by the Psychiatric Security Review Board, versus convicts who serve conventional terms?

Recidivism for offenders that simply serve a prison sentence as opposed to getting actual treatment is much, much higher.

I’m not sure of the exact stats in this situation, but I know domestic abusers that simply go to prison are some ~230% (give or take a couple tens, I can’t remember off the top of my head) more likely to reoffend than those who are actually treated.

Again, idk the stats for this case, but you will find that those who are simply punished rather than treated have higher recidivism rates across the board.

the voices ordered Smith to eat the victim's brain so they would get a better understanding of human behavior and the eyes so that they could see into the "spirit realm."

"Disassembly reveals useful pathways"...

Everyone can change

Not in my experience it ain't . Once an asshole always an asshole. That shits in your DNA. The most they do is go sociopathic and pretend they changed but they always crack.

If you have depression and tried to commit suicide, will you always end up depressed and try to end your life?

Or is there more to it all?

Mental illness is not that straightforward.

Even DNA isn't that straightforward. Epigenetics is a whole subfield dedicated to studying how and why genes in your DNA are or are not expressed.

Dude ate a guy. Would you live next door to him?

Unequivocally, yes I would. I work with people who have severe psychiatric disorders pretty regularly. The difference between someone who is untreated vs. someone who is stable and adherent to their med regimen can be light years.

Part of the reason we fear people with psychiatric disorders so much is because we, as a society, fail these people. We have no reliable system for remanding them to get help, if we see signs they are decompensating. The only system we provide is one that only starts to function when they've reached crisis level.

That's not their fault; it's ours. They deserve better. A better system could have prevented this crime.

"We as a society fail these people"

How do we fail people that would die off without continuous support?

There is a difference between pointing out that certain policies have better outcomes and ascribing moral fault to a society for the actions of an insane fringe.

You are expressing a very modern and ahistorical paradigm of what makes a human being valuable. Deep history shows us fossilized remains of people with injuries like broken femurs or no teeth that would have been absolutely fatal without continuous support. Disabled people are valuable simply because they are human every bit as much as able-bodied people are, and historically we have dedicated resources to caring for the disabled among us.

It is a very modern idea that labor is the only value a human being possesses, and that those who cannot care for themselves are worthless. What use is anything that we do, if we can't even be bothered to care for people who cannot care for themselves? What kind of monsters does that pretend we are? And make no mistake, we all start and most of us will end our lives not being able to care for ourselves.

Personally, I view caring for the helpless as a fundamental function of humanity. And yes, we as a society fail at that function, primarily because we fail to recognize it in the first place.

People who voluntarily cause societal harm are not the same as people who suffer temporary (and relatively minor) injuries.

And no those people were not pandered to and taken care of, they were evicted from society or even killed.

"Personally I view caring for the helpless as a fundamental function of humanity"- And you would be wrong. The only fundamental function of humanity is to continue existence.

You are inserting a moral imperative to "save the helpless". Where the "helpless" are a handful of people who attack and in this case, eat others, and of course their existence is societies fault.

Like I already said there is a difference between making a prescriptive claim that we should do something out of practicality, and a moral claim that society is responsible for the actions of the fringe.

"It's a very modern idea"- Imagine accusing someone of ahistoricism, and then immediately make false historical statements. Infanticide and senicide have historically been quite common, it is only in modern society where we have enough labor surplus that we are willing to condemn convenient deaths. Of course this is all irrelevant since at no point was I talking about people with injuries, but rather the case of violent perpetrators actively harming others.

I almost want to ask your opinion on abortion, since you are making a deontological right-to-life argument but are directly copying left-wing arguments and phraseology^1^ and left-wingers are vehemently pro-choice, not that there is any logical rule that they should be.

  1. Yes, you all talk the same way, make the same statements; you're not intellectuals, you are parrots.

Yes, you all talk the same way, make the same statements; you're not intellectuals, you are parrots.

A lot of critical, open minded analysis going on here.

Perhaps my statement was too broad to be formally provable, but it is quite obvious they they are using buzzwords and arguments exclusive to a certain political sector, completely ignoring it's lack of veracity and even applicability.

This would be like a libertarian arguing that the NAP, applies to the immorality of eating toast because it was enumerated in the Bible. A wrong argument based on false premises.

If you really cared about critical analysis then maybe you should have pointed out all the false statements made by the OP to them.

2 more...
2 more...

i hope the guy is truly rehabilitated and is getting the ongoing treatment he needs.

but lets be honest, id rather he not live on my street

Dude should have never been released simply because we can't ever be sure he'll take his medication or adhere to treatment in the future. At some point, the safety of an individual and the public takes priority over turning them loose on the streets.

Anyone else think the Sake part of the story is really weird too? Like, is that the preferred pairing with human flesh? Who makes that recommendation? A cannibal sommelier?

Thats the weird part? Not Subway?

Yeah that's a little weird too. A discerning cannibal would've chosen Potbelly.

Fucking bizzare! Who the fuck is down voting this post ?

I was tempted to. I always hate these posts. If he's healthy and doing well and observed, I'm glad he's out. Hopefully he benefits society.

I hope ten years worth of data lets some researcher figure out what went wrong or helps doctors find some way to help people like this.

well, the particular manifestation of his psychosis isn't common (eating people), but psychotic disorders aren't super uncommon and they still aren't as well understood as we might like. unfortunately, not everyone responds well to treatment - it can take some effort to figure out which meds are effective and for some minority of patients, nothing really helps at all.

in this case, it sounds like he responded very well and perhaps (haven't read more than what's posted above) had not been treated before. at the very least, treated insufficiently well, clearly. it doesn't hurt that he was forced to receive treatment and supervision for a long period of time, and given his high profile case, maybe got the best psychiatric care available to him. i'm happy he was able to get some help.

The board stated in its report: “Tyree Smith is an individual with a psychiatric illness requiring care, custody and treatment.
“Since his last hearing Tyree Smith has continued to demonstrate clinical stability.

So~ he's gonna be added to a secret list of people who basically get their (mandated) medication free, right? People's financial situation tend to worsen at times. 😐

So~ he's gonna be added to a secret list of people who basically get their (mandated) medication free, right?

I would hope so.

Most likely he's on Medicaid. He's going to a group home on a monitoring program and missing doses because he couldn't afford them would be a probation violation. I don't know the exact details, but I'm willing to bet that's how they have it structured.

I feel like threads like this also make a good case that people really, REALLY, don't understand psychosis. Dude doesn't just hear a whisper in his brain and star murdering. Those voices build and build and build until you literally can't hear yourself think. Then you break, your mind isn't your own, the voices have entirely drowned you out and you're tired because they haven't let you sleep in days and you've been off doing who the hell knows because you aren't even in control anymore.

It's a shame there is no spirit realm, he killed these men in vain... so senseless.

sentenced to 60 years

out in 10

It's like doctors might know more about clinical psychology than a judge...

It's almost as if these doctors don't have the foresight to see that in a couple of months he'll end another life

Yes, this is the most important and most frightening in the story.

Jesus fucking Christ....kill one person "sane" and it's life but murder mutilation like a death metal album = insanity (which is curable‽) and you're out in ten years. This country is fucked.

I’m… glad I don’t live in Connecticut. Put this guy on a no-fly list please.

How long before he recommits this crime. 10 years that bullshit.

Given the shitshow that is American healthcare, sooner. Society will fail him, he will commit another crime, everyone will be aghast at his release, and people will feel vindicated for doubting him. I’ve watched this movie before, it ends with US healthcare becoming even worse.

No risk of him repeating the crime unless that guy had two brains and four eyes.

Or maybe he got better and they grew back.

Boy, how much would that suck, then some guy comes and eats your brain and eyes AGAIN. I bet he'd be super pissed.

1 more...

He was sentenced to sixty years in a psychiatric facility, but was cured in ten? Great. Put him in prison for the remaining fifty.

I mean that's the whole point of the insanity plea. He didn't do it for greed or for evil. He had a severe chemical imbalance that they've been able to treat and now he is once more socially viable.

60 years of prison would be to punish somebody for doing something that they knew was wrong, or depending on your world views to make sure that he stays incarcerated for public safety.

They didn't give him 60 years in the funny farm to make him think about what he did. That's the maximum amount of time he was supposed to spend in there if he didn't get it sorted out.

That said, he would be kind of nice if we had a public health system that could check up on this guy once every 30 60 days or so, Make sure he doesn't fall off the wagon on his medication.

Presumably he will be on parole or probation or something, so he will be checking in.

We probably need people with that serious of medication problem to be checked up on for the rest of their lives. He falls through the cracks really bad s*** happens.

Why? For punishment?

Good question. I made my comment hastily, without taking time to think.

I’d have to know more about the judges rationale. Was the plan to keep him out of society for sixty years, or was the original intent actually to help and rehabilitate him?

I let my revulsion carry me away. If he’s cured, then letting him rot in jail wouldn’t help anyone.

He's not cured, he's being treated. And he's not just being released to the generap public, he's still going to be living in a group home, with managed care and accountability.

Those are good things to remember as well. It’s not just “good luck, bye!” The group home and continuing treatment are important. Thank you!

Props to you for admitting that. We all say things in the moment, but most of us aren’t mature enough to admit when we might have been wrong

He ate someone’s brain and eyeballs. He will never be ready to be a part of society. Ever.

Yes, let’s listen to you, someone who most likely has no professional experience in the field of psychology, instead of a bunch of people who did study for it.

He can live next to you

For real, down vote all you want. The fucking guy ate someone. CHEWED. SWALLOWED. ATE. CONSUMED. (eventually) SHAT OUT, A HUMAN.

If you think I’m wrong you can move next door to that fucker and give it a test. Better yet, share an apartment with him

THANK YOU.

Think he's cured let your kids go trick or treat at his place. Maybe they won't look like brain veal to him 🤣

I hate to break up the circle jerk, but the dude is going to a group home. It's not a he can live alone situation, just going from a prison facility to a regular mental health one. At most, he will probably get some supervised outings. Seems fair to me if he is stable and consistent with his meds.

You guys are acting like he's free to teach preschool or something. The dude's going to be spending his life under supervision from people who know more about him and his problems than you do.