Middletown, CT – Judges: By Reason Of Insanity Man Not Guilty In Killing Jewish Student

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    Stephen Morgan waves to his family as he is escorted out of the courtroom Friday, Dec. 2, 2011 at state court  in Middletown, Conn. Morgan, 32, of Marblehead, Mass., is charged with murdering Justin-Jinich. (AP Photo/The Middletown Press, Catherine Avalone)Middletown, CT – A Massachusetts man was found not guilty by reason of insanity Friday in the 2009 shooting death of a Wesleyan University student after a trial that portrayed him as anti-Semitic and mentally ill as he stalked and harassed the young woman.

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    A three-judge panel agreed with the defense for 32-year-old Stephen Morgan, who will be committed to Connecticut’s maximum-security psychiatric hospital for the criminally insane.

    Morgan, of Marblehead, Mass., was charged with murder and other crimes in her May 2009 death of 21-year-old Johanna Justin-Jinich. The college junior from Timnath, Colo., was shot seven times while working at a bookstore cafe near the liberal arts school in Middletown.

    During the trial, Morgan sat in a chair at the defense table rocking back and forth. At times, he shook his legs up and down.

    Morgan had apparently met Justin-Jinich at New York University in the summer of 2007, police said.

    Police say Justin-Jinich was working at The Red and Black Cafe inside Broad Street Books on May 6, 2009, when Morgan walked in disguised in a wig and glasses and shot her seven times with a handgun before fleeing.

    The shooting caused a scare on and off campus for two days as police searched for the shooter. University officials locked down the campus and a synagogue near the bookstore closed temporarily.

    Before Morgan’s arrest the next day, police announced that he left a journal in the bookstore in which he had written about killing Justin-Jinich, going on a shooting spree on campus and targeting Jews.

    Justin-Jinich’s family is Jewish; her grandmother was a Holocaust survivor. Authorities also said they found an infamous anti-Semitic book, “Protocols of the Elders of Zion,” in Morgan’s motel room.

    Authorities say Morgan wrote in his journal about all the “beautiful and smart” people at Wesleyan, a liberal arts school of about 3,000 students in Middletown, about 18 miles south of Hartford.

    “I think it okay to kill Jews and go on a killing spree at this school,” he wrote.

    During the trial, police testified that on the night before the killing, Morgan searched the Internet on his laptop for information about the Columbine High School and Virginia Tech mass shootings.

    Morgan was at a Meriden convenience store, about 10 miles from the crime scene, when he surrendered to police after seeing his photo in a newspaper. It was late in the evening on the day after the killing. He was charged with murder, intimidation due to bias and carrying a pistol without a permit.

    Madelon Baranoski, a forensic psychologist and Yale University professor, testified that she evaluated Morgan and determined he suffered from paranoid schizophrenia. She said Morgan has delusional thoughts that include prison guards reading his mind, video of his thoughts being shown to his family and fellow inmates monitoring him from strategic locations.

    Baranoski also said Morgan’s mental illness wouldn’t be immediately apparent to others.

    Police officers testified about the series of events at the bookstore, and defense lawyer Richard Brown cross-examined them about the strange behavior of Justin-Jinich’s shooter.

    Police testified the shooter left behind a trail of evidence including his laptop computer, a computer bag containing his journal, the gun and the disguise. They said he fled down a conveyor belt to the basement of the bookstore and ran back up a staircase to an exit door instead of escaping through a door near where Justin-Jinich was shot.

    Justin-Jinich would have graduated from Wesleyan last year. She was a 2006 graduate of the Westtown School, a Quaker boarding school outside Philadelphia. At Wesleyan, friends said she was interested in women’s health issues and hoped to study international public health in graduate school.

    She apparently met Morgan when the two attended a summer class at New York University in 2007, police said. Justin-Jinich filed a harassment complaint against Morgan back then for unwanted and insulting phone calls and emails, but ended up not pursuing criminal charges.

    At the trial, a police detective read aloud an email Justin-Jinich sent to Morgan in December 2008. She wrote: “I am so tired of you STALKING me. Leave me alone! … YOU are the type of person that women take self-defense classes to protect themselves against.”

    A day before Justin-Jinich’s email, Morgan wrote an email to her saying, “When you were upset about not communicating anymore, I thought it was because you needed me. But it was all stupid because I didn’t have a clue what I was doing at the time.”

    In her response, Justin-Jinich said she’d go to police if she ever saw him in person, and she would defend herself if necessary. She accused him of “spamming” her previous email account with “psychotic e-mails” and wrote: “I do NOT want to communicate with you, ever.”

    “I don’t know what went wrong in your childhood or your adult life thus far to make you feel like you have some right to sexually harass me, to track me down on my various email accounts, to feel like you know me when you actually have no idea who I am or what I am capable of to make sure you never talk to me again,” Justin-Jinich wrote. “You don’t deserve to know me and you never will. So stop littering my life.”


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    10 Comments
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    12 years ago

    The verdict of not guilty by reason of insanity, is one which can vary from jurisdiction to jurisdiction. It seems to be accepted with greater prevalence in the northeast, than it would be in the south, or the midwest.
    There are varying opinions amoung psychiatrists, as to the authenticity of such a defense.
    It just seems to be a shame that this individual escaped being sentenced to life in prison, and will instead be sent to a hospital for the criminally insane. I’m sure at some point in the future (i.e. 10 to 15 years), there will be a petition on his behalf to have him released, alleging that “he is no longer a danger to society”. Such criminal predators are never completely cured, and should never be released.

    12 years ago

    #1 : a broad claim that there are “varying opinions amoung [sic] psychiatrists” is not really true. Most psychiatrists do agree that there are diseases that diminish a persons ability to reason, understand the criminal nature of an act, or effectively participate in his/her criminal defense. The issue is not whether NGRI is a valid defense but whether a particular defendant in a particular case meets the criteria. Some defendants have illnesses that can be effectively treated. Some defendants have, for example, personality trait disorders that aren’t amenable to treatment.
    Without knowing the specific clinical details of Stephan Morgan, it is not possible to forecast his future.

    12 years ago

    To #2 - Without a doubt, if this perpetrator had committed his heinous crime in Texas, to use the vernacular, he would have been toast, and would be on death row at the present time. If this defendant was truly insane, he never would have been brought to trial. For example, the shooter who shot up the Federal Capitol in D.C., in the late 1990’s was found to be insane and never went to trial; the same held true for the shooter of Congresswoman Giffords. Yet, this individual was brought to trial, and the three judge panel (too bad that he wasn’t tried by a jury), actually believed the report of the psychiatrists. Perhaps, the same psychiatric team should be utilized by the defense team when the trial of the child killer/ butcher of Borough Park, begins.

    SherryTheNoahide
    SherryTheNoahide
    12 years ago

    This is just sick! I had never heard of this story until today! I had no idea! The main-stream media didn’t bother to cover it I don’t think! (But please correct me if I am wrong.)

    Her poor family! How they must have felt! They raised a beautiful daughter… only to have her life cut so short & never to be married or to have children! How horrific- her whole life was ahead of her. A bright career & future too.

    Whatever punishment they give him won’t be punishment enough, that’s for sure.

    OyGevald
    OyGevald
    12 years ago

    We can possibly agree on the murderer being “insane” but why is it called “not guilty”??? If the murder was commited by him, he’s guilty. Being insane is akin to doing it under the influence (drugs or alcohol etc.) .

    Monseyboy
    Monseyboy
    12 years ago

    I believe that anyone who commits murder should be put to death no matter if he is sane or insane or any of the other exuces that lawyers create.

    Death penalty in every state of the united and, wow watch how all of a sudden all those “insane” people aren’t murdering no more.