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May 31, 2014. Waukesha, Wisconsin. Twelve-year-old Payton Leutner is lured into the woods by two friends. She is stabbed and left for dead. Miraculously, she crawls to a path where a cyclist finds her. She survives after emergency surgery. The attackers — both 12 years old — tell police they did it to appease a fictional internet character called Slender Man. But court-ordered psychiatric evaluations reveal something deeper: both girls were experiencing severe psychosis. One diagnosed with early-onset schizophrenia. The other with shared psychotic disorder. Both found not guilty by reason of mental disease. This case isn't about internet folklore. It's about a survivor's courage, two children in psychiatric crisis, and the mental health system that failed to intervene before violence occurred. 🕯️ CASE FILE: Crisis and Aftermath • MAY 31, 2014 — Payton Leutner attacked in Waukesha woods; survives after crawling to path; undergoes life-saving surgery • PERPETRATOR EVALUATIONS — Court-ordered psychiatric assessments reveal severe mental illness: one girl diagnosed with childhood-onset schizophrenia; other with shared psychotic disorder influenced by first • LEGAL OUTCOME — Both found not guilty by reason of mental disease/defect (2017); committed to Wisconsin mental health institutions with 40+ years supervision • SURVIVOR RESILIENCE — Payton Leutner recovered physically; family advocates for mental health awareness without media exploitation • WISCONSIN LAW — Juvenile offenders' identities legally protected; ethical media coverage uses initials only (M.G. and A.W.) • PREVENTION LEGACY — Case spurred school mental health screening programs and early psychosis intervention protocols in Wisconsin schools 🔍 WHY MENTAL HEALTH MATTERS MORE THAN MYTHOLOGY: → Psychosis misinterpreted: Perpetrators didn't "believe in Slender Man" — they experienced command hallucinations misattributed to folklore → Missed intervention windows: Warning signs documented months pre-attack (social withdrawal, bizarre statements) not escalated to mental health professionals → Internet as symptom not cause: Online content reflected existing psychosis — didn't create it (per psychiatric testimony) → Juvenile justice evolution: Case highlighted need for mental health diversion over incarceration for youth in crisis → Survivor-centered recovery: Payton's family refused media exploitation; focused on healing and mental health advocacy 🔔 SUBSCRIBE for ethically grounded content examining youth violence through a mental health lens — never exploiting children for clicks. We focus on recognizing early psychosis warning signs, school intervention protocols, and honoring survivors through prevention. New episodes examining cases where understanding mental health protects vulnerable youth. ⚠️ ETHICAL COMMITMENT: We center Payton Leutner's survival first. We avoid ALL attack details to prevent copycat risk. We clarify perpetrators had documented psychosis — not "internet influence." We respect Wisconsin law protecting juvenile identities. We include youth mental health resources prominently. If you're concerned about a child's mental health: *National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) Helpline 800-950-NAMI* or **Crisis Text Line text HOME to 741741**. #SlenderMan #MentalHealth #ChildPsychosis #Prevention #YouthViolence #Waukesha #SurvivorStory