Crime A Troubled Mother Faces Murder Charges in Her Young Children’s Deaths - Strangled her three children to death with an exercise band. Was it PPD or postpartum psychosis?

Chilling details emerged at an arraignment of Lindsay Clancy, accused of strangling her three children. Her lawyer argued she was mentally ill, but prosecutors outlined methodical planning leading to the deaths.



By Ellen Barry
Feb. 8, 2023
DUXBURY, Mass. — Lindsay Clancy lay paralyzed in a hospital bed on Tuesday afternoon, occasionally blinking or shutting her eyes, unable to do anything but listen as lawyers told two narratives about how she had strangled her three children.

The prosecutor said it had been meticulously planned: She had concocted an errand that would keep her husband, Patrick, out of the house for about 25 minutes, just long enough so she could do it.

And she had then strangled each of her children with an exercise band, an act that would require holding each of them down for at least four minutes. Then she leapt from a second-story window, a fall that fractured her spine.

“The defendant stated that after he left the house that night, she killed the kids because she heard a voice, and had, quote unquote, a moment of psychosis,” Assistant District Attorney Jennifer Sprague said during a virtual arraignment via Zoom.

“She heard a man’s voice, telling her to kill the kids and kill herself because it was her last chance,” Ms. Sprague said.

The defense lawyer told a different story. Since the birth of her youngest child, eight months ago, he said, Ms. Clancy had repeatedly sought help for postpartum depression, eventually being prescribed 13 psychiatric medications in a four-month period. But suicidal thoughts kept surfacing, culminating in a break on Jan. 24.

“This is not a situation, your honor, that was planned by any means,” said Ms. Clancy’s lawyer, Kevin Reddington. “This is a situation that clearly was a product of mental illness.”

In the last two weeks, since Mr. Clancy arrived home to a horrific scene, this community has been trying to make sense of it. Ms. Clancy, 32, worked as a labor and delivery nurse. She was known as a generous friend and a doting mother. She had no criminal record, nor any reported history of abusing her children — Cora, 5; Dawson, 3; and the baby, Callan.

Ms. Clancy has received a good deal of sympathy, much of it from women who have experienced postpartum depression and psychosis. Online supporters have adopted the hashtag LAOL, which stands for Lindsay’s Army of Love. Mr. Clancy appealed to the public to “find it deep within yourselves to forgive Lindsay, as I have.”

But Tuesday’s arraignment made it clear how difficult it would be to untangle Ms. Clancy’s mental state from her actions.

The Plymouth County district attorney, Tim Cruz, is prosecuting Ms. Clancy on charges of first-degree murder, which carries the state’s maximum penalty, life imprisonment without the possibility of parole, as well as three counts of strangulation and three counts of assault and battery with a dangerous weapon.

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Lindsay Clancy
Credit via Facebook

Mr. Cruz, a rare Republican prosecutor in Massachusetts, is widely seen as uncompromising. He successfully pushed for two consecutive life sentences for Latarsha Sanders, who fatally stabbed her two sons in Brockton, Mass., despite her family’s insistence that she was psychotic and delusional.
The extent of Ms. Clancy’s mental illness is only gradually coming into view.
Prosecutors said on Tuesday that she had never reported psychosis to her husband and that a psychiatrist who evaluated her in December had concluded she was not suffering from postpartum depression. On Jan. 5, less than three weeks before the killings, she had been released from a five-day inpatient stay at McLean Hospital, a psychiatric hospital, without any warning that she posed a danger to herself or others.
The case is unfolding at a moment of rising awareness of mental illness and failures in the mental health system.
“If I were the D.A., I would be reticent to charge this as murder — it feels misaligned with our current understanding of mental health, and misaligned with the public reaction,” said Daniel Medwed, a professor of criminal law at Northeastern University.

“Society,” he added, “is way ahead of the law here.”
More than two dozen countries have laws decreasing penalties and providing psychiatric care for mothers who kill children under the age of 1. In 2018, Illinois was the first U.S. state to pass a law making postpartum illness a mitigating factor in sentencing.
Ms. Clancy posted frequently on social media, leaving behind a trail of family snapshots and updates on her mental health. In one post, last fall, she described an adverse reaction to Zoloft, a commonly prescribed antidepressant, which she wrote had left her with such “extreme insomnia” and lack of appetite that she stopped taking it.
Over the four months preceding the killings, Mr. Reddington said, she had been prescribed 13 psychiatric medications, an assortment of benzodiazepines, antidepressants, mood stabilizers and Ambien, which is used as a sleep aid.
“This continued even up until the week before when her husband went to the doctor and asked her for help and said, ‘Please, you’re turning her into a zombie,’” he said at a hearing last week. At Tuesday’s arraignment, he said she had been suffering from postpartum depression, “as well as a possibility of postpartum psychosis that is pretty much ignored.”
Prosecutors, meanwhile, cast the killings as carefully planned.
Using data from Ms. Clancy’s phone, Ms. Sprague described at length how Ms. Clancy had spent the afternoon of Jan. 24 — making a snowman with her children and taking photos that she sent to her mother and husband. Then, at 4:13 p.m., she searched for a restaurant to order takeout, using Apple maps to calculate how long it would take to drive to the restaurant and back.
At 4:53, she texted Mr. Clancy, who was working from a home office in the basement, and asked him to pick up the food — a Mediterranean power bowl for her, scallop and pork belly risotto for him. They had a 14-second call at 5:34 p.m., which Mr. Clancy described as unremarkable, though “she seemed like she was in the middle of something.”
When Mr. Clancy returned to the house, shortly after 6 p.m., he was confused to find it quiet, Ms. Sprague said. Setting down the containers and climbing up to the second floor, he forced open the door of the master bedroom to discover blood on the floor and an open window.

He ran down to the back yard, where his wife was lying, with cuts on her wrists and neck, and asked her where their children were. A recording of a 911 call captured the audio as Mr. Clancy climbed down the stairs to the basement. “At one point, he calls out, ‘Guys?’” Ms. Sprague said. “He can then be heard screaming in agony and shock as he found his children.”

All three had exercise bands tied around their necks. Cora, 5, and Dawson, 3, were pronounced dead at the hospital. Callan died three days later.

Maternal infanticide frequently takes place in the context of postpartum psychosis, a syndrome that occurs in one or two births per thousand and is characterized by delusions and hallucinations that can come on suddenly.

Courts and juries have responded to these cases in disparate ways. The best known is that of Andrea Yates, a Texas woman who was charged with murder in 2001, after she drowned her five children in a bathtub. She later said she had been following the commands of Satan, who had told her it would save them from hell.

In Ms. Yates’s first trial, in 2002, a jury found her guilty after just three and a half hours of deliberation. After that conviction was overturned, the jury in her second trial, in 2006, found her not guilty by reason of insanity.

It’s not unusual for doctors and family members to miss signs of postpartum psychosis in high-functioning women, according to Teresa Twomey, a lawyer and author of “Understanding Postpartum Psychosis: A Temporary Madness.”

Ms. Twomey, who said she had suffered a psychotic break after the birth of her daughter, remembered repeatedly calling her husband to warn him there were intruders in the house. He would drive home, reassure her there was no one in the house and leave again, figuring, as she put it, “maybe a squirrel got into the attic.”
Eventually, she said, she began to vividly visualize acts of violence against her baby, and was so fearful of her own potential actions that she collected the knives and scissors in the house and stowed them in the back of the closet.
In the case of a patient like Ms. Clancy, Ms. Twomey said, “we make the assumption that she would know, and could self-report.” But, she added, “if you’re high-functioning, and you’re paranoid, people are looking for reasons you wouldn’t have this illness.”
In a sermon last Sunday, the Rev. Robert Deehan, who had baptized the youngest of the Clancy children, asked parishioners to look more closely at their neighbors and family members, to consider, as he put it, “what burden the other person might be carrying.”
It had been a difficult week. The morning after the killings, Father Deehan sat with Mr. Clancy for an hour, praying. Later, he visited Ms. Clancy in her hospital room while she was still unconscious and delivered the sacrament of anointing of the sick, which is sometimes known as last rites. On Friday, at a funeral Mass for the children, he read the eulogy Mr. Clancy had written for them.
“Poor Pat kind of went off by himself because he’s still grieving, as you would imagine, and wanting to be apart and just alone, having some space,” he said. “So we gave him that space.”
In Duxbury, a seaside town settled in the 17th century, opinion was split, with some calling for draconian punishment and others, especially women, expressing sympathy.

“The first thing everybody did was look up her Facebook page, and on her Facebook page you can see literally how in love she was with her children,” said Julie Catineau, a psychiatric nurse who hosts a podcast, “Psychology Unplugged.”

“I believe in my heart that this woman was suffering,” she said. “That woman was out of her mind suffering.”

Ms. Clancy will remain in the hospital until she is cleared to be moved to a rehabilitation facility. A probable cause hearing in the case is set for May 2. Speaking to reporters last week, Mr. Reddington indicated that he planned to argue that she was not guilty by reason of insanity.

“The legal system is a heartless juggernaut that would not be affected by public opinion,” he said. “They will proceed as they deem appropriate. I hope they will temper justice with mercy, as they say. If they don’t, then it will be a trial.”


Ellen Barry covers mental health. She has served as The Times’s Boston bureau chief, London-based chief international correspondent and bureau chief in Moscow and New Delhi. She was part of a team that won the 2011 Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting. @EllenBarryNYT
 
Is this a fucking puff piece trying to paint a triple child murderer in a sympathetic light?

I hate the antichrist.
More like, questioning the system that let someone that deranged keep children, and thinking that putting her on 13 medications was going to have a positive effect. Or that's my take anyway.
 
Thirteen medications? Why would anyone be on that many medications?

“This continued even up until the week before when her husband went to the doctor and asked her for help and said, ‘Please, you’re turning her into a zombie,’” he said at a hearing last week. At Tuesday’s arraignment, he said she had been suffering from postpartum depression, “as well as a possibility of postpartum psychosis that is pretty much ignored.”

Why didn't he get another opinion? The doctor sounds like a quack that just hands out prescriptions and collects fees.
So post partum psychosis/depression and THIRTEEN different medications? Yeah that's never going to go badly. What the fuck was that doctor thinking? I didn't go into this thinking I'd have a shred of empathy but that much medication? She'd be better off snorting cocaine and hoping for the best.

Regardless of whether or not she was psychotic when she committed the murders, that doctor should be sued. That's an insane amount of medication to put anyone on. It doesn't sound like he was doing much else for her but writing prescriptions. And of course she's not the only patient. God knows what other shenanigans are going on.
 
Quoting myself since it's relevant here
I mean, really, if having a child can spontaneously make women turn into unabashed baby killers you gotta wonder if you can trust them to make any choices.
Is this a fucking puff piece trying to paint a triple child murderer in a sympathetic light?

I hate the antichrist.
The in-group preference of women truly knows no bounds.
 
I can't hate too much since I'd do the same if I reproduced lmao

What's the situation with the dad? Is he a creepy fundie with a breeding fetish who refused to adhere to his wife's doctors orders like Rusty Yates? Or did he just not realize how bad the situation was?

Strongly believe Rusty Yates should've been charged with something. If nothing else something related to medical neglect of a vulnerable adult. Highly doubt that tragedy would've happened if he actually followed the doctors orders that Andrea stay on her meds and not have any more fucking kids.
 
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There’s another aspect to articles written this way that I really find disturbing. I may not explain this well:
It’s written as though this was inevitable, and that PPD equals you having murderous actions which are totally not your fault, as if you’re powerless. Now many women DO experience PPD, and severe sleep deprivation can make you very sick as well. But the vast majority of women experiencing this find it very distressing, but still have the drive to care for and protect their babies. So a woman might be on her knees with tiredness and very worried / experiencing intrusive thoughts of say, being so tired she trips holding the baby, or being so tired she fails to notice a safety risk.
But even with something like severe OCD pure O type, it’s thoughts of harm, not harm. And mainly thoughts of harm being inflicted, not you inflicting harm. Imagine a woman reading this when she has PPD and becoming very distressed that maybe she’s crazy enoigh to the hurt the baby.
Maybe I’m not explaining this so well, but murder should be seen as murder. Not ‘an inevitable consequence of giving birth and being depressed/anxious.’ It’s like a woman unable to sleep becasue she’s heard of con sleeping deaths who stays awake watching the baby in a cot or safe sleeping place in her bed - when the majority of such cases are people drunk or drugged passing out and smothering them.
I’m trying to say that putting this as ‘troubled normal women kills children’ is not really an accurate reflection of either these murdered OR of most womens experience of postpartum blues, or depression, yet it links them in a way I find to be uncomfortable and somewhat anti-natal.
 
'Ms. Clancy has received a good deal of sympathy, much of it from women who have experienced postpartum depression and psychosis. Online supporters have adopted the hashtag LAOL, which stands for Lindsay’s Army of Love. Mr. Clancy appealed to the public to “find it deep within yourselves to forgive Lindsay, as I have.”'

Faggot.

Jesus in Heaven, this has been bothering me all day. I can't stop thinking about those poor childrens' last moments at the hands of their lunatic mother, all because their father is too much of a limp dick moron to stick her crazy ass somewhere and keep the kids safe. I blame him. No forgiveness for either of you sacks of shit. This is sickening.

And the twats in Lindsay's Army of Losers? Wastes. Of. Skin. She had to stare into the faces of her babies as she strangled the life out of them, their last moments were an eternity of confusion, agony, and fear. I don't care, give me the hats, I want to light this bitch on fire, and all her supporters too.
 
Throwing so many drugs into her system in a short amount of time is not how you fix that problem. What the fuck was the husband doing? Why didn't he sort something out to get her away from the children for a while? Where the fuck was their families? They all should've gotten involved to get this woman away from her kids so she can destress before she goes fuckin' nutters.

Those poor, poor babies.
 
I want to share some thoughts about Lindsay. She’s recently been portrayed largely by people who have never met her and never knew who the real Lindsay was. Our marriage was wonderful and diametrically grew stronger as her condition rapidly worsened. I took as much pride in being her husband as I did in being a father and felt persistently lucky to have her in my life. I still remember the very moment I first laid eyes on her and can recall how overcome I was with the kind of love at first sight you only see in movies. It really didn’t take long before I was certain I wanted to marry her. We said “I love you” to each other multiple times daily, as if it were a reflex. We habitually started every morning with a passionate hug, yielding a sigh of relief like we had each received the perfect medicine. If too much time passed with out a hug, she’d look at me and ask, “did you forget?” We mutually understood the reality that people can have bad days, but we stuck to the rule that when one of us got lost, the other was always there to bring them home, always. She loved being a nurse, but nothing matched her intense love for our kids and dedication to being a mother. It was all she ever wanted. Her passion taught me how to be a better father.

I want to ask all of you that you find it deep within yourselves to forgive Lindsay, as I have. The real Lindsay was generously loving and caring towards everyone - me, our kids, family, friends, and her patients. The very fibers of her soul are loving. All I wish for her now is that she can somehow find peace.
I should note that this was written four days after this psychotic bitch murdered all three of his children. Four fucking days, and he's already prostrating himself before her and extolling her virtues. There's being a cuck, and then there's lavishing praise upon someone who just murdered your children earlier that week.

I just don't believe that it's possible to be such a spineless loser that you could be this pathetic in a scenario so ungodly sobering. Maybe he's just shell shocked and doesn't know what he's saying.
 
I should note that this was written four days after this psychotic bitch murdered all three of his children. Four fucking days, and he's already prostrating himself before her and extolling her virtues. There's being a cuck, and then there's lavishing praise upon someone who just murdered your children earlier that week.

I just don't believe that it's possible to be such a spineless loser that you could be this pathetic in a scenario so ungodly sobering. Maybe he's just shell shocked and doesn't know what he's saying.
I think Leonardo DiCaprio reaction to similar event was way more appropriate. This is some level of denial and fake saintliness that must be powered by a nuclear grade of narcissism. Maybe that's why his chick got so insane. I am not justifying what she did, but just her mental disturbance. Imagine putting up with such a goody-goody two shoe every day.
 
I should note that this was written four days after this psychotic bitch murdered all three of his children. Four fucking days, and he's already prostrating himself before her and extolling her virtues. There's being a cuck, and then there's lavishing praise upon someone who just murdered your children earlier that week.

I just don't believe that it's possible to be such a spineless loser that you could be this pathetic in a scenario so ungodly sobering. Maybe he's just shell shocked and doesn't know what he's saying.
Even better - strangle him with an exercise belt along with that murdering cunt of a "mother",
MATI, yes, don't really care. Fuck 'em.
 
13 medications? She may be a sociopath but we would never know it for sure. People get permanent brain fry for far less than that.
However, i'm going to be 100% honest here: this smells like a late stage abortion. Yeah sure a lot of people regret having children that doesnt mean they would literally kill them, but again she was on 13 medications so for starters she's not the average person. The husband being this pasive tells me either he was was waiting for this or that he's a bit glad too.
 
Gotta get around abortion bans somehow lmao
Oh they're going to jump you but you're right lmao. People severely underestimate how far a mother would go to get rid of an unwanted child.
Nowdays straight up killing them went out of fashion because you can't toe around "infant death" like the old days, but the massive admout of groomed and adiccted kids whose mothers only look at them sheeply from afar, tells you they don't really care if the kid drops dead.
 
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