Massachusetts Mom Offers Written Admission in Triple Child Killing to Center Trial on Mental State
Defense lawyers for Massachusetts nurse Lindsay Clancy, accused of strangling her three young children in Duxbury on Jan. 24, 2023, have filed a new motion offering a formal written admission that she killed them in an effort to shift the trial’s focus entirely to her mental condition. The move comes a week after a judge rejected her bid to split the trial into separate phases on the acts and her sanity, and asks the court to reconsider by arguing that guilt on the conduct would no longer be in dispute. Prosecutors, who say Clancy used exercise bands to kill 5‑year‑old Cora, 3‑year‑old Dawson and 8‑month‑old Callan before jumping from a second‑story window in an apparent suicide attempt that left her paraplegic, have not agreed to the proposal and previously argued a bifurcated trial would be redundant. If she is ultimately found not guilty by reason of insanity or otherwise deemed mentally unfit, Massachusetts law could allow commitment to a secure psychiatric facility instead of state prison, a prospect already stirring public debate over postpartum mental illness, accountability and public safety. Newly unsealed records cited in the case show she carried out a series of apparently routine tasks the day of the killings — taking a child to the pediatrician, contacting a pharmacy, ordering takeout and checking Apple Maps — before allegedly sending her husband to pick up food and medication, leaving her alone with the children.
📌 Key Facts
- Lindsay Clancy is charged with three counts of murder and strangulation in the Jan. 24, 2023 deaths of her children in Duxbury, Massachusetts.
- A new defense motion says she is willing to formally admit in writing to the conduct that caused their deaths, aiming to make her mental state the sole issue for a jury.
- A judge had denied her earlier request to bifurcate the trial about a week before this filing, and prosecutors oppose splitting the proceedings.
- If Clancy is found legally insane or unfit for trial, she could be committed to a secure mental-health facility rather than serving time in prison under Massachusetts law.
📊 Relevant Data
Postpartum depression diagnosis rates increased significantly from 2010 to 2021, with the largest increases among Asian and Pacific Islander individuals (280% increase) and non-Hispanic Black individuals (140% increase).
Trends in Postpartum Depression by Race, Ethnicity, and Socioeconomic Factors in the United States From 2010 to 2021 — JAMA Network Open
Black individuals have the highest rates of perinatal depression, while Asian and Hispanic individuals experience more severe symptoms.
Racial and ethnic differences in perinatal depression and associated adverse perinatal outcomes among people with gestational diabetes: a retrospective cohort study — Journal of Affective Disorders
The success rate of the insanity defense in criminal cases where mental illness is cited is about 1%.
Mental Illness & the Insanity Defense Statistics — Criminal Defense FLA
Child homicide rates in the US increased to 2.8 per 100,000 children in 2020, a 27.7% rise from 2019.
Trends in Homicide Rates for US Children Aged 0 to 17 Years, 1999 to 2020 — JAMA Pediatrics
In fatal child abuse and neglect cases, more than one in three victims resided in the most impoverished communities, with disproportionate impacts on American Indian/Alaska Native and Black victims.
Racial and ethnic differences in fatal child abuse and neglect: Findings from the National Violent Death Reporting System, 2015-2019 — Child Abuse & Neglect
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