THE CENTRAL Criminal Court heard yesterday that a woman accused of murdering her daughter told gardaí that Our Lady told her to kill her so she got a knife.
Gardaí found the body of her 21-year-old daughter, Jessica, covered in blood at the foot of the stairs. She had been stabbed 44 times.
The court was told that the Cork woman suffers from paranoid schizophrenia with fixed delusions. The accused said she killed her daughter to save her child who she believed was Jesus.
Mary Prendergast (49), of Glenna Cottages, Commons Road, Cork, has pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity to the murder of Jessica Prendergast (21) at that address on July 29th, 2006. Consultant psychiatrist Dr Brian McCaffrey gave evidence on behalf of the accused.
He said that Ms Prendergast has had illness of a psychiatric nature for about 19 years and was admitted to psychiatric institutions on seven occasions before the killing. He read a referral letter from Ms Prendergast’s GP dated October 2001.
The letter stated: “This woman has severe paranoid delusions centred around the government trying to kill her. She is getting messages from the TV.”
Dr McCaffrey said that Ms Prendergast was “convinced that medication was given to her to damage or perhaps kill her”. He diagnosed Ms Prendergast with paranoid schizophrenia with very fixed delusions.
“At the time of the events, she was suffering from an exacerbation of symptoms. They were actually worse that night,” he said.
The jury will be asked to decide today whether Ms Prendergast should be acquitted by reason of insanity.
Supt Martin Shannon told the jury that a woman named Sandra Byrne, who lived nearby in Glenna Cottages, was woken early on the morning of the stabbing.
She thought she heard the sound of crying and heard the words: “She’s dead, why aren’t you helping me?” Ms Byrne looked outside and saw a woman in pyjamas.
The woman was “panicked and stressed and had a child over her left shoulder”. Supt Shannon told the jury that the woman then walked to the offices of the Blue Cab taxi company – a three minute walk away. She passed by the offices a number of times before coming to the hatch and asking for a taxi to the Garda station. There was blood on her face and hair, and on the child she was carrying.
One of the men working at the office called gardaí and, at 6.10am, Garda John Flynn arrived. He observed that the woman was “very distressed”. An ambulance was called and took the woman to Mercy hospital.
The jury heard that, on the way, the woman said “something to the effect that her daughter was possessed by the devil”.
Garda Murphy observed that Ms Prendergast was in a “shocked state, crying, shaking, grinding her teeth. There was blood on her left cheek, forehead, hair and left eye”. Garda Murphy took notes of some of what Ms Prendergast said.
Ms Prendergast said that the baby – Jessica’s two-year-old son – told her that Jessica was “bad with the devil”. Ms Prendergast said that she “killed Jessica with a knife”
She said that she “wanted the baby because the baby was Jesus and she wanted to save the baby”.
“I asked the baby was she [Jessica] dead and he told me she was and he clapped his hands.”
She said that the baby made her kill Jessica. “He told me she was the devil.”
The court heard that State Pathologist Prof Marie Cassidy found 44 stab wounds and more than 30 puncture wounds on Jessica’s body.
After she was stabbed she made her way from the bedroom and down the stairs before finally collapsing at the bottom of the stairs.
The jury heard that Jessica’s brother, Wayne, told gardaí that his mother had been at the dentist in the days leading up to the killing. “She thought that the antichrist had been injected into her at the dentist,” he said.
Jessica had texted Wayne on the day of the killing to say that their mother was “acting up”. Wayne understood this to mean “unusual behaviour.”
Ms Prendergast had been released from psychiatric treatment at Cork University Hospital 19 days before the killing and had gone to stay with Jessica and her grandson.
Supt Shannon said: “She believed she was getting messages from Our Lady from the water dripping into the toilet bowl.”
The trial continues today.