
MADISON, Wis. (AP) — A Wisconsin woman who almost killed her sixth-grade classmate to please the fictional horror villain known as Slender Man was ordered back to a state psychiatric hospital Tuesday after she escaped from her group home last month.
Waukesha County Circuit Judge K. Scott Wagner granted a state Department of Health Services request to revoke 23-year-old Morgan Geyser’s release privileges. Geyser told the judge through her attorney, Tony Cotton, last week that she would not fight revocation. Wagner then approved the request during a short hearing.
Cotton didn't immediately respond to an email message seeking comment.
Geyser and her friend Anissa Weier lured their classmate, Payton Leutner, to a Waukesha park in 2014. Geyser stabbed Leutner 19 times while Weier cheered her on. A passing bicyclist discovered Leutner, who barely survived. All three girls were 12 years old at the time.
Geyser and Weier later told investigators they attacked Leutner in hopes of impressing Slender Man enough that he would make them his servants and wouldn't hurt their families. Both of them were eventually committed to the Winnebago Mental Health Institute — Geyser for 40 years and Weier for 25 years.
Weier earned conditional release in 2021. Wagner granted Geyser conditional release this past September despite warnings from state Department of Health Services officials that she couldn't be trusted.
Geyser was placed in a Madison group home. Authorities say that on Nov. 22 she cut off her GPS monitor and fled the state with a 43-year-old companion. Police arrested both of them the next day at a truck stop outside Chicago, about 170 miles (274 kilometers) south of Madison.
Geyser's companion told WKOW-TV that the two of them became friends at church and had been seeing each other daily for the last month. Geyser decided to escape because she was afraid the group home would no longer allow them to see each other, the companion said.
Slender Man was created online by Eric Knudsen in 2009 as a mysterious figure photo-edited into everyday images of children at play. He grew into a popular boogeyman, appearing in video games, online stories and a 2018 movie.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
What's an atmospheric river? AP explains the weather phenomenon - 2
Google to Use Natural Gas to Power Massive Data Center in Texas - 3
Katz to Hezbollah chief Qassem: You won't live to see Israel’s full response to Passover attacks - 4
Earth's newfound 'episodic-squishy lid' may guide our search for habitable worlds - 5
Sea level doesn’t rise at the same rate everywhere – we mapped where Antarctica’s ice melt would have the biggest impact
Palestinians protest against Israel's new death penalty law
Illegal entries into Germany halve over two years, border police say
What will the Artemis 2 astronauts eat during their historic moon mission? (video)
Figure out How to Adjust Work, Life, and an Internet based Degree
NASA Artemis II tracker: Where is the Orion now and when will it reach the moon?
Family-Accommodating Snow Sports Experiences
EU Commission slams Israel's death penalty law for Palestinians
Germany's first Omani LNG shipments arrive despite Middle East disruptions
Massive supernova explosion may have created a binary black hole













