Delusions rooted in battlefield trauma and the civil unrest after George Floyd's death led a judge to find a 24-year-old former Marine not guilty by reason of mental illness for breaking into a Shakopee home and fatally shooting a man.
Brady D. Zipoy was acquitted of second-degree intentional murder Wednesday in Scott County District Court and ordered civilly committed to the St. Peter Security Hospital in connection with the killing of 65-year-old Timothy Guion in June.
Based on two psychiatric evaluations, Judge Paula Vraa ruled that Zipoy "did know the nature of his act at the time" when he shot Guion multiple times, but he "was laboring under such a defect of reason ... that he did not understand that his act was wrong."
Therefore, Vraa's order read, the law requires that Zipoy "be excused from criminal liability by reason of mental illness."
County Attorney Ron Hocevar said Thursday, "It's a tough pill to swallow when you have somebody who murdered another individual in cold blood. There is no criminal punishment, but he will receive mental health care."
Hocevar said both evaluations were conducted by highly respected psychologists, and Zipoy's attorney presented "a valid mental illness defense. We do find it sincere."
Zipoy, of Minneapolis, remains jailed ahead of his transfer to the state-operated hospital for treatment until a judge rules him no longer a threat to the community. Hocevar said it's possible Zipoy might never win release, but he called a lifetime of commitment "a remote possibility."
The Prior Lake High School graduate admitted under police questioning that night to killing the man who was a stranger to him, but the court-ordered exams revealed that Zipoy had been suffering from various psychotic episodes connected to politics, religion, Floyd's death that spring and his military service.