JoeFromLB
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http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/ht...nohomishhighschoolstabbing1stldwritethru.html
March 1, 2012
The 15-year-old girl accused of stabbing and injuring two other students at Snohomish High School created a "bucket list" while locked up that includes harming a toddler and blowing up a school, county prosecutors said.
...Information about the defendant is included in documents that Deputy Prosecutor Cindy Larsen filed in court Monday seeking to have the case moved from juvenile court to Snohomish County Superior Court. A court hearing will be held next week.
The girl, who turns 16 in April, is charged with assault and attempted murder in the Oct. 24 attack that nearly killed April Lutz and injured Bekah Staudacher, both 15, in a bathroom before the start of school. If convicted as a juvenile the defendant could not be held past the age of 21. If convicted as an adult, she would face up to 25 years in prison.
"The state would have a great deal longer to work at rehabilitating the respondent in the adult system, and the public would be protected from her random acts of horrific violence for many years longer in the adult system," Larsen wrote.
The girl continues to have thoughts of bathing in blood and killing and eating people, despite ongoing psychological treatment and incarceration, Larsen wrote.
March 1, 2012
The 15-year-old girl accused of stabbing and injuring two other students at Snohomish High School created a "bucket list" while locked up that includes harming a toddler and blowing up a school, county prosecutors said.
...Information about the defendant is included in documents that Deputy Prosecutor Cindy Larsen filed in court Monday seeking to have the case moved from juvenile court to Snohomish County Superior Court. A court hearing will be held next week.
The girl, who turns 16 in April, is charged with assault and attempted murder in the Oct. 24 attack that nearly killed April Lutz and injured Bekah Staudacher, both 15, in a bathroom before the start of school. If convicted as a juvenile the defendant could not be held past the age of 21. If convicted as an adult, she would face up to 25 years in prison.
"The state would have a great deal longer to work at rehabilitating the respondent in the adult system, and the public would be protected from her random acts of horrific violence for many years longer in the adult system," Larsen wrote.
The girl continues to have thoughts of bathing in blood and killing and eating people, despite ongoing psychological treatment and incarceration, Larsen wrote.