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Mother gets life for heroin death | |
(20 minutes later) | |
A mother convicted of murdering her disabled son by injecting him with heroin at a Hertfordshire care home has been jailed for life. | |
Frances Inglis, 57, of Dagenham, Essex, denied murdering Thomas Inglis, 22, on 21 November 2008 and an earlier attempt to kill him on 4 September 2007. | Frances Inglis, 57, of Dagenham, Essex, denied murdering Thomas Inglis, 22, on 21 November 2008 and an earlier attempt to kill him on 4 September 2007. |
But a jury at the Old Bailey found her guilty of both charges. She must serve a minimum of nine years. | |
Mr Inglis suffered brain damage when he fell out of an ambulance in July 2007. | Mr Inglis suffered brain damage when he fell out of an ambulance in July 2007. |
The jury reached their verdicts by a majority of 10 to two after deliberating for more than six hours. | The jury reached their verdicts by a majority of 10 to two after deliberating for more than six hours. |
'Tragedy and grief' | |
There were cries of "shame on you" from the public gallery as the verdicts were read out. | There were cries of "shame on you" from the public gallery as the verdicts were read out. |
Before the jury went out to deliberate, Judge Brian Barker told them "there is no concept in law of mercy killing" and it is still killing. | Before the jury went out to deliberate, Judge Brian Barker told them "there is no concept in law of mercy killing" and it is still killing. |
Judge Barker said there was no doubt Ms Inglis had tried to take her son's life in September 2007 and succeeded using an "identical" method 14 months later. | |
In summing up, the judge said the background of "tragedy and grief" will have struck a chord with all who had heard it. | |
Frances Inglis said she wanted her son to have a painless death | |
He said: "It would be extraordinary if we didn't feel empathy with the family and what Mrs Inglis had to face." | |
During the trial Inglis said: "For Tom to live that living hell - I couldn't leave my child like that. | During the trial Inglis said: "For Tom to live that living hell - I couldn't leave my child like that. |
"I did it with love in my heart, for Tom, so I don't see it as murder." | "I did it with love in my heart, for Tom, so I don't see it as murder." |
Inglis told the court she had started to research her son's condition on the internet within days of his accident. | |
She also claimed she had to beg hospital staff to give him some relief for his "terrible pain". | |
Detectives investigating the first incident in September 2007 found notes stored under the stairs at her home in Dagenham, east London, the Old Bailey heard. | |
Mother driven 'insane' | |
One said: "People keep saying Tom isn't suffering. How do they know? Can they know the terror of knowing you cannot control anything anymore? | |
"Can they know the agony of being denied pain relief just to see his reaction?" | |
She later told police: "When I wrote this I was sort of off my head really," the court heard. | |
Inglis said she was convinced that the doctor treating her son at Queens Hospital in Romford, Essex, was lying about his chances of recovery. | |
The jury heard from Inglis's other son Alex who said his brother's injuries had driven his mother almost "insane". |