WASECA, MINN. – The teen arrested for plotting a massacre at his local school will stay in Minnesota for evaluation and treatment during his probationary sentence, a judge ordered Wednesday as part of a revised agreement.
John LaDue, now 19, will remain in the Waseca County jail until a bed opens at a state facility where he can be evaluated. Attorneys indicated that could take at least two weeks.
After an evaluation of approximately 90 days, LaDue will likely be transferred to a state-run home with 24-hour staff and appropriate monitoring, attorneys said, while he undergoes treatment tailored to his unusual needs: autism spectrum disorder with a fixation on violence.
The new plan came after LaDue's anticipated placement in a Georgia facility specializing in such treatment fell through last month. That state declined to accept him because they could not supervise him while he lived in a secure facility, attorneys said.
"Plan A has now become impossible for us," Judge Joseph Chase said during a short hearing Wednesday afternoon, as he and attorneys outlined the revised agreement. While Minnesota does not have a facility like the one in Georgia, Chase added that county workers and attorneys in the case were trying to duplicate the original plan as much as possible.
After LaDue is evaluated, attorneys will review evaluators' recommendations and have the opportunity to address the court if they disagree with a treatment plan and placement.
County Attorney Brenda Miller described possible placement later as something along the lines of a home-type setting with 24-hour staff.
In court, LaDue, dressed in orange jail garb, said he understood the new sentencing arrangement and agreed with it.