During Ed Gein's childhood he was always a target for bullies and didn't socialize much. When Ed was in school some teachers recalled that he would just burst out in random laughter as if he was laughing at his own jokes. Whenever Ed tried to make friends his mother would punsih him. He was always trying to make his mother happy, but she often abused him because she believed that he would become a failer like his father. Ed Gein admitted to the two murders of Mary Hogan, and Bernice Worden. Psychologist and psychiatrist who interview Ed asserted that he was schizophrenic and a “sexual psychopath.” Gein was tried with first degree murder and pleaded not guilty for the reason of insanity. He was stable to hold the trial because he was "mentally incompetent". Gein was sent to the Central State Hospital for being criminally insane. He wasn't there for long and later transferred to the Mendota State Hospital in Madison, Wisconsin. On November 14, 1968 his trial began again. Edward Geid was found guilty of first- degree muder. After his trial he spent the rest of his life in a mental hospital because he was legally insane.