Posted on 05/05/2015 2:59:37 PM PDT by Oldeconomybuyer
An Oklahoma woman slashed the face of her boyfriend's dead ex-girlfriend while the body was on display at a funeral home, police say.
Shaynna Smith, 28, of Tulsa was charged with illegal dissection of a body. She cut the dead woman's hair and slashed the face from her hairline to the tip of her nose during a viewing last Friday at Moore Funeral Home, according to Tulsa police.
The woman, a 38-year-old whose cause of death was not disclosed, "once dated Smith's current boyfriend," Ashley said, but police did not know of a motive for the desecration. The dead woman's makeup was smeared, and Smith allegedly stole her shoes.
(Excerpt) Read more at nbcnews.com ...
Hmmm...if it were 19th Century Oklahoma, I’d almost understand it...sending a rival into the afterlife disfigured, and all.
But now? Not so easy to understand...
....”There are still places for the criminally insane”....
It’s now called Prison.......just ask any prison guard.
What the hell is wrong with people? I’m at a loss on this one.
Never sleep with anyone crazier than yourself.
5.56mm
Guilty. Off with her head.
I’d like to know how the dead girlfriend died.
Creepy and ugly...
We don’t know that the boyfriend isn’t a certifiable lunatic, too.
Uh, maybe Smith had a little more of a grudge than simply slashing the dead woman's face . . .
White people with black names like Shaynna. I think she took that “acting black” thing too far.
Is this “before” picture of the dead woman?
In lieu of flowers?
Psychopath
Extreme insecurity.
Felt the Ex was better looking than herself.
(odds are good that she’s correct on that....)
Now THAT'S true love....
I hope her color is because of the film used or bad lighting. If not, she’s got liver AND heart disease (yellow skin and blue lips).
Consequences
When a party successfully defends criminal charges on a ground of insanity, the consequences vary from jurisdiction to jurisdiction. Usually, the defendant is committed to a mental institution. On the average, a defendant found not guilty by reason of insanity and committed to a mental institution is confined for twice as long as is a defendant who is found guilty and sent to prison. Very few acquitted insanity defendants are given supervised release, and even fewer are released directly following their verdict.
The detention of an insanity acquittee is limited by law. The acquittee must be allowed periodic review in the mental institution, to determine whether continued treatment is necessary. In addition, a hospital facility may not hold an insanity acquittee indefinitely merely because the acquittee has an antisocial personality (Foucha v. Louisiana, 504 U.S. 71, 112 S. Ct. 1780, 118 L. Ed. 2d 437 [1992]).
http://legal-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/Criminally+insane
Jeez...she looks DEAD and SOULESS.
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