Courtesy Washington National Cathedral.

Courtesy Washington National Cathedral.

After nearly a year and a half since she was first arrested, a D.C. Superior Court judge has dismissed the case against a Chinese woman who allegedly splattered numerous local landmarks with green paint.

The Post reports that 58-year-old Jiamei Tian—who was arrested in 2013 for allegedly splattering the Lincoln Memorial with green paint, and is suspected of doing the same to walls inside of the National Cathedral, the Smithsonian Castle, the Luther Place Memorial Church, and a Martin Luther statue in Thomas Circle—won’t stand trial for one count of defacing property.

Previously, Tian, who is in the U.S. on an expired visa from China, was declared unfit to stand trial and spent time in St. Elizabeth’s hospital in 2013 and 2014, under court orders. At a December 3, 2013 status hearing, Tian’s attorney told the judge that her psychiatrist believes her client would be able to stand trial in the “foreseeable future.”

At yesterday’s hearing, the judge ordered Tian’s release from the hospital, though the prosecutors weren’t happy:

Prosecutors within the U.S. attorney’s office who handled the case said they were “disappointed” in the District’s decision not to order Tian committed. “We don’t have any control to say otherwise,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Kathleen Connolly said.