Yes, I've had terribly much trouble with the law. And it all started just because one cop thought I was weird. Yep. My cellmate in jail was a diagnosed Aspie, too, and his thing, he wasn't so much on a trumped up charge as I was, but he reacted to a situation in a way that was...logical, but didn't really particularly work for him. Lots of Aspies get in trouble for that. http://www.copblock.org/3759/young-man- ... to-police/ Like this, there was nothing wrong with what he did, technically, but he didn't know "if you're dealing with a cop, he can legally beat your ass and get away with it no problem, so when dealing with cops it's most of the time better to take their crap." My celly btw, was this kid, http://www.norwichbulletin.com/news/x11 ... e-shooting He was right in what he did, imo, the group of "nice teenagers" he shot at in the article was actually a small town gang who'd harass people and do bad stuff constantly. To prove it was a small town gang, a person in my unit in jail was in this small town gang, and was very angry at my celly over this. Also, my celly told me in that argument, someone pulled a knife out on him and put it to his throat. So he came back, and fired upon them without trying to kill, just to threaten. What he did wasn't really "wrong" however, it's something that'll get you in trouble. He ended up doing 2 years and getting probation and pretty much ruining his life over something he could have just walked away from.
I think another thing with Aspies, because we tend to "think" through much more things, everything seems "premeditated" because to us everything is premeditated. Example, if a normal person, let's say, shoots someone in a bar fight or something like that, right. Normal person can go "I wasn't thinking, I didn't mean to!" and then possibly get the charges dropped from a Murder 1 to a Murder 3 or Intentional Manslaughter or even lower. Aspie on the other hand, if they were in the same situation, would appear to others as cold and emotionless and if confessing, would probably just say "yeah I shot him, of course I meant to kill him, I shot him with a firearm" and then the prosecutor would have no sympathy because the Aspie doesn't "feel" remorse, even if he understands the implications of his actions.
One thing I was told, too, upon going to jail for the second time, was "You have a very principled thought process, and I'm afraid of how you'd react to certain situations in general population, where the people don't have a principled thought process like you."