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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
National
Nick Perry

New Zealand jury finds mom guilty of killing her 3 young daughters in a case that shocked the nation

New Zealand Herald

A New Zealand jury on Wednesday found a mother guilty of murdering her three young daughters in a case that shocked the nation.

Lauren Dickason, 42, had earlier admitted killing her 2-year-old twin daughters Maya and Karla, and their 6-year-old sister Lianè, at their home in the town of Timaru nearly two years ago.

But she had pleaded not guilty to murder, arguing she was mentally disturbed at the time of the killings and didn't know that what she was doing was wrong.

Prosecutors, however, pointed to Dickason's troubling phone messages and online history in the weeks before the killings, including comments about wanting to kill her children and Google searches for “most effective overdose in kids.”

Dickason and her husband Graham Dickason, both qualified medical professionals, had moved from South Africa to New Zealand just days before the murders, seeking a more stable lifestyle away from the turmoil in their home country.

Lauren Dickason at first tried to kill her children using zip ties and then suffocated them with pillows. She then placed them in their beds under the covers and tried to kill herself.

Graham Dickason, an orthopedic surgeon. returned from a work dinner to find his children dead. He later told police that he knew his wife was struggling with her mental health and with motherhood but had no idea she was capable of killing.

The guilty verdict came after a four-week trial. Jurors rejected Dickason's legal defenses under New Zealand's insanity and infanticide laws. Jurors were not unanimous, voting 11-1 for conviction, a split allowed under New Zealand laws.

Dickason faces a sentence of life imprisonment.

Radio New Zealand reported that Dickason was motionless in the dock as the verdict was read out in the Christchurch High Court, and then cried quietly as she left. Jurors could also be heard crying, RNZ reported.

Dickason's parents issued a statement saying the deaths were the result of their daughter's debilitating mental illness.

“We would like to encourage families and individuals around the world to be aware of the symptoms of post-partum depression as early as possible, both for yourselves as well as close family and friends around you," parents Malcolm and Wendy Fawkes said in the statement, RNZ reported.

Detective Inspector Scott Anderson said police wanted to express their deepest sympathies to family members who would never get to see Liané, Maya, and Karla grow up and live out their lives.

“Words cannot begin to express the tragic circumstances of this investigation,” Anderson said in a statement.

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