National Post

Teen pleads guilty in Slender Man case

Stabbing prompted by fictional person

- I van Moreno

• One of two Wisconsin girls charged with repeatedly stabbing a classmate to impress the fictitious horror character Slender Man pleaded guilty Monday, but she still faces a trial in the case next month focused on her mental health.

Anissa Weier, 15, pleaded guilty to attempted seconddegr­ee homicide as a party to a crime, with use of a deadly weapon. She initially faced a charge of attempted first-degree intentiona­l homicide in the 2014 attack on Payton Leutner in a park in Waukesha, a city west of Milwaukee.

Weier spoke at length during the hearing, telling Waukesha County Circuit Judge Michael O. Bohren that she understood her plea and its ramificati­ons. She also explained her motivation for participat­ing in her classmate’s stabbing.

“I believed that if I didn’t go through with it, Slender Man would come and attack and kill myself, my friends and my family.

“Those I cared about the most,” she said.

The plea means her trial next month will look only at whether she is legally responsibl­e for the crime or not guilty because of mental illness. She could face 10 years in prison if she’s found guilty. If not, she’ ll spend three years in a mental hospital.

Prosecutor­s allege she and her co- defendant, Morgan Geyser, stabbed Leutner 19 times in a wooded area following a sleepover, then left her. The girls planned to walk hundreds of miles north to meet Slender Man in a forest. Both suspects were 12 at the time.

Leutner was able to crawl out of the woods in the park to a path where she was found by a bicyclist.

Bohren questioned Weier about the attack. He asked her to describe what happened to ensure she understood her guilty plea.

Weier told the judge she didn’t want to harm Leutner. She said she told Geyser she couldn’t stab her.

“I told her that I couldn’t do it,” Weier said, adding that her co-defendant “asked me whether or not she should do it” when they were in the woods.

“And I just wanted it to be over with so I said, ‘ Go do what you have to do,’ and Peyton was then hurt,” Weier said.

“How was she hurt?” the judge asked.

“Morgan (Geyser) jumped on top of her and stabbed her repeatedly,” Weier said.

Hours after Weier’s plea, Geyser also was in court Monday for a status hearing that focused on scheduling issues before her Oct. 16 trial. She has pleaded not guilty by reason of mental disease to attempted homicide charges in adult court.

The Wisconsin case is the subject of the HBO documentar­y, “Beware the Slenderman.” The film examines how children can become easily drawn into beliefs spread through the Internet.

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