The first court appearance Wednesday of Nhan L. Tran on charges he killed a 9-year-old boy during a shooting spree in his Oakdale neighborhood Monday night quickly focused on Tran's mental health.
Tran, 34, who came to the United States with his family as a 10-year-old refugee from Vietnam in 1989, appeared pale and bewildered at his arraignment Wednesday morning, less than 48 hours after a random spray of bullets took the life of fourth-grader Devin Aryal. Devin had been riding in the back seat of his mother's minivan near the corner of Hadley Avenue and 7th Street N.
On Wednesday, Tran was charged with six felony counts. Washington County District Judge Ellen Maas set bail at $2 million, and he remained in the Washington County jail. It will probably be months before a trial is set, likely in 2014, said Washington County Attorney Pete Orput.
"It's going to come down to whether he knew right from wrong," said Fred Fink, who will prosecute the case with Jessica Stott, assistant county attorney.
The court accepted a motion Wednesday that initiated efforts to establish Tran's state of mind at the time of the shooting and whether a lack of competence will keep him from effectively participating in his legal defense.
"In my view, that's going to be the crux of the case," Orput said.
The initial mental health evaluation will likely take several weeks, and Orput cautioned that it will not likely answer the question preying on grieving families and a quiet suburban community set reeling: Why?
"People want some kind of understanding, and unfortunately, they're not going to get it from the court," Orput said. "We can't answer the 'Why?' We can only say 'Who did it, and what did they do?' ... Some of these cases make us sick."