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Doctors attest to Tesla crash suspect's belief in child trafficking during psychotic break

Doctors say Tesla crash suspect in California believed children were being trafficked

Anjali

Los Angeles An Indian- origin radiologist who drove his Tesla off a precipice in the US with his Mrs. and children inside allegedly suffered from major depressive disease and was passing a psychotic break at the time of the incident, media reports quoted two croakers attesting at a recent area near by them.

Dharmesh Patel from Pasadena, California was charged in January last time with three counts of tried murder after he drove the family’s Tesla off the precipice at Devil’s Slide on Highway 1 near Half Moon Bay, according to prosecutors. Patel, his Mrs. Neha, and their children — a (7yrs) old girl and a (4 yrs) old boy at the time — miraculously survived. Patel (43yrs), was passing visions, hearing steps and believed his children had been coitus traded, two doctors witnessed at a hail on Wednesday in Redwood City.

Wednesday’s hail was a response to an earlier request from Patel who is seeking a internal health diversion in his case, the New York Post review reported. However, Patel would be placed on a two-time treatment plan rather of entering jail time, If a judge grants the doctor's request. Patel’s charges would be dropped if he does not commit any crimes during the proposed treatment plan.

At the time of the crash, the croakers witnessed, Patel was passing a psychotic occasion in which he. At the time of the crash, the doctor's witnessed, Patel was passing a psychotic occasion in which he believed that his children might be coitus traded, Los Angeles. Times review quoted District Attorney Stephen Wagstaffe as saying doctors Mark Patterson and James Armontrout witnessed for the defence. Still, James Armontrout, a Stanford psychiatric clinician, If Patel is placed in the internal diversion program.

" I see him as someone who's veritably motivated and amenable to treatment," psychologist Mark Patterson witnessed at the hail Patterson's opinion of Patel came after a series of 18 tests were conducted and he spoke with the doctor's and his siblings Prosecutors oppose diversion in the case, arguing that the execution's croaker set up Patel isn't suffering from a major depressive complaint with a psychotic point, but from a different complaint, known as schizo affective, and that the defence's proposed treatment plan won't be effective.

Prosecutors believe the case should remain in court. Wagstaffe bothered that if Patel is released he'll not be covered except in his meetings with doctor's still, how do you know? It's not like being on pration or parole," If he goes off his drug. It's purely the visits with the psychiatrist," he said Patel's attorney, Joshua Bentley, didn't respond to a request for comment, the report said.