Crime Stories with Nancy Grace - 12-year-old Mastermind Convicted for Stabbing, Leaving Bestie for Dead to Be Released
Episode Date: January 18, 2025Two girls stab their best friend 19 times. Why? They wanted to appease the fictional horror character, Slender Man. Both girls serve time in a mental health facility. Anissa Weier was granted conditio...nal release in September 2021. She was required to receive outpatient psychiatric treatment and was subject to GPS monitoring – though the monitoring was waived in September of last year. Now a Wisconsin judge decides Morgan Geyser is well enough to be released from the Winnebago Mental Health Institute she has been in for the last seven years. She will be moved to a group home where her mental health will be continue to be monitored. Three medical experts testified that Geyser has made considerable progress, which convinced a judge that she doesn't pose a safety risk outside hospital walls. Joining Nancy Grace to discuss the case: Troy Slaten – Los Angeles Criminal Defense Attorney, Slaten Lawyers, APC; Twitter/X: @TroySlaten Dr. Daniel Bober – Forensic Psychiatrist, Chief of Psychiatry Memorial Regional Healthcare Systems, Assistant Clinical Professor at Yale University School of Medicine; Instagram: drdanielbober Joe Scott Morgan – Professor of Forensics: Jacksonville State University, Author, “Blood Beneath My Feet,” and Host: “Body Bags with Joseph Scott Morgan;” Twitter/X: @JoScottForensic Levi Page - CrimeOnline Investigative Reporter Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Crime Stories with Nancy Grace.
Little Peyton Lautner was just 12 years old when she was lured to the woods and stabbed repeatedly
in a sickening attack, left for dead. The two perps, her 12-year-old friends,
in the last days, a stunning blow to the victim. I'm Nancy Grace. This is Crime Stories. Thank you
for being with us. That's right. In the last days, the Slender Man stabber, Morgan Geyser, is set to be released from prison despite the little victim,
Peyton Lautner's anguished pleas. Geyser and co-defendant Anissa Weir just 12 when they
attacked their little friend, Peyton Lautner. Since that time, Geiser has been in a psychiatric facility,
but in the last days, a judge grants her release. This over the anguished pleas of the victim
and her family. What happened that horrible night? Sir, you still there? Yes. Hi, sir. So are you with this 12-year-old female? Yes.
She says she's having trouble breathing.
She said she was stabbed multiple times.
Stabbed multiple times?
Yes.
Okay, sir. Are you with her right now?
Yes.
Is she awake?
She's awake.
Is she breathing?
Yeah, she's breathing.
She said she can take shallow breaths.
She's alert.
Okay, stay with her.
We're sending the police department.
Don't hang up, okay?
Hold on just a minute.
Don't hang up.
Okay.
Okay.
Hold on just a minute, sir.
We're sending officers.
Is there any assailant around?
I didn't even look.
I don't see anybody.
Okay, stay right with her, sir.
Is she on the ground or is she standing up?
No, she's laying on the grass.
Is there any bleeding going on?
Her clothing has got blood on it.
Where are the wounds? Do you see where the wounds are?
No, I don't know if I should be rolling her over and checking or not.
Do you know where?
Okay, just stay with her and just let me know if she's conscious or alert or stops breathing or anything.
Hold on a minute. Talk to the ambulance. Police are also en route.
Okay, so do you see any active bleeding or blood spurting out or anything like that?
No, unless it's underneath there. I just see dried blood.
Okay, just dried blood. Okay.
You are hearing a 911 call that becomes even more chilling when you realize the victim is a 12-year-old little girl.
The victim speaks out. Listen to our friends at TMJ4.
Weier told police planning the attack made her scared,
but she wanted to prove Slenderman skeptics wrong.
I was scared because A, I would never see my family again.
And B, I was kind of hopeful to prove that I wasn't crazy.
Geiser says the victim, Peyton, had been her best friend for years.
She says she didn't choose Peyton, but went along with it.
We stabbed her.
That was weird.
Did you stab her or had a use of it?
Where did I?
Most of the time I did.
I wanted to hurt people before, but they're not nice to me, so they deserve it.
A little girl saying before I wanted to hurt people and they deserved it?
Two girls, Morgan Geyser and Anissa Weir.
Could they possibly have lured their 12-year-old little best friend out into the woods and then stabbed her, leaving her for dead?
That's what police are reporting.
Right now to CrimeOnline.com investigative reporter Levi Page.
Levi, take me back to the night.
This little girl was stabbed multiple times, left for dead, bleeding out, left to, quote, bleed out in the woods.
You'd think it was a sex offender, a registered sex offender, a pedophile, a maniac.
But it turns out it's two little girls.
Yes, Nancy.
May 30th, 2014, Morgan Geyser is celebrating her birthday.
She had turned 12, and she invited two of her classmates, her friend Peyton Lutner and Anissa Weir, who are also 12, over to her home. They
went skating. They ate frozen yogurt. They had a slumber party. Okay, stop, stop, stop, stop right
there. Jason Oceans. This is just like every other kid's birthday party, Jason Oceans. You've got
two children. You've lived through it. It makes it worse to me when it's a wolf in sheep's clothes, Joe Scott, that this was supposed to be an innocent, fun birthday party for little 12-year-old girls.
I mean, really.
Yeah, you would think that they'd be completely and totally safe.
But, yeah, and your defenses are down, wouldn't you think, 12 years old? Who's going to expect that this kind of behavior is going to rise up among what would seemingly be a few innocent little children?
I mean, Chloe Steiger, 36 years, Seattle PD, 22 years, homicide detective.
I mean, I've seen plenty of 12-year-old killers.
I'm not proud of it, but I had to do a stint in juvenile, but usually they're 12-year-olds going on 25, dopers, you know, getting their parents drugs, mental issues that nobody knew about.
Those types of killings by 12-year-olds.
But two little suburban 12-year-old girls having a birthday party?
Really?
Have you ever seen anything like that, Chloe?
Because I have not.
I've never seen anything of the 12 year old. I've seen something very
similar with some like 16 year old boys
who were like, you know, not criminal boys
that lured one of their friends into the woods and killed
them because of an argument over a girl.
But this is really an anomaly
and like you said, I've arrested
I think the youngest I've arrested is 13
but that was a gang bang thing, you know,
and a long history of violence before that.
So it's really unusual.
A lot different from a little girl's sleepover in suburbia to Dr. Daniel Bober.
It's like when, let me just compare it to a little old lady you pass in the street and she's got a walker and she pulls out an Uzi on you and takes your money and runs.
You don't see it coming.
What am I trying to say?
Put it in forensic psychiatric words.
Well, Nancy, it's a little bit different than an old lady.
A 12-year-old doesn't really have the capacity to make those types of.
I'm saying you don't see it coming, Bober.
I know there's a difference in a little old lady and a 12-year-old girl.
What I'm saying is the whole wolf in sheep's clothing thing, Bober.
Yeah, well, I agree with you. You definitely don't see it coming. It's not something you
would ever see coming. I agree with you on that. Wait, you're the renowned forensic psychiatrist
and your takeaway is, yeah, Nancy, it's something you don't see coming. That's it? I've already said
that, Dr. Bober. You're going to have to think of something impressive and psychiatric right now.
Well, let me just say that if it was something we would see coming,
then this wouldn't even be a story that we'd be talking about.
But my point is that it's something that you would not expect out of a 12-year-old,
but when it happens, it's something that is explainable by the fact that
they don't really have the capacity to weigh the future consequences of their actions.
Well, you're certainly right about that.
Levi Page, see, all you had to do was say skating rink and everything went sideways.
Let's just go back to the party. What happened?
So they had a sleepover, and after the sleepover, in the morning, the three girls went to the park.
They went for a walk, and this was Morgan Geiser and Anissa Weir's idea they went for a walk. And this was Morgan Geyser and Anissa Weir's idea to go for
a walk. So they went out into the woods. And while they were in the woods, they were playing hide and
seek, or they were pretending to play hide and seek. And they told Peyton Lautner to lay down
in the leaves and that they were going to hide. Well, instead, Morgan Geyser pulled out a knife
and stabbed her 19 times.
And this is after they have a spend the night with the little girl, the three of them besties.
Take a listen to our friend David Muir at ABC 2020 with Angie Geyser, Morgan's mom.
Peyton was so, so excited.
The girls met in fourth grade, Peyton drawn to Morgan because she was a loner who needed a friend.
I made friends with her when I saw that she didn't have any friends at all.
Also at that sleepover, Anissa Wire, who was new to the school and who had grown close to Morgan.
They played up in Morgan's bedroom, ran up and down the stairs, giggling and laughing.
And I mean, it was just a normal night.
But there was nothing normal about what happened the next morning
when Morgan and Anissa suggest they all go to the park and then to the woods together.
Anissa told me to lie on the ground and like cover myself in like sticks and leaves and stuff.
But it was really just a trick.
Crime Stories with Nancy Grace.
Bombshell. In the last days, the slender man stabber Morgan Geiser is set to be released from prison. When the little 12-year-old victim was stabbed multiple times and left for
dead, the victim's family relieved she managed to pull through. And now, at the 10-year mark
of the brutal stabbing, we learn the perp is set to be released.
Recall, she was sentenced to 40 years behind bars.
That sentence went down in 2018.
It's only been six years since the sentence occurred.
What happened the night a 12-year-old little girl was lured to her planned death by Slenderman devotees.
Morgan said, don't be afraid. I'm only a little kitty cat.
And jumped on top of Bella and stabbed her repeatedly.
And do you remember when it started?
Kind of. I didn't feel anything because my body was in shock.
They told me to lay down.
You'll lose blood slower.
Like, we're going to go get help.
And she tried to get up.
Yeah, she tried to get up.
She said that she couldn't see, she couldn't walk,
and that she couldn't breathe.
And they told her they were going to go get her help.
But Anissa flat out said, no, we weren't getting her help.
We wanted her to die.
I got up and then just walked until I hit a patch of grass where I
could lay down. A bicyclist notices Peyton bloodied and lying in the grass. He calls 911.
You're hearing our friends at ABC 2020. That was David Muir with Peyton along with Detective
Trussoni. Did you notice, Joseph Scott Morgan, that the little victim, the 12-year-old Peyton, says,
oh, by the way, when you hear them refer to Bella, that's her nickname.
Peyton's nickname is Bella.
Did you hear her say, I didn't feel anything?
What does that mean?
Well, that means, and she's actually, in some of her interviews, she's gone on to say that she was in shock.
And I'm sure that that's what's been conveyed to her because she would have asked, why didn't I feel anything? It's a primal response that we have to being attacked like this.
And Nancy, this little girl was stabbed 19 times over a variety of areas in her body. So after a
period of time, the body is beginning to shut down just so that she's not going to feel this response.
Man, I've always heard of your body going into shock and you don't feel things.
You know, Jason, you and I have discussed this many, many times.
Jason Ocean is with me, veteran defense attorney in the tri-state area, New York, New Jersey,
Pennsylvania.
Jason, I always wondered about my fiancé when he was murdered.
You know, he was shot five times in the neck, the face, the head.
I always hoped that he went into shock and didn't understand or know what was happening,
that he was alive, and then he was gone.
But I also know that when he got to the hospital, even after all that,
he was physically still alive, his heart was still beating.
So I guess it's a blessing when people physically go into shock. For sure, Nancy, you know, as the doctor said, that's a natural reaction.
And, you know, you listen to the testimony of, and you're just, you're shocked as well.
You know, she reacted that way, and the 12-year-old,
the scenario of what happened to her, she explains it.
It would be only natural and in some way a blessing that she doesn't feel that physical pain of being stabbed 19 times.
You know, I've noticed it with my daughter, Lucy.
The other day we tried, what a scene, to take Fat Boy for a walk.
I even had him on a leash.
Somehow he wiggled out.
He's a dachshund mix.
He wiggled out of the leash.
He took off running and got between two Rottweilers.
He started the fight with two Rottweilers in between them.
And I immediately take off, which was completely wrong, but I instinctively tried to pull him out from between the two Rottweilers in between them. And I immediately take off, which was completely
wrong, but I instinctively tried to pull him out from between the two Rottweilers,
who basically just ignored him, thank goodness. But he was, I guess, fighting with himself,
trying to egg them on. But I turned back quickly because I yelled at the children,
stay away, go back, don't come over here. Lucy had just frozen. She was still standing in the same position,
holding the leash in her hand, dangling. John David was jumping up and down, yelling and running
around in circles and trying to come over. But Lucy froze. And I've noticed that. Dr. Bober,
what is that instinct when you are in shock and you just freeze?
Well, Nancy, they talk about fight or flight, but it's really fight, flight or freeze. And that's the freeze. And the freeze is sort of what we call dissociation,
where you're disconnected from your thoughts and your emotions when you become too overwhelmed.
That's what it is. Floyd Steiger with me, 22 years homicide detective and author of Homicide,
The View from Inside the Yellow Tape. Floyd, have you seen that on criminal scenes before where witnesses, defendants, victims
just freeze in the moment?
I have several times.
And I've also talked to a lot of people who have been stabbed and survived.
And they said the same thing.
They didn't even know they were being stabbed.
They thought they were just being punched.
And fortunately, I could talk to some parents of a young girl that was stabbed to death
and tell them she probably didn't suffer before she died.
And that means a lot to them because it is.
I mean, I hear it all the time.
I've heard it over my entire career.
I didn't even know I was being stabbed.
I just thought I was being punished.
So, I mean, that is a blessing.
I've heard it, too.
I have heard that, too.
Well, that is what this little girl was saying, that she didn't feel anything at the beginning.
Listen.
Do you remember leaving the park to go to the woods?
They just wanted to go on a walk, and I didn't think much of it.
It's just a walk.
It's in Waukesha.
Like, what bad stuff happens in Waukesha, Wisconsin?
After we go into the woods, we say we're going to put you in a hide-and-seek.
Anissa told me to lie on the ground and like cover myself in like sticks and leaves and stuff but
it was really just a trick
I give it back to her and say you do go ballistic and she said okay I'll go ballistic whenever
when you say you want me to and I'm like when I'm five feet away I said now I'm like I'm like, I'm a go ballistic, go crazy, make sure she's down.
What did you do next?
I already told you.
What was that?
Stab, stab, stab, stab, stab.
When you hear them describe to investigators at NISA, telling Morgan just to do it, I think the word was go ballistic.
Oh, I remember that. I do remember
them chatting right next to me while I was just laying there. Stabbed 19 times and left by her
attackers to, quote, bleed out dead in the woods. The shock, her attackers are two other 12-year-old
little girls. The victim, who miraculously survived. Her mom says doctors
claim that they found one of the stab wounds about an eighth of an inch from one of her
arteries, an eighth of an inch between life and death. How could two 12-year-old little besties
do something like this?
Listen to our friend David Muir with Peyton.
After they stabbed her 19 times, they encouraged her just to lay down in the woods and rest.
What they really wanted her to do was bleed out in the woods.
Do you remember what you said to them?
I trusted you, and then they told me to lay down.
You'll lose blood slower.
Like, we're going to go get help.
Did she try to get up?
Yeah, she tried to get up.
She said that she couldn't see.
She couldn't walk.
And just that she couldn't breathe.
And they told her they were going to go get her help.
But Anissa flat out said, no, we weren't getting her help.
We wanted her to die.
Do you remember the moment they left you?
I think I remember them running away.
But I kind of just laid there for a minute.
You walked out of the woods?
I got up, grabbed a couple trees for support, I think, and then just walked until I hit a patch of grass where I could lay down.
It's amazing that she had the strength to do that with the injuries that she had. When I told her that the girls were in custody, it seemed to give her a sense of relief.
The girls were ultimately arrested
for first-degree attempt homicide.
Two 12-year-old girls had a plan for six months
to kill their friends.
You don't often see this with adults,
and to have this happen between 12-year-olds
is absolutely horrifying.
Can I ask you a question?
Yes.
Where is Bella's body now?
Bella's at the hospital.
Okay.
I thought it was still out there.
The crime scene.
Did you make sure she died?
Yes.
She is alive.
Okay.
Have you ever watched any of those interrogations?
I watched a little bit.
What was your reaction?
It was a little shocking to me to see that they had this big, huge plan that they had been working on for months.
A big, huge plan they had been working on for months?
A little girl has a spend-the-night birthday party with her other 12-year-old friends.
The three of them go for a walk,
and the two friends, Mark and Geyser and Anissa Weir,
execute a long-planned scheme to murder Peyton Lautner,
just 12 years old, also known as Bella.
You are hearing our friend David Muir at 20-20 speaking.
A huge plan that they had for months, but why?
Listen.
This is where the story takes another turn to a fictional character on the Internet. It's full of horror stories that are meant to purposely scare you.
And there's one of them called Slender Man.
Who's Slender Man?
He's this tall, faceless man who preys on children.
At his own will, he can exploit these tendrils from his back
and strangle his victim.
For both the creepypasta and Anissa, he targets children most.
Anissa explained to me that to prove yourself worthy to Slender,
you would have to kill somebody.
Or he said, you have to kill Bella.
You have to kill someone to go live with Slenderman.
You're hearing our friend David Muir and detectives during the investigation
of the attempt to stab little 12-year-old Bella dead.
Crime Stories with Nancy Grace. The Slender Man stabber set to be released. Are you kidding? This is after
psychiatrists argue against her release, feeling she still poses a threat to society. One shrink
even taking the stand to state that Geiser was actually faking psychotic symptoms at the time of the stabbing and that if
she is currently released, she presents a significant risk of bodily harm to herself
and others. Will she go back and seek out the victim? What happened at the time of the stabbing?
Levi Page with me, CrimeOnline.com investigative journalist. Who is Slender Man?
So this is a fictional character, Nancy, that is very prevalent in creepypasta communities.
And creepypasta communities is like horror stories that people tell on forums like Reddit.
It's very popular there.
And this is a guy that someone drew, an artist, and he has a featureless face.
He's tall, thin. He's often wearing a suit. He looks very ghost-like. And he likes to stalk
and traumatize children in these creepypasta stories. He also uses mind control to tell them
what to do. And apparently, Morgan Geyser was obsessed with Slender Man. When law enforcement
got a search warrant for her room, they found drawings of Slender Man. She had researched him
on the internet, had read creepypasta stories about him. And they also found that she had been
thinking about murder for a long time because months in advance of this attack,
she had searched on the internet how to get away with murder.
Well, there's everything you need to show premeditation to defense attorney Jason Oceans.
The girls tell police they were convinced to murder their little friend, Peyton Lautner,
known as Bella, by Slenderman. Slenderman's not real, Jason.
He's fictional. And how can both girls have the same psychiatric delusion at the same time? That's
the same thing I keep talking about all of Epstein's guards in the jail. How can they all
fall asleep at the same time and leave him to be found dead how can two little girls have the same
psychiatric break with reality this was just their excuse for murdering their little friend
they are murderers nancy i i analogize uh this type of uh you know, mind control that the young lady placed in this Slenderman character to, you know, Jim Jones or any cult or David Koresh, where people are willing not only to sacrifice themselves, but their children in belief.
And those are adults, right?
Brain formed out all the way by 22, right?
And these are adults with children.
And you would think, my God,
you know, sacrifice yourself. How do you do your children? It does shock the conscience that this
happened. And clearly from, you know, monitoring your children and, you know, creepy pasta stories
because they're creepy with fun, but noticing some differences in your children with being withdrawn or, you know, just something more sinister is the responsibility of parenting.
You can't just be disengaged when your child has been having seemingly these thoughts, murderous thoughts for so long.
You've got to see a change in your child.
You just can't be an absentee parent.
What about it?
Dr. Daniel Bober joining me, forensic psychiatrist out of the Florida jurisdiction.
Apparently the parents knew nothing, had no idea anything was going on with their children.
Yeah, Nancy, you see this a lot.
For example, I remember during the Columbine shootings,
parents had no idea that Klebold and Harris were stockpiling weapons in their own garage.
Like they never bothered to check that there were weapons being stockpiled in their garage.
So unfortunately, this is something that happens with parents.
They just kind of give their kids these electronic babysitters like cell phones.
They're not really paying attention to what's going on.
But in regards to what you said before, yes, of course, the kids did not have the same delusion.
But sometimes when you get two kids together, and one of them has a more dominant personality
and more dominant traits, they will lead the weaker kid to go along with their plan,
even though it's not something they would have done on their own.
Take a listen to this.
I've never gone into an interview so blind as I have in this one.
I thought that maybe this was all about a boy.
This is a fight about a boy.
I still don't know what happened.
And I don't know who did what.
And I need to know that today.
Okay?
We didn't know what these girls were going to tell us.
What were you trying to do with her when you stabbed her?
Kill her. I might as well just say it. We were trying to tell us. What were you trying to do with her when you stabbed her? Kill her.
I might as well just say it.
We were trying to kill her.
So why did you pick Peyton?
I didn't pick her.
Who picked her?
Whoever Anitil was talking about.
She made it seem necessary.
My thought was, why would she do this?
There's this website full of, like, horror stories,
and there's one of them called Slender Man. Who the heck is Slender Man? Would she do this?
Who the heck is Slenderman?
The road that she was located on was Big Bend Road at the dead end of that.
Peyton wasn't moving a whole lot.
As I approached her, I said, hi, I'm Officer Dan.
Are you okay?
And she said, no. And I said, hi, I'm Officer Dan. Are you okay? And she said,
no. And I said, okay, help is on the way. Just stay right where you are. And as I got closer,
I started to see a little bit more blood. And the closer I got, the more blood I saw.
Somehow she'd been able to pull herself out of those woods. And in another moment of strength, she was able to communicate with him.
I asked her who did this and she told me her friend Morgan.
I then asked her where did this happen and she told me that it happened in the woods.
She was the first one to reveal that it was Morgan, her best friend, who was behind this.
You're hearing Officer Dan Klein speaking with 2020's David Muir,
Levi Page, CrimeOnline.com investigative reporter. Levi, when the search warrant was executed on
Geiser and Ware's homes, what was found? So I mentioned about the internet searches on
Morgan's computer that said how to get away with murder. They had also found mutilated dolls in her room
that had the body parts cut off of them.
Oh, dear Lord in heaven.
To Joseph Scott Morgan, forensics expert,
professor of forensics,
and author of Blood Beneath My Feet on Amazon.
Joseph Scott Morgan, this is right up your alley,
speaking of forensics.
Yeah, well, Nancy, let me go to something real quick that, you know, we've talked about this obsession that these girls have with Slenderman.
And they're doing his bidding and living in this fantastical world where they're, you know, they've got to make some kind of, I don't know, sacrifice this guy.
Let me tell you what's based in reality. What's based in reality is this poor girl was subject to being stabbed by five, a blade of five inches in length. And she stabbed 19 times.
Nancy, her liver was actually clipped. It passed through her pancreas. It passed through her
diaphragm and she was very close to dying. You know, I did a calculation just a moment ago. Let's just say that she only weighed 80 pounds, 12 years old.
You know, she's gotten less than a gallon of blood in her body.
It is an absolute miracle that she survived.
And I'm just talking about the organs, not to mention all the little peripheral stab wounds that she sustained.
She had an angel on her shoulder at that time.
The injuries done to
this 12-year-old little girl are overwhelming. But listen to this. After Weir and Geiser tell
detectives they had to kill Bella to become Slender Man's servants, we now know that when
the jury decided the little girls were mentally insane or had a mental defect,
this means that every six months they can petition the court to be released.
Every six months, according to the victim's mom.
She says the potential release of an assailant that methodically planned and executed an attack on our little girl,
where she was stabbed 19 times, puts the community and our family at risk.
They pleaded guilty. Anissa Weir took a plea deal, and she pleaded guilty to a lesser charge of attempted second-degree intentional homicide.
As part of her deal, a jury would hear her insanity defense.
Then they were going to decide on whether or not she would be responsible and sent to prison or not guilty by a reason of a mental defect and sent to a mental institution.
They wanted to send her to a mental institution, so she didn't get sent
to prison. In 2017, a jury found her not guilty by reason of a mental disease or defect and was
sentenced to a 25-year commitment into a state institution. And Morgan Geiser's lawyers also
made a similar deal. She pleaded guilty to attempted first-degree intentional homicide,
and prosecutors agreed as part of this deal not to challenge her insanity defense,
and she was sentenced to 40 years in a mental institution.
Lloyd Steiger, 22 years, homicide detective, author of Homicide, The View from Inside the Yellow Tape.
When you commit a murder at age 12, or in this case, attempted murder, that's a tough cell to be released back out into the community.
Because if you are homicidal at that age, what are you going to be like at 21?
Yeah, that's just the question.
I mean, it really puts people at risk.
But first of all, I also wanted to say that this police department, which is a relatively small police department, probably not very
experienced in homicide, they did a great job from the patrol officer getting there, asking
appropriate questions, and great job by both the detectives and their interviews and the techniques
they use and the casualness and the setting of the room. So, I mean, you know, people from big
cities, New York, Los Angeles, they don't expect to have a case like this.
But when it happens in a suburban, smaller town, you'd think they'd be overwhelmed, but they stepped to the plate.
It was just a terrible case all the way around.
Take a listen to Peyton, the victim, also known as Bella, as she speaks out.
Have you ever watched any of those interrogations?
I watched a little bit.
What was your reaction?
It was a little shocking to me
to see that they had this big, huge plan
that they had been working on for months.
To Dr. Daniel Bober, forensic psychiatrist joining us,
what would be the prospects of these two girls
would be killers ever becoming anything less than a threat
if they are released. Nancy, I totally agree with you. I'm sorry. I strike that. I totally
disagree with you. The brain of a 12 year old. I believe that's what you call a Freudian slip,
but go ahead. The brain of a 12 year old isold is just not the brain of a 25-year-old,
and the science is not consistent with what you guys are saying.
For example, children who display what we call conduct disorder behavior,
two-thirds of them do not go on, I repeat, do not go on to become antisocial.
So a 12-year-old committing a murder.
Wait a minute.
Wait, wait.
Did you say conduct disorder?
It's what we call conduct disorder.
It's sort of the forerunner.
Does that include stabbing deaths?
I agree that a stabbing.
I mean, you're making it sound like she just threw a tantrum in the floor of Target.
No.
That's not what happened, Boba.
No, that would actually be more oppositional behavior.
But the point I'm trying to make is you can't say that someone who's 12 who commits a murder at 25 is going to be a menace
to society because they're a totally different person. They have a totally different brain
at 25 than they did at age 12. I do know that what happened has changed Peyton Lightner,
the victim's life, forever. One of the things I will never forget from this interview with
Peyton Lightner all these years later is what she said to me when I asked, what would you say to Morgan Geyser if you
saw her today? If she saw this interview, what would you want to say to her? There's a lot that
I would want to say to her. I would probably initially thank her, I would say, because of
what she did. I have the life I have now, which I really, really like it.
You do know that when people hear you say, I would probably thank her, that they're going to be surprised.
Yeah, I'm surprised to hear myself say that.
Why?
Because I wouldn't think that someone who went through what I did would ever say that,
but that's truly how I feel.
Like, without the whole situation, I wouldn't be who I am.
Stronger.
Mm-hmm.
Geiser stabbed Peyton across her arms, legs, and torso, hitting multiple major arteries and severing her diaphragm.
Geiser did this while Weir egged her on.
Both girls claim they were motivated by a fictional Slender Man, a tall freaky
dude that is a fictional horror character. A shock to the victim and the
victim's families when the Slender Man stabber is set to be released. You know, sometimes it feels like there is no justice.
We wait as the Slender Man Stabbing story goes on. Goodbye, friend. This is an iHeart Podcast.