Lol no one is going to accept a bad reaction to medication as an excuse for putting a woman in the hospital.
Forget basketball, Jailbari will be lucky to keep his freedom..
At the date and time of the post there was no information available as to the extent of the injuries (to my knowledge, there's still nothing officially out there), and being treated at a hospital is different than being hurt badly enough to require inpatient care (i.e. an injured wrist might get treated there, but getting fitted for an air cast isn't exactly getting put in the hospital). Had it eventually come out that the person wasn't hurt particularly badly and there were some sort of mitigating circumstances regarding the need for a psychiatric hold it's possible the situation could have resolved less severely than it appeared it was headed.
It's looking worse and worse as time goes on though.
I think people are getting ahead of themselves on the possibility of Bird using some sort of mental illness defense. He may very well claim, and indeed have, some sort of mental illness, but even if true it likely isn't going to be the basis for an insanity defense. Laws are pretty specific as to what sort of mental issue can qualify one to be judged not legally responsible for a criminal act. Jails are full of people with serious mental issues who have been nevertheless judged competent to stand trial and pay the price for their crimes.
The original comment at least wasn't intended as some sort of discussion of possible legal defense. It was literally a best-case-scenario response to speculation as to whether there was any way Bird's not gone/in jail. "Best case scenario" isn't the same thing as "this is probably what happened".