79°
forecast

Hinckley attorney argues for more Williamsburg visits

Posted to: Crime News Williamsburg - James City

By JESSICA GRESKO

WASHINGTON

An attorney for the man who tried to assassinate President Ronald Reagan told a judge Thursday that his client has shown he is not dangerous and should therefore be allowed more time away from a Washington mental hospital.

John Hinckley, who shot and wounded Reagan outside a Washington hotel in 1981, has spent most of the past three decades confined to St. Elizabeths Hospital in Washington. In recent years, however, he has been allowed to visit his mother's home in Williamsburg, Va., for up to 10 days at a time. During a series of hearings that began in November, his lawyer has urged a judge to grant Hinckley longer visits of 17 and 24 days and ultimately allow him to be away from the hospital full time.

On Thursday, a judge heard closing arguments in the hearings, which have taken place sporadically but lasted a total of two weeks. Government lawyers are asking that Hinckley's visits be kept to 10 days for now. Hinckley's attorney, Barry Levine, said his client is ready for longer stretches of freedom.

"Not once during any one of these releases has Mr. Hinckley done anything violent or dangerous," Levine said of the more than a dozen visits Hinckley has made to his mother's home.

A jury found Hinckley to be insane when he shot Reagan in an effort to impress actress Jodie Foster. Doctors say his mental illness has been in remission for years, however, leading a judge to grant Hinckley increasingly longer stretches away from the hospital.

During closing arguments, Levine was critical of the government's arguments to limit Hinckley's visits, saying it was illogical to argue that 10-day visits are safe but 17-day visits are not. He also disputed government evidence that Hinckley continues to be deceptive.

Earlier during the hearings, the government presented evidence from U.S. Secret Service agents trailing Hinckley. The agents said that on one occasion when Hinckley was supposed to be going to the movies, he was at a bookstore looking at shelves that held books about Reagan and the assassination attempt.

Levine said Hinckley neither picked up nor read any of those books.

"Glancing at books does not equate to danger," Levine said.

Levine also called into question the testimony of a bookstore employee who said he believed that Hinckley on another occasion asked him about new books on the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.

Levine said the government sent the Secret Service to follow Hinckley and find some transgression on his part only when it was clear there would be hearings about his release. The Secret Service didn't follow him at other times because the government really doesn't believe he is dangerous, Levine said.

However, government prosecutor Nihar Mohanty said in his closing argument that Hinckley needs more monitoring — not less. Hinckley has been deceptive on several occasions with people at the hospital, looked at online photographs of his dentist without her permission and lied about movies he was supposed to see while visiting his mother, Mohanty said.

Mohanty said Hinckley should first be accepted into treatment at an outpatient mental health facility near his mother's home before his visits are extended to 17 days apiece. During the visits Hinckley should also have to wear an ankle bracelet when he is not accompanied by someone such as his mother; that way authorities can ensure they always know where he is, Mohanty said.

U.S. District Court Judge Paul L. Friedman told attorneys not to expect his decision until April or May. Hinckley's 10-day visits will continue during that time.

Speaking after the hearing Levine quoted President Franklin Roosevelt in suggesting his client is not a danger.

"To quote another president, 'There's nothing to fear but fear itself,'" he said.

COMMENTS ADVISORY: Users are solely responsible for opinions they post here; comments do not reflect the views of The Virginian-Pilot or its websites. Users must follow agreed-upon rules: Be civil, be clean, be on topic; don't attack private individuals, other users or classes of people. Read the full rules here.
- Comments are automatically checked for inappropriate language, but readers might find some comments offensive or inaccurate. If you believe a comment violates our rules, click the report violation link below it.

What is the court thinking?

This guy tried to kill the President. Sane, insane, whatever, letting him out of confinement for even a minute should never be considered. Same applies for anyone who tries to or succeeds in killing any other person.

if he's so cured?

Then he's no longer insane & should be placed into a Federal prison for the attempted murder of President Reagan, NOT RELEASED from a mental hospital. That alone should get you a life sentence. & besides, ask any cancer survivor what "REMISSION" means. Their cancer is not cured completely & can come back @ any time. What happens when this comes back & he decides he wants to impress another imaginary girlfriend & shoots another famous person, or just a nobody like you or me? What's so hard to understand. He's not cured, Keep him locked up, he's darn lucky to be allowed any time away from the hospital let alone being allowed more time away, until he doesn't have to go back. Remember, he tried to kill a sitting President, & almost did!

Let the guy be

He's been spending large hunks of time in public for years. If there was going to be a problem there would already have been one. I have friends who live near his mom. They've seen him walking around the neighborhood just like anyone else would.

Get him out of the hospital and off the taxpayers payroll.

Just like

anyone other mentally ill person who tried to kill the President and shot several other people as well.

sure

he is cured... Did you see the news report the other night? The secret service followed him to the Barnes and Noble and he went right to the history section and looked transfixed as he looked at books on assassinations. Are you prepared to let Sirhan Sirhan out? This is ridiculous. Let him live with Levine (who by the way is kind of rude and obnoxious during interviews). Big fat no on this one.

Lawyer

OK, he is so cured let the Lawyer adopt him and keep him at HIS house. Hickley's Mother is 85, and can not watch him full time and be sure he remains on his medication. I do not think he should be allowed out of St. Elizabeth's.

Get real...

The man had no mental issues his entire life leading up to that fateful moment when he tried kill the President of the United States. He had that one single moment where he went haywire and pulled the trigger, and has been just fine since then? Sounds like a load of BS to me. He should not even be allowed out for 10 seconds let alone 10 days.

Spot on Backdot. The man

Spot on Backdot. The man isn't insane, never has been. Just claimed that so he'd stay out of a real prison. Throw away the key to his cell door.

"in remission for years"

"in remission for years" And what happens when that remission ends? Will the judge and lawyer take responsibility for letting him out, knowing that remission is not the same as cured?

The unpopular opinion

I have worked in mental health for many years, with people of varying degrees of severity of illness. I am here to tell you with certainty that someone who has been adjudicated "Not Guilty By Reason of Insanity - NGRI" stands a much greater chance of being a contributing member of society then someone who committed a similar crime and is released. The person with NGRI status will continue to have very tight controls on their time. Certain requirements will need to be met, or he runs the risk of jail or re-hospitalization. Because of this they generally have very good outcomes in recovery. And while yes, trying to assassinate the President is very serious, I have seen people who have murdered others in heinous ways become great citizens

Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.
Please note: Threaded comments work best if you view the oldest comments first.

More articles from: Crime rss feed    News rss feed   


Toolbox