Waseca, Minn. – It's likely to be some time before John LaDue is integrated back into society as he serves up to 10 years of probation in connection with his plan to carry out a school massacre in this southern Minnesota town.
Under a sentence issued Monday, LaDue will undergo an unspecified amount of time in treatment at a secure facility near Atlanta that will work with his autism spectrum disorder and fixation on violence. Then he'll spend time in a halfway house before being allowed back into the community under intensive supervision.
If and when LaDue returns to Waseca — a community stung by the revelation that a horrific tragedy was so narrowly diverted — it would be better off embracing LaDue than treating him like a pariah, Judge Joseph Chase told the quiet courtroom.
LaDue, now 18, showed no emotion during the sentencing hearing, declining to make a statement. His parents sat in the gallery, holding hands.
"Call it what you will — grace, providence, fate, good luck, a guardian angel — tragedy was almost miraculously averted in this town," Chase said, praising the alert citizen who called police after seeing LaDue enter a storage locker in late April 2014, leading authorities to discover a cache of bombmaking materials, guns and a 180-page notebook detailing LaDue's plans. "That day, Waseca was spared."
But after going over medical reports and other documents, Chase, reading from a prepared statement, said it is clear that LaDue's "severely distorted thinking" comes from his disorder. Autism spectrum disorder "prevents him … because of the way he is wired … from experiencing true emotional responses to others the way that most of us do," the judge said. LaDue presents an unusual case because his fixation is on violence, he said.
LaDue "did not ask" to have autism spectrum disorder, the judge said, and "he is not at fault for having this condition any more than one can be at fault for having diabetes or asthma."
But, he acknowledged, that doesn't make it less frightening for the community or diminish the need for future supervision.