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A 28-year-old man who decapitated his mother and displayed her head on the front porch of their home because he believed she was Satan was acquitted of murder by reason of insanity.Judge John Scotillo ruled Tuesday that Karl Sneider of Palatine suffered from mental illness and lacked substantial capacity to appreciate the criminality of killing his 49-year-old mother, Kathryn Sneider.During four days of testimony, four doctors said Sneider was schizophrenic and suffered from delusions and hallucinations.According to court testimony, Sneider told police he was Jesus Christ, his mother was Satan and that her death in January 2003 signaled the triumph of good over evil.According to police and prosecutors, the two got into a fight after she told him he should be committed to a mental
stanley canada hospital. He then stabbed her, cut off her head with a kitchen knife and put her head on the front porch. The next morning he stole a neighbor s car and crashed it before police tracked him down, reports said.Scotillo ordered Sneider to be evaluated by mental health experts within 30 days. The judge will then determine the numb
stanley cup spain er of years and what type of mental-health supervision Sneider will receive. He will remain in Cook County jail until then.Outside the suburban Chicago courtroom, relatives were divided on the ruling.Some wanted Sneider to go to prison and shouted at his father, Warner, who said his son was a troubled man. Don t you understand he s sick Warner Sne
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In grade school you probably learned Newtons apple story around the time you learned that George Washington chopped down a cherry tree, that people in
stanley cup Columbus time thought that the world was flat, or that the Pilgrims celebrated the first Thanksgiving in America and invited the Native Americans t
stanley thermobecher o join them. Since literally none of the latter three stories here are true follow the preceding links for full details , you probably have your doubts about whether Newton actually sat under an apple tree and had something of a eureka moment concerning gravity. It might surprise you to learn, then, that your teachers got one of these stories partially correct. Newton was indeed sitting under an apple tree when he had his so-called eureka moment on how gravity worked. Although, it took him over two decades more to develop the fully-fledged theory of universal gravitation , first published in his Philosophi忙 Naturalis Princip
stanley quencher ia Mathematica on July 5, 1687. He also didnt complete it without some ideas others had already come up with, such as Christopher Wren, Robert Hooke, and Edmond Halley who Halleys comet is named after ; though Newton claims particularly Hooke, who corresponded heavily with Newton on gravity, and his ideas had little real bearing on his work, other than simply to inspire him to continue working on the problem. As Newton stated when Hooke accused Newton of plagiarizing his work: Yet am I not beholden to him for any light into that business but only fo