-Caveat Lector-

Sounds like mind control to me....

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http://www.adn.com/nation/story/0,2360,264978,00.html


Voices plagued slashing suspect
EARLY YEARS: 'I never thought he would ever hurt anyone,' mother says.

By Sheila Toomey And Lisa Demer
Anchorage Daily News

(Published May 9, 2001)
The man who wanted to kill children to save them from damnation lived a life
that seemed relatively normal and even successful until the mid-1990s, when
the command voices and religious delusions of schizophrenia apparently took
over his life.

Jason W. Pritchard worked hard, owned a vending machine business, bought a
four-plex in East Anchorage, and went to church regularly.

But by 1995, according to public files and interviews with family and people
who encountered him, the four-plex was gone and Pritchard had begun
collecting arrests. They were driving offenses at first, apparently alcohol
related. He lost his license in 1994 in a drunken driving conviction and lost
his job at Eastside Carpet Co., because the job required driving, said
company owner Ross Walther.

He was in conflict with his Jehovah's Witnesses faith, drinking and going to
strip bars, but apparently fighting his demons, the voices only he heard. He
listened to religious self-help tapes, Walther said, but gave Walther's wife
the creeps when he cornered her and talked about religion.

"He'd look at you like he didn't see you half the time," he said.

By 1998, Pritchard had been "disfellowshipped" from the church for
patronizing a prostitute. Police in Anchorage and on the Kenai Peninsula,
where he often lived with his stepfather, were arresting him regularly for
criminal trespass and once for stalking, because he refused to stop preaching
at young people about the evils of sex.

That's what he was doing this past Saturday in Homer at the Subway
restaurant, said owner Deb Germano. He sat down at a tableful of
middle-school boys and "told them he was here to do the work of God and they
were sheep," Germano said. But he left quickly when she asked him to leave
the kids alone.

Pritchard seemed crazy, though not especially threatening to his unwilling
audiences. But by 1999 his record of bizarre behavior and lack of response to
treatment spelled danger to then-prosecutor Carmen ClarkWeeks, who turned the
last of his trespassing cases into a forum on his potential dangerousness.

"We had him taking the medication for three months and nothing happened,"
ClarkWeeks said.

"Essentially he continued to hear the voices. . . . The voices said to him
that children were pure. Children were God's special favorites, but once they
hit puberty and began to sin, they were damned for eternity. ... It was clear
that whatever had caused what we were looking at, the end result was really
dangerous."

That's not how it was at the beginning, said his mother, Christina Heath.

Pritchard, 33, was born in Eugene, Ore., and spent his early years there, in
the Seattle area and in Kellogg, Idaho. His father was from Eugene and she is
from Atka, on the Aleutian Islands, Heath said. She is now remarried and
living in Anchorage.

In her Midtown home, still numb from the news of the slashings, Heath agreed
to talk about her son's life to show that "Jason wasn't in his right mind
when he did what he did."

She sat on the sofa in her living room, a bright, airy and immaculate space.
Family pictures of fishing trips, graduations, grandchildren and weddings
cover the walls.

Pritchard seemed like a normal, healthy boy and young man, she said, until
his early 20s, when something snapped.

When Jason was small, his father suffered an emotional breakdown, Heath said.
After that, he had little involvement in raising Jason or his younger
siblings, she said. She supported the family as a hotel maid and a waitress.

Heath married again, a diesel mechanic named Larry Trefren, who was a good
man when sober but had problems with alcohol, she said. Court records show a
string of charges over the years and convictions for second-degree weapons
misconduct in 1988 and driving under the influence in 1992. In a phone
interview Tuesday evening, Trefren said all that happened long ago. He's been
sober for five years, he said.

The family moved to Ketchikan and then to Wrangell, where something happened
that led the state to take custody of the children, Heath said. They were put
into a foster home. Heath said she has put the difficult times out of her
mind and can't remember what the trigger was.

When the family reunited, they moved to Anchorage and eventually to Anchor
Point, where they bought property and built a house.

Pritchard had a crush on a girl from Homer High School who was a Jehovah's
Witness, Heath said, and was baptized into the church.

Pritchard struggled with the Bible and the church's teachings, she said.

"He was just making his own visions of the verses he read, but it was not
correct. He was totally confused." He interpreted one Bible verse as telling
children to shun their parents. But he never talked to his family about
killing innocent children to protect them from sin, she said.

"I never thought he would ever hurt anyone," she said.

As a teen, Pritchard worked on fishing boats. He graduated from Homer High
School. He stayed in the area and worked on a commercial crab boat.

"He was very well to-do," his mother said. He moved to Anchorage, and
according to property records, bought a four-plex on San Roberto Avenue. He
lived in one unit and rented out the others. He also bought a vending machine
business, his mother said.

In 1995, around the time Pritchard's life began to spin out of his control,
his mother and her boyfriend, whom she would later marry, moved to Nevada.
Pritchard, though a grown man, felt abandoned, she said.

The family didn't realize he was seriously disturbed, she said. They
struggled to get information from his doctors, even when he cut off the end
of his penis with a kitchen knife while at his brother's apartment. He had
taken a shower, according to the family. He came out dressed and sat quietly
on the couch. His brother didn't notice anything until Pritchard got up,
leaving a blood-soaked patch where he had been sitting. His brother rushed
him to the hospital.

Voices told him to cut off his penis, said ClarkWeeks, the prosecutor who
worried about Pritchard's mental decline back in 1999 and presented his
history at a sentencing hearing. "Voices told him to do so for two reasons:
If you weren't sexual, it would be easier to get into heaven. No more risk of
masturbation, prostitution or massage parlors. He also believed he should be
an example to the children, that later the children should lose their
genitals," ClarkWeeks said.

At the end of this February 1999 hearing, Pritchard was sentenced to 130
days, a long time for a relatively minor trespass charge, to give the
Department of Corrections time to seek an involuntary commitment to the
Alaska Psychiatric Institute. Corrections did so and Pritchard entered in
March 1999. A few days later, API staff reported to the Anchorage Police
Department that he was making death threats against children for religious
reasons, according to the charging document filed Tuesday.

His mother visited him regularly. She took him out on weekend passes. They
went to movies. He was eager to get out, she said.

He was discharged about a year ago and moved back in with his mother. When
she remarried in July 2000, Pritchard walked her down the aisle.

"He seemed in good spirits. I didn't see anything wrong," Heath said.

He soon moved back to Anchor Point to live with his former stepfather. His
life seemed normal, if heavy on religion, Trefren said. Pritchard worked at a
Ninilchik cannery, studied the Bible and went to church every Tuesday,
Thursday and Sunday.

Over the weekend, Pritchard listened to Bible tapes nonstop, Trefren said.

"He'd been fine until this last weekend. He buried himself in the Bible. I
told him he was going to overdose on this stuff." When Trefren awoke at 5:30
Monday morning, Pritchard and all his stuff were gone, he said.

Pritchard hadn't been taking his medication, Trefren said. Trefren said he
didn't know how important it was.

"Nobody told me. I had no idea he was this bad," Trefren said.

Until the attack Monday on the children at Mountain View Elementary School,
Pritchard's violence seemed directed mostly toward himself. He disrupted a
service in 1998 at a local Kingdom Hall by offering to lead the congregation
in suicide. "His statement was that the only way you can get to the kingdom
of God is to kill yourself," said Richard Baker, a church elder who was
there.

Church officials didn't really want Pritchard arrested, he said. But police
said nothing would be done if they didn't file a complaint. "I said this guy
needs help, so we pressed charges," Baker said.

This is how it was until Monday. Pritchard's crimes were petty, even if his
talk was sometimes scary.

Judge Stephanie Rhoades, who worked in 1999 to get Pritchard committed, said
there's no good place to put people like him. Outside of locking them in jail
or API, there's no way to make sure they take their medication. And, she
said, there are few places for people whose sickness keeps them from
understanding how sick they are.

"I cannot comment on the cases pending," Rhoades said Tuesday. "But with
respect to the 1999 case that is now over, it was like seeing something
dangerous coming at you in slow motion and there's absolutely nothing you can
do to stop it."

Daily News reporter Sheila Toomey can be reached at [EMAIL PROTECTED] or
257-4341; reporter Lisa Demer can be reached at [EMAIL PROTECTED] or 257-4390.
Daily News reporters Tom Kizzia and Molly Brown contributed to this story.


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MARtin F. ABErnathy           [[EMAIL PROTECTED]]

Bronx,NY 10473                   May 9, 2001

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