November 15, 1995
Overview:
Appellate documents state Steven Alvarado
killed two people, a mother and son, during a drug deal in 1991
when he was 17 years old. A year or so prior to the murder
Alvarado had been in the hospital. The psychologist stated that at
that time, based on her reports, the appellant was “violent and
dangerous and that he had a full-blown antisocial personality
disorder.”… He had “no concern for the rights of others, and
admitted selling illegal weapons, abusing and selling illegal
drugs, sexually assaulting a woman, mutilating human infants in
Satanic rituals, and committing numerous other crimes. He was
discharged after twelve days in the hospital because he was felt
to be a danger to the other patients and that he was not suffering
from a mental illness that was treatable, and, therefore under the
mental health code had to be discharged.”
The Court found that these and other factors
supported the jury’s finding at the punishment stage of the trial
on the future dangerousness of the defendant |