A 63-year-old man accused of the murder of his elderly mother in a violent incident in his home told gardaí he had no choice but to kill her because God told him to do it.
The jury in the trial of Brendan Murray (63) of Kincora Court, Clontarf, Dublin 3, heard on Thursday that the accused told gardaí he had been told by the Holy Spirit to punch and choke his mother before allegedly sexually assaulting her.
The Central Criminal Court heard, however, that there was no evidence that Mr Murray had committed a sexual assault on the victim.
Mr Murray has pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity to the murder of Neasa Murray (88), at Kincora Court on August 23rd, 2020.
Nil Yalter: Solo Exhibition – A fascinating glimpse of a historically influential artist
A Californian woman in Dublin: ‘Ireland’s not perfect, but I do think as a whole it is moving in the right direction’
Will Andy Farrell’s Lions sabbatical hurt Ireland’s Six Nations chances?
How does VAT in Ireland compare with countries across Europe? A guide to a contentious tax
Opening the case for the prosecution, Anne-Marie Lawlor SC said there was no controversy as to what happened and no controversy about who did it, the issue is whether Mr Murray met the criteria for insanity when he killed his mother.
She said that the defence will call evidence by psychiatrist Dr Brenda Wright who will give her expert view that Mr Murray had schizoaffective disorder and did not know what he was doing was wrong.
“This case is about the psychiatric state of Mr Murray when he killed his mother. Criminal liability is dependent on a guilty mind accompanying guilty acts,” said Ms Lawlor.
Det Sgt David Ennis gave evidence to Ms Lawlor that Ms Murray, a mother of five, lived at the family home at the nearby Kincora Drive and acted in a carer role for her son Brendan.
He said that Mr Murray’s neighbours observed him on the day outside his home in pyjamas looking dishevelled. A neighbour assisted him in ringing his mother as he said he was locked out and wanted his mother to bring a key.
The neighbour said Mr Murray’s behaviour was erratic and he was gathering bins and using a crutch as though it were a rifle.
The court was told that Mr Murray told the neighbour “I’m kind of confused.”
‘Spaced out’
Det Sgt Ennis said that a neighbour also told gardaí that Mr Murray had said that God had told him to stop taking his medication and with the help of God, he would get better. The neighbour said that Mr Murray appeared “very spaced out”.
Ms Murray arrived and she and her son went into the house before they later came back out and Ms Murray got into her car. Mr Murray, who the neighbour said now appeared to be wearing clothes, put his hand on her wrist and she went back into the house.
Det Sgt Ennis said that another neighbour told gardaí she heard screaming from the house and heard Mr Murray screaming at his mother. The neighbour said she could hear Ms Murray being attacked, so she got her husband to ring the gardaí. The neighbour also thought she heard a moment of laughter but could not be sure.
When gardaí arrived at the scene, Mr Murray opened the door with blood on his trousers, jumper and hands.
Det Sgt Ennis said that Mr Murray told gardaí he had killed his mother.
Gardaí found Ms Murray lying face up covered in blood, with a lot of blood on the floor surrounding her. Det Sgt Ennis said that it was immediately clear that Ms Murray had been the subject of a violent incident and there was no prospect of saving her.
A postmortem revealed the cause of death to be asphyxia due to mechanical obstruction of the airway and blunt force trauma to the head.
Det Sgt Ennis said that when arrested and brought to the Garda station, Mr Murray struggled in his seat, shouted abusively and prayed out loud.
At one point, the gardaí thought he was having a heart attack, but he was in fact masturbating. He made numerous attempts to run at the door and run at gardaí and he also made references to the bible and God.
Det Sgt Ennis said that Mr Murray told gardaí: “I had to do it, I had no choice, God made me do it. I was in the special forces. I have Lyme disease.”
Det Sgt Ennis said there was no evidence to support Mr Murray’s claim that he had sexually assaulted his mother.
He said the accused delivered a “stream of consciousness reflection about abuse and hostages” during his garda interview.
Det Sgt Ennis said that the accused’s interviews with gardaí were “jumbled” and very hard to write down.
“Our Lord told me I had to kill her, it was her or me. God was telling me to do it,” Mr Murray told gardaí, the court heard.
In response to cross-examination by defence counsel Padraig Dwyer SC, Det Sgt Ennis said Mr Murray has no previous convictions. He confirmed that the alleged sexual assault Mr Murray claimed to have carried out was not reflected in the crime scene.
The trial continues before Ms Justice Eileen Creedon and the jury of eight men and four women.
* This article was amended on December 16th, 2022