A Minnesota man was sentenced to more than 33 years in prison for stabbing his wife to death during a Bible study session.
Robert Castillo, 41, who pleaded guilty in March to second-degree murder, apologized in court Friday for killing his wife, Corinna Woodhull, the St. Paul Pioneer Press reported. They had been married about two years and have five children, who are now ages 11 to 24.
Castillo’s sister told police she hosted a weekly Bible study at her St. Paul home. On the night of March 21, 2023, the couple was sitting on a couch when Castillo whispered something in Woodhull’s ear. After she shook her head “no,” Castillo pulled out a hunting knife and stabbed her multiple times, until his own family disarmed him.
Thoughts and prayers… And knife!
Has anything good ever resulted from Bible study?
Besides not kink shaming for beastality and taking large loads, bukkake maybe(?), no.
One day I too will have emissions like a horse
I have emissions like a horse but only because I eat an equivalent amount of fiber.
I got laid once.
looking back… its probably a good thing that we used protection.
Just a quick safety PSA, bibles are only good for protecting against Judeo-Christian demons. I always recommend keeping an oonusa for yokai, a copy of Bhagavata Purana for preths, etc
I prefer the My armor is contempt. My shield is disgust. My sword is hatred. Path. You won’t hersey here!
Naw. I’ve yet to meet a demon that can withstand the power of disbelief. that’s why I keep a copy of A Brief history of Time
My dad, who was only vaguely theistic but had a very good knowledge of the old (and new) testament used to go to Torah study and argue with the Rabbi whenever a point of contention came up.
It resulted in good entertainment for my mother.
I would watch at least an hour of this on YouTube
I would too. I only heard about it. He was a professor, so he knew how to argue.
sounds like a fun time.
I love a good debate. (like. not an angry debate, but a seriously good discussion.)
It would definitely not have been angry. They liked each other. The Rabbi came over for dinner all the time and stuff. It was weird, his religion was only vague deism and my mother is an atheist but they both got super involved in the temple in their old age, long after I had moved away. My father is no longer with us, but my mother still goes every week. She was even president of the temple for a while. But if you asked her, she would say, “I don’t believe in any of it.”
I definitely get it. There’s a distinct lack of 3rd spaces, which is necessary for finding community.
also, wasn’t saying it was angry, just… saying I love a good discussion. I totally get that. Props to the rabbi, too,
I didn’t think you were, no worries.
They must have been studying the Old Testament.
But morals have to come from somewhere…right? Aren’t we told repeatedly and vehemently while figuratively bashing our collective brains in with it, that it’s the Bible?
apologizes in court Friday for killing his wife
As if an apology means a damn thing for this.
You mean that book that’s about killing your enemies and making them your slaves? I’m pretty sure that’s not the place to learn how to behave.
What did he whisper in her ear?
Lets go to heaven! Or maybe you want to stay here tonight?
No hate quite like Christian love.
I’m not sure how you interpret this story to represent this comment, but it appears to me that Robert’s sister likely invited him to her Bible study, not because he is a Christian but expressly because he is not. He was likely dragged there by his wife Corinna. This seems to be corraborated by the ABC story:
Members of both Woodhull’s and Castillo’s family urged her not to marry him.
“It’s a testament to the kind of person she was that she went through with it, thinking she could help him,” the prosecutor said. “I can’t believe that she knew her wedding vows would ultimately be her death sentence.”
So Corinna, against the advice of everyone who knows Robert, marries into an abusive relationship thinking she can help him, and brings him to his sister’s Bible study, where he stabs her in a supposed drug induced rage, and you interpret his actions as an accurate representation of Christian love? Robert doesn’t represent even Wordly love in this story, let alone Christ like love.
Whatever passage that was, it would be funny to make the republicans use it for important debates or speeches without knowing the context until a couple of weeks before elections. LOL, big guys in big stupid trucks with “Genesis 9-11” or “Jeremiah 666” of whatever it was. I read that book, I don’t know what in it could have someone do crazy things…but then again I did read it and they do crazy things in it.
“A quarrelsome wife is like a constant dripping on a rainy day; restraining her is like restraining the wind or grasping oil with the hand.” Proverbs 27:15-16
Castle had a message afterward about domestic violence: “Women need to understand: Don’t accept this kind of behavior. It’s not OK.”
Oh yes, women need to understand this isn’t okay. Fucking Jesus fucking wept, was this dickwipe trying to win Tone-Deaf Asshole Of The Century award?
The context makes this statement different.
The above is the victim’s mother, who begged her not to marry her murderer. She says this after stating she found divorce papers in her daughter car after her death, which led her to believe he killed her because she was planning on leaving him.
The above is a statement trying to help women to avoid brutal men to begin with, not blaming them for being victims.
Fair point. I know I’m not alone in being entirely sick of hearing victims get blamed using words just like this, but you’re right that it’s extremely unlikely he meant it that way.
Incoherent
The judge sentenced him to 33 1/3 years. In Minnesota, defendants typically serve two-thirds of their sentence in prison and the rest on supervised release.
Castillo had eight prior felony convictions, including second-degree assault for beating another woman with a hammer in 2014. At the time of the knife attack, Castillo was on intensive supervised release and had a warrant out for his arrest after he failed to show up at a court hearing on charges that he assaulted two correctional officers at the Stillwater state prison in 2020.
Fingers crossed this worthless piece of shit dies in prison, but it doesn’t seem likely if he’ll only serve about 22 years. I’m usually pretty heavy on rehabilitation, but this one seems too far-gone. Hopefully they can at least get him a ton of psychiatric help and counseling before he’s released on the slim chance he can change.
Not a very constructive way to resolve theological disputes.
He sent her to god to ask, I mean that’s kind of smart, right?
\s
Historically, this is exactly how theological disputes were handled. See Crusades on Wikipedia for more information.
I know. It wasn’t constructive then either.
I think what you should take from religious texts is “don’t be an asshole”. Everything else should build on that.
And I don’t need religion to not be an asshole.
Then again, I’d be reluctant to take morality lessons from someone who threatens to eternally torture me.
Yeah, that on top. I think if you’re a bad person from the start, praying won’t change much. Being a cunt and then ask for forgiveness makes it worse to be honest.
He was just trying to nature sure she got the point of what was being said
They must have been studying Exodus 22:18.
People are down voting you for citing actual religious nonsense. Like raccoons hoarding trash.
I wish people in this thread would pay less attention to the bible study and more attention to the violent crime repeat offender recently out of prison who clearly never got the psychiatric help he needed (cause that dude be cray cray).
So yeah, a well intentioned woman thought she could fix him (with the help of the Lord) and decided to tie the knot with an unstable convinced felon. That’s… misguided, but a mistake that has been made a great many times before by a great many people. But truthfully, religion is barely a part of this story. Mostly this is a story about how many Americans aren’t encouraged to get the mental help they need, about one of the many ways in which our correctional system doesn’t work, and about how you really shouldn’t try to “fix” that bad boy that I’m sure has a heart of gold deep down. That last part is just so dangerous… please don’t do it.