Woman who fatally stabbed new boyfriend 108 times receives probation and community service

Woman who fatally stabbed new boyfriend 108 times receives probation and community service

The woman who was convicted of stabbing her boyfriend to death 108 times during a "cannabis-induced psychosis" has avoided jail time for the brutal killing.

On Tuesday, January 23, Bryn Spejcher, 33, was sentenced to two years probation and was ordered to perform 100 hours of community service after being found guilty of killing her new boyfriend, Chad O'Melia, according to the Ventura County Star.

Woman who fatally stabbed new boyfriend 108 times receives probation and community service

Ventura County Superior Court Judge David Worley ruled that Spejcher "had no control over her actions" when she entered into a psychotic episode and stabbed O'Melia, 26, 108 times in his Thousand Oaks apartment on May 28, 2018.

Experts for the prosecution and defence both found that the marijuana given to Spejcher threw the woman into the deadly psychotic episode.

Woman who fatally stabbed new boyfriend 108 times receives probation and community service

"From that point forward, she had no control over her actions," Worley said, according to the outlet.

Spejcher and O'Melia had been seeing each other for a few weeks before she brutally murdered the 26-year-old accountant.

Court documents say that after Spejcher had killed O'Melia, law enforcement found the woman covered in blood, hysterically crying next to her boyfriend's body, still gripping the knife.

Woman who fatally stabbed new boyfriend 108 times receives probation and community service

She then plunged the knife into her throat when police attempted to disarm her.

Spejcher, who turned 33 last Thursday, also stabbed her dog during the rampage, according to the outlet.

O'Melia was pronounced dead at the scene.

Spejcher's lawyers had argued that their client who was an inexperienced marijuana smoker - became "involuntarily intoxicated" at the time of the killing after O'Melia had pressed her to take another smoke after not getting high off the first hit, the outlet reported in December.

She had an immediate adverse reaction to the second hit and had to go to the bathroom in a panic before carrying out the killing.

Under California law, a person is seen as responsible for their actions when impaired by drugs or alcohol unless their intoxication is involuntary.

Jurors took less than four hours to find Spejcher guilty of involuntary manslaughter.

During Tuesday's sentencing, Spejcher cried in court as she apologized to the father of the victim, Sean O'Melia.

"My actions have ripped your family apart," she said, according to the outlet. "I am broken and aching inside. I hurt that you never see Chad again."

Spejcher, who was painted as a party girl who just wanted to get high the night she killed O'Melia by the prosecution, was portrayed in a different light by her father during the sentencing hearing.

"She has worked her whole life helping others," Mike Spejcher said, who also made a note of his daughter's hearing impairment and her work as a licensed audiologist before the killing.

Chad O'Melia's father, Sean, accused Worley of being biased and claimed the judge set a dangerous precedent following his ruling.

"He just gave everyone in the state of California who smokes marijuana a license to kill someone," the grieving father said.

"There is no winner in this tragedy," said Brendan O'Melia, the victim's uncle. "There can be, however, accountability."

Spejcher's lawyer, Bob Schwartz, called Judge Worley's ruling against his client the "right and courageous thing."

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