Education
Weinstein attended Erasmus Hall High School, where he was two grades ahead of Bobby Fischer.
Weinstein attended Erasmus Hall High School, where he was two grades ahead of Bobby Fischer.
He has been incarcerated in a psychiatric hospital since killing a man in 1964. Weinstein played first board on the Brooklyn College chess team which became national collegiate champions. He played a total of five times in the United States. Chess Championship.
Weinstein tied for the gold medal on his board in that event.
Weinstein played on the United States. team in the 1960 world Chess Olympiad in Leipzig, East Germany. Weinstein defeated many top American players, including Samuel Reshevsky and Pal Benko.
He never defeated Bobby Fischer, although he drew one game of four with him (in the 1959-1960 United States Championship). His best tournament result came in the 1960-1961 United States. Championship, where he finished third, after Fischer and Lombardy.
As this was a zonal year, this result qualified Weinstein to play in the Interzonal tournament, held in Stockholm in 1962, though neither he nor Lombardy played, with their places being taken by Benko and Arthur Bisguier.
This result also gave Weinstein the automatic International Master title. Weinstein defeated Lombardy, Reshevsky, Bisguier and Robert Byrne in this tournament. In 1963, he graduated from Brooklyn College with a degree in psychology and travelled to Amsterdam, Netherlands, to attend graduate school.
By this time, however, he had apparently developed a mental illness, possibly schizophrenia.
He was reportedly arrested for assault. Dutch chess author Tim Krabbe has identified the victim as the Dutch psychology professor and International Master Johan Barendregt.
Soon after this incident, he was deported to the United States. There, he was detained in a half-way house, where he killed his 83-year-old roommate with a razor after an argument.
Weinstein was deemed incapable to stand trial, and remanded to a psychiatric hospital, the Kirby Forensic Psychiatric Center on Manhattan"s Wards Island, where he remains to this day.
Weinstein had been described as having a "ruthless killer instinct" for chess in a February 1964 British Chess Magazine article, before the incident took place.