MA - Lindsay Clancy, Strangled 3 Children in Murder/Suicide Attempt, Duxbury, Jan 2023

The reference may be alluding to the complaint filed by the Yates family against the psychiatrist due to the dosage of Effexor he prescribed.

Effexor is not an antipsychotic.

Another psychiatrist disputed that claim stating “Saeed's greatest error was taking Yates off the antipsychotic drug Haldol two weeks before she killed her children.”


That suggests the exact opposite of what the poster claimed, which was that the antipsychotic made things worse. That's why I'm confused.
 
Effexor is not an antipsychotic.



That suggests the exact opposite of what the poster claimed, which was that the antipsychotic made things worse. That's why I'm confused.
No, Effexor is not an anti-psychotic. Never said it was. The OP mentioned the Yates case complaint and you asked for a link. As I posted, OP may have been alluding to the complaint I referenced. In the reference, a different psych felt the issue with Yates was being removed from Haldol.

I don’t think you are confused.
 
No, Effexor is not an anti-psychotic. Never said it was. The OP mentioned the Yates case complaint and you asked for a link. As I posted, OP may have been alluding to the complaint I referenced. In the reference, a different psych felt the issue with Yates was being removed from Haldol.

I don’t think you are confused.

I snipped the OP's post because I'm asking for this: "One psychiatrist noted that the cocktail of anti-psychotic drugs she was prescribed was like throwing gasoline on a roaring fire in terms of her psychotic symptoms"

If anyone has the above, that's the link I'd like to see. The suggestion from an expert that the antipsychotics made her worse. Otherwise, I don't believe it to be fact.
 
I snipped the OP's post because I'm asking for this: "One psychiatrist noted that the cocktail of anti-psychotic drugs she was prescribed was like throwing gasoline on a roaring fire in terms of her psychotic symptoms"

If anyone has the above, that's the link I'd like to see. The suggestion from an expert that the antipsychotics made her worse. Otherwise, I don't believe it to be fact.
I’m intrigued by your intrigue with this one. While we wait for the OP to come back and answer, maybe this?

Finally, she received a drug cocktail containing an antipsychotic agent. The medication was apparently effective, but Andrea believed she had been given “truth serum”, which caused her to lose control of herself.

 
I snipped the OP's post because I'm asking for this: "One psychiatrist noted that the cocktail of anti-psychotic drugs she was prescribed was like throwing gasoline on a roaring fire in terms of her psychotic symptoms"

If anyone has the above, that's the link I'd like to see. The suggestion from an expert that the antipsychotics made her worse. Otherwise, I don't believe it to be fact.
The term 'anti-psychotic drugs', I believe, has been used to mean there was likely an anti-psychotic or two prescribed at some point, not a combination of only anti-psychotic drugs.
That is how I read it.
JMO
 
This is the latest article I can find (July 26)

Attorneys waiting on DNA is case of Lindsay Clancy, Duxbury mother accused of killing her 3 children​



A lawyer for the commonwealth told the judge that they are still waiting on DNA test results. She says the crime lab has indicated testing for this case it is in the queue that is relatively long.

Clancy was not in the courtroom on Friday and her appearance was also waived for her new court date on September 27 where the status of DNA evidence will be discussed.
 
 
"Sick" is not the same as insanity, for legal purposes. The bar is much higher. She planned this atrocity in detail, to make sure he would be gone long enough for her to complete the deed.
I would tend to agree the doctors were somewhat complicit with that massive number of prescribed meds.
Diminished capacity perhaps, but not insanity. JMO
 

Thank you for posting. From the link:


“In a recent interview with "The New Yorker," Patrick Clancy said he once asked his wife for answers.”

"I think one of the first things I asked was, 'Did you plan this? Is that why you sent me out?" Clancy said. "She said, 'No, it just was, like, a snap of the fingers."

“According to Massachusetts law, the defense only needs to make the argument that Lindsay Clancy was not guilty by reason of insanity. NewsCenter 5 legal experts said it will then be on the state to prove Clancy was sane and criminally responsible the night her children were killed.”

“Clancy is being held at Tewksbury State Hospital.”
 
 

During a hearing on Wednesday, the court scheduled her trial for Dec. 1. Attorneys for both sides said they expect the case could last two or three weeks.
 

Members online

Online statistics

Members online
116
Guests online
3,124
Total visitors
3,240

Forum statistics

Threads
627,272
Messages
18,542,207
Members
241,242
Latest member
shindigdig
Back
Top