close
close

Slender man sting: Morgan Geyser is faced with opposition

A judge in Waukesha County agreed to hear the state's petition on Friday to stop the conditional release of Morgan Geyser, one of two people who stung more than a decade ago that the court granted in January.

The background story:

In a decision in January, judge Michael Bohren Geyser granted the conditional release – it would not be a significant risk to the public or geysis, who now identified as a transgender man.

Register today: Get daily headlines and break Nachrichten -E emails from FOX6 News

The most recent petition has been the fourth time in the past two years that Geyser asked to be released from the facility. Geyser pulled her first two petitions back. Drilling denied the third request and said Geyser had remained a risk to the public at that time.

The same three doctors who rated Gyser last year returned to the Waukesha courthouse in January. In 2024, two of them said that Geyser was not ready to move to a group house. But in January they called Geyser a “bright young woman” who is no longer a danger. The doctors said Geyser no longer heard voices and have not been antipsychotics for years.

Last May, a doctor diagnosed geyser with autism spectrum disorder. Schizophrenia was previously diagnosed at Geyser. The doctors said that none of these things had had Geysers recovery of mental health.

What's next:

In the plan for Geysers, which was due to Geysers, he went to a group house where he was monitored and treated.

The petition, which was submitted to stop the conditional publication, was about concerns about the books with which Geyser was read, and a person with whom the state said was in communication with geyser. The state argued that the book contained graphic content.

Free download: Get Breaking News notifications in the FOX6 News app for iOS or Android.

“I think it is unfair to someone who has already been published and has now interrupted her plan because she has decided to disclose intreatment things that honestly and openly reads and speaks about the questions you have asked,” said Anthony Cotton, Geyser's defender.

Another hearing is planned for Thursday, March 6th. Three doctors who have created reports for the previous hearing.

Slim man case

The background story:

In 2014, Geyser and Anissa Weier were both 12 years old when they attracted Payton Leutner to a Waukesha Park after an overnight stay. Geyser Stach Leutner 19 times while Weier was concerned. Leutner hardly survived.

Geyser and Weier later told the investigators that they wanted to earn the right to be the fictional slim man, and they feared that he would harm their families if they did not carry out the attack.

Weier said guilty of enabling a second degree murder and was also sent to the psychiatric center. She received a release in 2021 to live with her father and was ordered to wear a GPS monitor.

Geyser owed himself guilty of doing an intentional attempt at murder in the first degree and was sent to the Psychiatric Institute for mental illnesses.

The source: The information in this report comes from the Wisconsin Circuit Court and former FOX6 reporting.

Crime and public security tailwanews