As expected, a Lancaster County judge has found Taylor Bradley — who ran down two men in her Lincoln apartment complex parking lot and tried to run down a third last year — not responsible by reason of insanity of two murders and the attempted murder of a third.
In an order Friday, Post found that on March 27, 2023, Bradley did kill Ronald Gonzalez-Rivas, 45, and Christopher Karmazin, 42, and attempted to kill Robert Sargent, now 49, and that she had used her car as a deadly weapon while doing so.
He said the state had met its burden of proof beyond a reasonable doubt that Bradley had committed two counts of first-degree murder, attempted first-degree murder and three counts of use of a deadly weapon to commit the felonies.
"The court further finds that at the time of the commission of these crimes the defendant had a mental disease and was experiencing prominent delusions, a manic episode, and psychosis," Post wrote in the order. "The court further finds that her mental disease impaired her mental capacity to such an extent that she did not understand the nature and consequences of what she was doing and, further, that she did not know the difference between right and wrong with respect to what she was doing."
Post set a hearing for June 11 to determine whether there is probable cause to believe Bradley remains dangerous to herself or others.
She is likely to face a civil commitment to the Lincoln Regional Center.
Police say that on the afternoon of March 27, 2023, Bradley drove her Subaru into a grassy area near the clubhouse at The Lodge apartments, near South 40th Street and Nebraska Parkway, purposely running over the two men, who died at the scene, and trying to run down a third.
All three had worked as maintenance employees at the complex, where Bradley lived.
At trial, Deputy Lancaster County Attorney Jim Rocke said: "She was actually so delusional on that day that she was proud of what she did."
At her first court appearance a day later, held by Zoom from the jail, Bradley appeared not to understand what was going on and repeatedly screamed over the judge, before a corrections officer muted her microphone and began to walk away from her cell.
Soon after, her public defender filed a motion seeking a competence evaluation of her.
Since then, Bradley has gotten treatment at the regional center to restore her competence so she understands the proceedings and can help with her defense.
But the question at trial was her state of mind at the time of the crime and whether she knew right from wrong.
"Both experts came to the same conclusion that she was legally insane at the time. So the state understands the position the court's in," Rocke said.
Taylor Bradley listened May 17 as her attorney, Deputy Lancaster County Public Defender John Jorgensen, addressed the court at her bench trial on murder charges. Deputy Lancaster County Attorneys John Schmidt and Jim Rocke sat at the other end of counsel table.