A former nursing student charged with killing seven people at a Christian college in Oakland this year has been found by a psychiatrist to suffer from schizophrenia and unfit to stand trial, his lawyer told a judge on Monday.
One Goh, 44, is charged in Alameda County Superior Court with seven counts of murder and three counts of attempted murder in the April 2 shooting spree at Oikos University, where he once attended nursing school. He has pleaded not guilty.
The shooting spree
was the deadliest at an American college since 2007, when a Virginia
Tech University student killed 32 people and wounded 25.
Deputy Public Defender David Klaus
said at a hearing in Alameda County Superior Court that a court-ordered
psychiatric report concluded that Goh was "presently incompetent to
stand trial due to his longstanding paranoid schizophrenia."
A hearing on Goh's
competency was postponed until January 7 because a second psychiatrist,
who the court also ordered to issue a report, was unable to interview
the Korean-born defendant until a translator could be found.
Goh, who weighed
220 pounds when he was arrested a few hours after shooting, looked
emaciated as he sat in a jury box in a red jail suit, his hands and feet
shackled. Klaus estimated Goh, who refused food for four weeks after
his arrest, had lost up to 75 pounds.
"I've felt strongly
since the beginning of the case that he's severely mentally ill," Klaus
said after Goh's brief court appearance. "I believe that mental illness
is, if not the direct cause, certainly the catalyst for this terrible
tragedy that he committed."
Klaus said the
confidential psychiatrist's report found that, based on interviews with
family members, Goh has suffered from paranoid schizophrenia for nine to
15 years. He never sought treatment and has refused treatment in jail.
Alameda County
District Attorney Nancy O'Malley, who has not yet decided whether to
seek the death penalty, declined comment.
Authorities said
they believe Goh became angry after he dropped out of the nursing school
last year and administrators refused to refund his tuition. A
Presbyterian minister from Korea founded Oikos University as a
vocational school in 2004.

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