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| James S. Brady, shooting
victim and sponsor of the Brady Bill to restrict hand gun purchases (AP) |
Many people perceived John as having “gotten
away with” shooting four people, one of whom was the president of the
United States and another of whom would be permanently afflicted
because of the attack. There was widespread fear that he would soon
be out and about again.
A common scenario, at least in urban folklore if
not in real life, is that of the wily, sophisticated criminal who
fakes insanity, then goes to a mental hospital and is miraculously
“cured” only to stalk the streets and victimize again. |
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| St Elizabeths Hospital |
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However, John was immediately taken to St.
Elizabeths (it has no apostrophe) hospital for the mentally ill that
is operated by the Department of Mental Health. It has a section for
people who have been referred through the court called the forensic
services administration.
There he was given a battery of tests to
determine his psychological status and try to ascertain his potential
for danger. After those tests were analyzed, a report concluded, “his
defective reality testing and impaired judgement combined with his
capacity for planned and impulsive behaviors makes him an
unpredictably dangerous person. Mr. Hinckley is presently a danger to
himself, Jodie Foster, and to any other third party whom he would
consider incidental in his ultimate aims.”
By late 1983, however, he appeared to be
responding to treatment. He seemed less depressed. He also told
therapists that he was no longer obsessed with Jodie Foster and had
fewer thoughts of violence.
In 1983 he also gave an interview to Penthouse
in which he described a “typical day” for him. “I see a therapist,”
he said, “answer mail, play my guitar, listen to music, play pool,
watch television, eat lousy food, and take delicious medication.” He
also said that other patients sometimes ask for his autograph and that
he enjoys his notoriety although not the special restrictions that go
with it.
Two of those restrictions were lifted in 1984.
He was allowed telephone privileges and the hospital quit censoring
his mail. In 1985, he was permitted to take accompanied walks around
the grounds of St. Elizabeths.
John filed a Motion for Conditional Release with
the courts in 1986. A “conditional release” was a transfer to a less
restrictive ward and “city privileges one day per month.” The latter
meant being able to spend one day out of the month unaccompanied and
with no restrictions. The hospital recommended against granting
either request in an affidavit saying, “It is not possible to state
that Mr. Hinckley would not present a danger to the community if
granted such privileges at this time.” The court denied both
requests.
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Hinckley on escorted family
leave
(AP/Wide World) |
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However, on December 28, 1986, St. Elizabeths
most infamous patient was allowed a 12-hour leave to visit his family
at a Prison Fellowship Ministries center. He had a hospital escort
and the car he traveled in was closely tailed by the Secret Service
who had been notified of the visit.
On March 27, 1987, St. Elizabeths told the court
that it thought John was ready to visit his family off hospital
grounds for the Easter holidays. This time, the hospital said, he
would not need an escort. He had been making rapid strides in
therapy, was not the complete loner he had been, and had shown
improvements in major areas.
Government attorneys requested that this be
denied.
Psychiatrist Glenn Miller reported that the
patient had shown remorse for the shootings and quoted John as saying
“that he remembered Mr. Brady in his prayers.” He also said that John
realized that his fixation on Jodie Foster was “ridiculous” and that
she no longer played much part in his “sexual or psychic life.”
Unfortunately for John’s hopes of a holiday, Dr.
Miller dropped a bombshell during questioning by John’s own attorney,
Vincent Fuller.
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| Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme
(AP) |
“His judgement is not perfect,” Dr. Miller said,
“He writes letters to some of his pen pals.” One of those pen pals
was serial murderer Ted Bundy. Another was Lynnette “Squeaky” Fromme
who had been convicted of trying to assassinate President Gerald
Ford. He had also tried to get hold of Charles Manson’s address. |
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Roger Adelman asked for and got a court order to
search John’s room at St. Elizabeths. That search proved somewhat
frightening. Twenty photographs of Jodie Foster were found hidden
there. All had been collected after his hospitalization. That
collection was taken away from him.
There was no Easter holiday outside St.
Elizabeths for John.
In 1988, the Secret Service received a letter
from a mail-order house saying it had received a letter from John
requesting a nude drawing of Jodie Foster. Apparently, his fixation
on the actress had not abated after all.
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