-
Главная
-
- Книги
-
- Авторы
-
- Даниэл Киз
-
- Таинственная история Билли Миллигана
-
- Стр. 503/524
Для того чтобы воспользоваться озвучкой предложений, необходимо
Войти или зарегистрироваться
Озвучка предложений доступна при наличии PRO-доступа
Купить PRO-доступ
"
We
’
re
not
the
ones
seeking
the
publicity
,
"
the
writer
said
.
"
I
don
’
t
wish
to
discuss
it
any
further
,
"
Lindner
said
,
and
hung
up
.
When
the
writer
asked
to
join
a
group
tour
of
the
Lima
State
Hospital
facility
the
day
before
the
November
hearing
,
it
was
granted
at
first
by
the
public
relations
department
.
The
day
before
the
tour
,
however
,
he
received
a
call
telling
him
that
his
visit
had
been
canceled
by
Dr
.
Lindner
and
Superintendent
Hubbard
,
and
that
the
Security
Department
had
been
told
the
writer
was
to
be
barred
from
the
hospital
grounds
permanently
.
When
the
writer
inquired
as
to
the
reason
,
Assistant
Attorney
General
David
Belinky
said
he
had
been
advised
by
hospital
officials
that
the
writer
was
suspected
of
having
smuggled
drugs
to
Milligan
.
Later
the
reason
was
changed
to
"
not
therapeutically
advisable
.
"
November
30
was
cold
;
the
first
snow
lay
on
the
ground
.
The
Allen
County
Courthouse
in
Lima
,
Ohio
,
was
an
old
building
,
and
though
Courtroom
3
was
large
enough
to
seat
about
fifty
people
,
most
of
the
chairs
were
empty
.
The
Milligan
review
hearing
had
been
closed
to
the
public
and
the
media
,
but
the
TV
cameras
were
waiting
outside
.
The
Teacher
sat
,
in
handcuffs
,
between
his
attorneys
.
In
addition
to
the
attorneys
,
only
Dorothy
,
Del
Moore
and
the
writer
were
admitted
as
observers
by
the
court
.
Also
present
were
James
O
’
Grady
,
assistant
prosecutor
for
Franklin
County
,
William
Jan
Hans
,
a
representative
of
the
Ohio
Adult
Parole
Authority
,
and
Ann
Henldner
,
an
attorney
observer
for
Southwest
Community
Mental
Health
Center
in
Columbus
.
Judge
David
R
.
Kinworthy
,
a
clean
-
shaven
,
handsome
young
man
with
sharply
chiseled
features
,
reviewed
the
history
of
commitment
hearings
from
December
4
,
1978
,
when
Milligan
had
been
found
not
guilty
by
reason
of
insanity
,
through
the
various
re
-
commitments
,
to
the
present
day
,
almost
one
year
later
.
The
hearing
,
Kinworthy
said
,
was
being
held
in
accordance
with
the
statutes
of
the
Ohio
Revised
Code
,
paragraph
5122
,
section
15
.
Assistant
Attorney
General
Belinky
s
motion
for
separation
of
witnesses
was
granted
.
Attorney
Steve
Thompsons
motion
for
the
court
to
return
Billy
Milligan
to
Athens
,
considering
the
procedural
defects
in
the
transfer
to
Lima
,
was
denied
.
With
preliminary
motions
over
,
the
commitment
review
hearings
began
.
The
first
witness
for
the
state
was
sixty
-
five
-
year
-
old
Dr
.
Frederick
Milkie
,
a
short
,
fat
psychiatrist
with
baggy
pants
and
a
baggy
sweater
.
His
dark
hair
was
slicked
down
,
and
he
waddled
from
the
table
beside
Belinky
(
from
which
he
would
later
serve
as
the
states
technical
consultant
)
to
the
witness
stand
.