About 90 percent of a psychologist's report that led to an Orange Park man accused of terrorism to be declared incompetent for trial was released to the public Monday afternoon after media objected to efforts to seal it.

U.S. Magistrate Judge James Klindt ordered the nine-page report on 20-year-old Joshua Ryne Goldberg released but redacted some medical and private personal information at the request of attorneys for both sides.

Media attorney Timothy Conner argued that the entire report should be made public. Klindt said he needed to review the information that had not been made public more thoroughly before deciding whether it could be released.

Authorities say Goldberg conspired to have a pressure-cooker bomb detonated at a 9/11 memorial event in Kansas City, Missouri, in September. He is charged with distributing information related to explosives, destructive devices and weapons of mass destruction.

No bomb was ever made.

Forensic psychologist Lisa Feldman with the Federal Detention Center in Miami wrote the report and found Goldberg incompetent to go to trial.

The information that was released Monday said Goldberg was suicidal after his arrest. It also said he did poorly in multiple tests designed to judge his sanity, often displaying poor eye contact and being guarded, evasive and argumentative.

"His thought content was remarkable for grandiosity and paranoid delusions, including delusions of persecution," Feldman wrote.

Goldberg's insight into his mental health and legal status were impaired and judgment is poor, she said.

"Based on subjective clinical impressions, Mr. Goldberg exhibits disorganized thinking, significant social deficits and poor interactions with others," Feldman said.

During a hearing that was open to the public in December, Feldman said Goldberg is on multiple medications for schizophrenia, depression and anxiety. But the medication doesn't seem to help much, and a more thorough procedure is probably necessary to determine exactly what his mental health issues are, Feldman said.

Goldberg, who was not at Monday's hearing, is being sent to the Federal Medical Center in Butner, North Carolina, for an evaluation that will take at least four months.

A progress report will be sent to Klindt, who will decide how to proceed.

At the time Goldberg was found incompetent, defense attorney Paul Shorstein said the entire report should be sealed. Prosecutors did not object, but the Times-Union, Associated Press and several Jacksonville television stations motioned to intervene, saying the public's right to know trumped any claim of privacy.

Conner said Goldberg's high-profile arrest and the fact that he'd been charged with terrorism meant the public had a right to know why he wasn't facing criminal charges.

Shorstein said there was information in the report that had no bearing on the decision to find him incompetent. But Klindt said when Feldman testified, she cited things in the report that Klindt didn't think had any bearing on Goldberg's mental health.

Feldman said Goldberg told her that he was attempting to be a journalist and help the FBI by exposing terrorism. Feldman said that was another example of Goldberg's lack of competence.

Klindt disagreed with that assessment and said trying to help the FBI or be a journalist sounded like a valid defense claim if Goldberg ever went on trial.

The criminal complaint against Goldberg said he had many different personalities online, at different times claiming to be an Australian militant who'd joined the Islamic State, a Jewish attorney, a news reporter, a feminist and a free-speech advocate.

If convicted, he faces a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison, according to the U.S. Attorney's Office.

An affidavit filed in the case said an FBI informer was in contact with Goldberg on Twitter and was given instructions to fill a pressure cooker with nails, metal and other items dipped in rat poison.

The FBI informer posed as a college student living about an hour away from Kansas City and expressed an interest in making a bomb, according to the affidavit.

Goldberg told investigators he provided the information but hoped the person would kill himself trying to make it, according to the affidavit. He said if the person created the bomb, he would have alerted authorities before the attack and be a hero.