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Tag: slender man

  • Slender Man Teens Will Be Tried As Adults

    Slender Man does not even exist. Yet the urban legend created from whole cloth is making headlines still.

    It’s been over a year since Anissa Weier and Morgan Geyser were charged with attempted first-degree intentional homicide in the stabbing of classmate Payton Leutner.

    At the time, all three girls were only 12 years old. Weier and Geyser told police that they stabbed their classmate 19 times to “appease Slender Man.” They said they wanted to be “proxies of Slender Man” and stabbed the girl and left her for him to find. They said they had been planning the deed for months. Miraculously, Leutner survived.

    After rounds of psychiatric testing and testimony, Waukesha County Circuit Judge Michael Bohren decided that the girls remain in adult court to face the charges against them. If found guilty of all the charges they face, and if sentenced to the maximum they could receive, they girls could be nearly 80 years old before they are released.

    Morgan Geyser had previously been found incompetent to stand trial because a state psychologist testified that she sees other fictional characters, including some of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, as well as Harry Potter villain Voldemort.

    For anyone not familiar with the character, Slender Man was created when a contest was held on an Internet forum to see which forum members could come up with the best photo edits that might take on a life of their own outside the site. One member Photoshopped a tall, thin figure into pictures of kids on a playground, then later made up a story to go along with the picture.

    The meme of Slender Man was born. The character did indeed take on a larger life outside the original forum. There are Slender Man costumes or Halloween, lots of fan fiction stories, some poorly written Kindle books, and some movie ideas. The original creator trademarked the name, but does not own all the rights necessary to have complete control of the character creatively. Therefore, no real films have yet been produced, but that may just be a matter of time.

  • Slender Man Attackers Hear from the Judge

    Slender Man supposedly stalks you for a while before he attacks. The scary-as-hell character is said to observe from a distance, driving his planned victims into a “slender sickness” before he attacks.

    Slender Man moves a little closer each day. You think he is gone, only to look up from what you are doing and see him again. Out there waiting.

    Payton Leutner never saw Slender Man coming. She only saw her friends Morgan Geyser and Anissa Weier. All three girls were 12 years old at the time and living in Waukesha, Wisconsin.

    Slender Man supposedly lures or takes his victims into the woods to finish them off. And that is where Morgan Geyser and Anissa Weier allegedly took Payton that day in May of 2014.

    Police say they stabbed her 19 times and left her to die in the woods. Payton did almost die. But she survived. That’s another big difference between this case and Slender Man. With Slender Man, no one ever lives to tell the tale.

    Morgan Geyser and Anissa Weier are both now 13, as is Payton. The two were arrested on May, 31, 2014. They told police that they were doing the bidding of Slender Man. Morgan Geyser told police that Slender Man “watches you.” She also said, “I’ve never seen him. He’s everywhere.”

    Since then, the world has waited to find out whether the girls would be tried in court as adults or as juveniles. Now they have some news from a judge, though it may not be the final word on the matter.

    Judge Michael Bohren ruled that there is enough probable cause for the first-degree attempted homicide charges against Geyser and Weier. Their attorneys were hoping to have the charges lessened. With less severe charges, the case could have been automatically moved to juvenile court. But with the judge’s decision, it stays in adult court for now, but can be moved to juvenile later.

    The next step is something called a “reverse-waiver hearing.” This will allow the defense teams a chance to argue before the judge about whether the case should be heard in juvenile court. Those hearings are scheduled for mid-May and mid-July for each of the accused girls separately.

  • Slender Man Stabbing Suspects Make Chilling Statements About The Night They Tried To Kill Their Friend

    Slender Man is a fictional online character, but he was very real to the two girls who tried to kill their friend to prove his existence.

    In hours of interrogation videos obtained by Wisconsin TV station WISN, the girls each had very different reactions to being held for the attempted murder of their friend, Payton Leutner, as a tribute to Slender Man.

    One of the Slender Man suspects, Anissa Weierm, who was 12 at the time of the crime, seemed anxious and somewhat remorseful.

    When she was asked by a detective if she understood what it means to kill somebody, she said, “I believe it’s ending a life. And I regret it.”

    However, when Slender man suspect Morgan Geyser, also 12, was asked how it felt to brutally stab Payton 19 times and leave her for dead, she reacted in a chilling and disturbingly nonchalant manner.

    She said, “It felt weird. I felt no remorse. I thought I would.”

    During the interview, Geyser’s body and face are not seen, but her arm twitches and swings weirdly as she recounts the events of the night she tried to kill Payton for Slender Man.

    When she was asked how many times she thinks she plunged the knife into her friend, Morgan Geyser retorted, “I don’t know. I didn’t know I was supposed to count.”

    After being brutally stabbed in the name of Slender Man, Payton Leutner managed to drag herself to a bike path that was nearby. A passersby spotted her and called 911.

    Payton recovered over the summer and started school again. Of course, the mental anguish suffered by her may never be over.

    As for the girls who wanted so badly to prove Slender Man exists, they are about to get one serious reality check.

    Anissa Weierm and Morgan Geyser appeared in court last week while their lawyers argued ruthlessly to have their clients not be tried as adults for the hateful and bizarre crime.

    The judge in the case said he will make his decision about how the Slender Man stabbers will be tried on March 13, after he has had time to review the hours of interrogation videos.

    What do you think about Morgan Geyser’s weird behavior during her interview with police?

    Do you think she has any remorse?

  • Slender Man Stabbing Teens Found Competent to Stand Trial

    The Slender Man phenomenon has been a harmless bit of fictional horror for most people. The character was created when a contest was held on an Internet forum to see which forum members could come up with the best photo edits that might take on a life of their own outside the site. One member Photoshopped a tall, thin figure into pictures of kids on a playground, then later made up a story to go along with the picture.

    The meme of Slender Man was born. The character did indeed take on a larger life outside the original forum. There are Slender Man costumes or Halloween, lots of fan fiction stories, some poorly written Kindle books, and some movie ideas. The original creator trademarked the name, but does not own all the rights necessary to have complete control of the character creatively. Therefore, no real films have yet been produced, but that may just be a matter of time.

    What has happened, though, are a few odd crimes that relate to the character. Specifically, two Wisconsin girls — Anissa E. Weier, 13, and Morgan Geyser, 12 — are accused of stabbing another teen 19 times and leaving her for dead back in June. At the time, all three girls were only 12 years old. Weier and Geyser told police that they stabbed their classmate to “appease Slender Man.” They said they wanted to be “proxies of Slender Man” and stabbed the girl and left her for him to find. They said they had been planning the deed for months.

    Geyser had previously been found incompetent to stand trial because a state psychologist testified that she sees other fictional characters, including some of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, as well as Harry Potter villain Voldemort.

    More recently, both girls have been found competent to stand trial. They will be charged as adults under Wisconsin law.

  • Slender Man Stabbing Trial Delayed

    Slender Man Stabbing Trial Delayed

    An attorney for one of the defendants charged with stabbing a classmate to appease the fictional internet entity The Slender Man, argued Tuesday in court that his client is mentally unstable, and is not fit to stand trial. A state doctor has deemed the girl to be mentally fit.

    On May 31, the teen, now 13, along with a friend, lured their 12-year-old classmate into a wooded area in Waukesha, Wisconsin, where they allegedly held her down and stabbed her 19 times. The victim crawled away and was discovered by a cyclist.

    Judge Michael Bohren heard the report of the 13-year-old defendant’s present psychological assessment last week, but didn’t directly act upon it, after defense attorney Anthony Cotton countered that he hadn’t gotten the chance to speak with his client. Bohren advised Cotton to talk with the teen and return to court.

    Cotton asserted that his client is still mentally incompetent, and was receiving the one-on-one care she requires in a mental institution – care she would not get in jail. Cotton added that his client still believes the Slender Man to be real, and hired a doctor that will testify during a December 18 hearing on her behalf.

    According to Kenneth Robbins, the psychiatrist hired by the defense, the defendant was described as being “giddy,” was laughing inappropriately while being interviewed and seemed unconcerned about a lengthy prison sentence.

    “We don’t think anything has changed in terms of her functioning,” Cotton remarked.

    Wisconsin law dictates that suspects in major crimes are to be charged as adults if they are at least 10.

    Here is a documentary concerning The Slender Man:

    While being interviewed by the police, the two attackers admitted that the stabbing was the first step toward becoming “proxies” to The Slender Man. The 13-year-old defendant said she believed that The Slender Man lived in a mansion in Wisconsin, where she and her accomplice could live, after they completed a murder. Both were charged as adults for first-degree intentional homicide, and are facing up to 65 years imprisonment each.

    Commenting on the defendant’ss mental status back in August, Dr. Brooke Lundbohm told the Waukesha County court that the tween is “standing mute.” Lundbohm revealed that the 13-year-old likewise believes in unicorns, thinks she has mind-control capabilities similar to the Vulcan race of Star Trek lore and has conversations with Harry Potter villain Lord Voldemort. She is likewise afraid to mention much about The Slender Man, for fear he would harm her or her family. She also claimed to communicate with the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.

  • ‘Slender Man’ Stabbing Suspect Fit to Stand Trial

    One of two adolescents charged with stabbing a classmate to appease the fictional internet entity The Slender Man, has been deemed fit to stand trial, a Wisconsin judge ruled Wednesday.

    On May 31, the teen, now 13, along with a friend, lured their 12-year-old classmate into a wooded area in Waukesha, Wisconsin, where they allegedly held her down and stabbed her 19 times. The victim crawled away and was discovered by a cyclist.

    Judge Michael Bohren heard the report of the 13-year-old defendant’s present psychological assessment, but didn’t directly act upon it, after defense attorney Anthony Cotton countered that he hadn’t gotten the chance to speak with his client. Bohren advised Cotton to talk with the teen and return to court on Tuesday.

    While being interviewed by the police, the two attackers admitted that the stabbing was the first step toward becoming “proxies” to The Slender Man. The 13-year-old defendant said she believed that The Slender Man lived in a mansion in Wisconsin, where she and her accomplice could live, after they completed a murder. Both were charged as adults for first-degree intentional homicide, and are facing up to 65 years imprisonment each.

    Attorney Cotton declined to comment on the hearing, and had been previously concerned over his client’s mental well-being. Though, his defendant was said to have looked more stable than during earlier hearings – she was dressed casually Wednesday, while sitting calmly. She had previously made court appearances in jail clothes, and would writhe in her seat.

    Wayward tweens like the Slender Man:

    Commenting on the defendant’ss mental status back in August, Dr. Brooke Lundbohm told the Waukesha County court that the tween is “standing mute.” Lundbohm revealed that the 13-year-old likewise believes in unicorns, thinks she has mind-control capabilities similar to the Vulcan race of Star Trek lore and has conversations with Harry Potter villain Lord Voldemort. She is likewise afraid to mention much about The Slender Man, for fear he would harm her or her family. She also claimed to communicate with the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.

    According to Kenneth Robbins, a psychiatrist hired by the defense, the defendant was described as being “giddy,” was laughing inappropriately while being interviewed and seemed unconcerned about a lengthy prison sentence.

  • 12-Year-Olds Stabbing: Friends Did It For Slender Man

    A 12-year-old girl was stabbed 19 times by two of her friends who claim that they did it in order to show their dedication to and obtain the approval of a fictitious creature known as Slender Man.

    According to several stories, Slender Man is a creature who lives in wooded areas and feeds on humans. He is very tall and has long arms and legs, thus earning his name as Slender Man. He often has no face and is usually wearing a long black gown or black clothing.

    One of the girls allegedly told an investigator, “Many people do not believe Slender Man is real … [We] wanted to prove the skeptics wrong.”

    The stabbing occurred in Waukesha, Wisconsin on Saturday. Two 12-year-old girls lured their friend to a park where they stabbed her at least 19 times. The victim managed to crawl to a nearby road and was found by a cyclist who called 911.

    The girl is currently stable, but many of the stab wounds came very close to vital organs and the girl is lucky to have survived the incident.

    The two girls who committed the stabbing admitted to the crime and said that they had planned to stab the girl for several months. They believed that by stabbing the girl, the Slender Man would welcome them into his home. According to one of the girls, Slender Man lives in a mansion in the Nicolet National Forest in northern Wisconsin.

    The girls said that they learned about the character from a website called Creepypasta. After learning of this, the website released a disclaimer saying,

    “This is an isolated incident, and does not represent or attribute the Creepypasta community as a whole. This wiki does not endorse or advocate for the killing, worship, and otherwise replication of rituals of fictional works. There is a line of between fiction and reality, and it is up to you to realize where the line is. We are a literature site, not a crazy satanic cult.”

    An attorney for one of the girls has asked that his client be given a mental evaluation as soon as possible. It is likely the other girl’s attorney will make the same request. Both girls face up to 65 years in prison for their crime.

    Image via Wikimedia Commons

  • 12-Year Old Stabbing Suspects Wanted To Appease “Slender Man”

    12-year old stabbing suspects in Waukesha, Wisconsin now face up to sixty years in prison if convicted of first-degree attempted murder after they lured their friend into the woods and slashed her repeatedly with a knife.

    The two girls–who have not been named because at least one of them may see the case go to juvenile court, where records are sealed–told authorities they have been planning the deed since December and invited the victim to a slumber party, saying they wanted to stab her in the dark so that they wouldn’t have to look her in the eyes. The horrific act was to be done in the name of Slender Man, an impossibly tall, ghoulish creature that has been circulating online for the past few years. In order to get to his realm, one must commit a murder, so on Saturday, the girls took their friend to a nearby park and attacked her, stabbing her several times all over her body. One wound just barely missed her heart, according to reports. She survived and is in stable condition.

    The girls say they planned to run away and live in the mythological creature’s forest home after the killing was over.

    “I recognize their young ages but it’s still unbelievable,” Court Commissioner Thomas Pieper said.

    Slender Man reportedly has long arms which he uses to kidnap children, and the stories have been shared on Creepypasta.com from various users. Since news broke of the attack, the question has arisen of just how affected young people are by the horror genre, whether it be in fiction or film form, and Creepypasta issued a statement regarding their role in the story. You can read the entire statement here.

    “Creepypasta comes from the word copypasta, which itself is a play on the “copy and paste” function. They were short, creepy stories that people spread around the internet for fun. This website is one of the many Creepypasta communities that accept submissions; people write their paranormal stories, I read them and decide which ones I personally like enough to post, and visitors read them and post comments – usually from the perspective of how the author can improve as a writer. I think that, more than other Creepypasta websites, we focus more on being a writer’s community. We have a spin-off site dedicated to getting feedback (don’t use so many ellipses, please don’t write romance stories about serial killers, please remember to proofread – that sort of thing) for authors who ask for blunt community critique and I try to do community promos for writers who self-publish or work on other projects like movies, anthologies, comics, and so on.

    Creepypasta is not solely dedicated to horror and murder or revenge fantasies, despite what some media outlets claim. They come up, of course – but so do ghosts, zombies, angels, mythology, urban legends, conspiracies, lost civilizations, aliens and sci-fi, vengeful deities, as well as real-world struggles, sorrows, and dangers. It’s a wide umbrella of inspiration, to be sure, but I’m sure that anyone who has ever browsed the horror or paranormal or sci-fi sections of a library or bookstore has noticed just how vast the possibilities are within those genres.

    I think that most of you will understand when I say it’s hard to justify pinning blame on an entire genre of writing. Unless you’re okay with blaming the world’s ills on Stephen King or H.P. Lovecraft, I don’t believe that it makes sense to say paranormal writing or an interest in the macabre should be blamed or even used as an indicator of a “sick” person (as a few emails have already felt the need to call both myself and all the authors here). The human race has long held and encouraged a fascination with things that go bump in the night.”

  • Slender Man Story Leads To Two Girls Stabbing Their Friend 19 Times

    On Monday, two 12-year-old girls from Waukesha, Wisconsin were charged as adults for the attempted first-degree intentional homicide of another 12-year-old girl.

    What caused these girls to want to kill one of their best friends? According to police, the girls stabbed the other girl nearly to death to please a mythological creature known as the “Slender Man.”

    The girls claimed to have learned about Slender Man on creepypasta.wikia.com; a site dedicated to horror stories.

    According to the site, Slender Man’s “appearance is that of an abnormally tall human with long arms and no face whom is wearing a business suit.” He has no eyes, mouth, or any other facial features, and is generally over six-feet tall.

    One of the attackers explained that they had planned the attack for months to please the Slender Man so that he would allow them to live with him in the fictional Nicolet National Forest.

    They invited their friend to a slumber party over the weekend, and planned on killing her that night so that they would not have to look into her eyes. They later decided to put it off, but the next day they got together to play hide and seek, and decided they would attack her then.

    One girl told the other to “go ballistic, go crazy.” The girls then stabbed their “friend” 19 times before leaving her to die; one of the stab wounds missed the victim’s heart by only a millimeter.

    The victim stumbled away from the girls, shouting that she hated them, and somehow managed to crawl out of the woods. She was later found by a passing bicyclist, who called the police. The victim was rushed to the hospital and into surgery and, as of Monday, she was listed as being in stable condition.

    The attackers were each given a $500,000 bond, and if they are convicted, they could face up to sixty five years in prison.

    Image via Wikimedia Commons

  • 12-Year-Old Slender Man Devotees Stab Girl 19 Times

    Two twelve-year-old Waukesha, Wisconsin girls have been charged as adults with attempted murder after stabbing a classmate 19 times in an attempt to appease internet folk monster Slenderman.

    For those unfamiliar with Slenderman, he’s a fictional character created in forums five or so years ago. Usually, Slenderman is depicted as a strangely tall, thin man with a blank, white face and a black suit. In his original creation, he was said to stalk and snatch people–especially children. The Slender Man went viral, and began to appear as a character in stories all over the internet–but the largest concentration appears on the online horror fiction site Creepypasta. Since then, Slender Man has popped up in various games and other online collections.

    Basically, Slenderman is an internet legend. But to two clearly troubled pre-teens, he is much more.

    The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel weaves a thoroughly disturbing tale of two young girls, whose devotion to and fear of Slenderman led them to try to kill a friend–after “months” of planning.

    According to the criminal complaint, the two girls originally wanted to kill their victim during a sleepover at one of their houses. That plan eventually morphed into one that involved killing her in a bathroom nearby a skate park. One of the accused said that she “knew there was a drain in the floor for the blood to go down.”

    After than plan didn’t work out (reports indicate one of the girls got cold feet), the two girls lured their victim into the woods for a game of “hide and seek.”

    From the Sentinel:

    W—- then suggested they go for a walk, pointing out a wooded area near Rivera Drive and Big Bend Road. They could play hide and seek, distract the victim, then kill her. G—- was the first “seeker,” and W—- and the victim hid. W—- told the victim where to hide and told her to lie facedown in the dirt. The girl refused. W—- then pushed the victim and sat on her, thinking G—- could stab her. But the victim began to yell and complain that she couldn’t breathe. She was attracting attention, so W—- got off her.

    Geyser gave W—- the knife, but W—- said she told G—- she was too squeamish and gave it back.

    W—- said that once G—- got the knife back, G—- told W—-, “I’m not going to until you tell me to.” W—- said she started walking away from G—- and then told her, “Go ballistic, go crazy.” G—- said she would go ballistic, and W—- said, “Now.”

    W—- said G—- then tackled the victim and started stabbing her. The victim was screaming. W—- said when G—- got off the victim, the victim screamed, “I hate you. I trusted you.”

    Jesus.

    The girls reportedly told police that they wanted to kill their classmate as an offering or sorts to Slenderman, to “prove themselves worthy.” They also said that the thought killing their classmate would protect them and their families from Slenderman, who would then invite him to his mansion in the woods.

    More from The Sentinel:

    G—- said they had to do it or “he would kill our family.” When asked who “he” was, G—- said she didn’t know him. When asked what she was trying to do when she stabbed her friend, G—- said, “I may as well just say it: Kill her.”

    When asked about Slender Man, G—- said she had never met him but said he watches her and he can read minds and teleport. G—- said what she did was “probably wrong.” She asked a detective if it is illegal to stab someone in self-defense. The detective said sometimes, and asked her if that was what happened in this instance.

    No, she said.

    Both girls are facing up to 65 years in prison. Miraculously, the victim was able to walk out of the woods after being stabbed 19 times and was eventually found by a passing bicyclist. She’s currently in stable condition.

    Claiming to have already received calls for “censorship and the shutdown of the wiki,” Creepypasta admin Sloshedtrain has posted a blog entry where they discuss the line between fiction and reality.

    “This is an isolated incident, and does represent or attribute the Creepypasta community as a whole. This wiki does not endorse or advocate for killing, worship, and otherwise replication of rituals of fictional works. There is a line of between fiction and reality, and it is up to you to realize where the line is. We are a literature site, not a satanic cult,” says the post.

    “Of course, only a small minority of people (mostly newcomers) on the wiki (and the Internet) truly believe what they read here. And for most people, they will not attempt replicate atrocities presented in some of the literature on the wiki. Something like this was bound to happen, considering the size of Creepypasta community. All it take is one person to do something insane and radical in the name of someone or something.”

    This was clearly a horrible, screwed up thing that happened in Waukesha. And as this story continues to spread, it’s important that that horrible, screwed up thing cannot be blamed on a website or a video game.

    Image via Wikimedia Commons