A judge yesterday rejected a plea by lawyers for an Australian woman charged with killing eight children to have the next hearing held in a mental health court.
Mersane Warria, charged under her full name of Raina Mersane Ina Thaiday, is facing eight counts of murder in the deaths of seven of her children and her niece, whose bodies were found inside her northern Australia home last week.
Police were called to the home in the Cairns suburb of Manoora on Friday morning last week after receiving a report of a woman with serious injuries. When they got to the house, they found the bodies, along with Warria, who was suffering from stab wounds to the chest.
Photo: AFP
Warria, 37, did not attend a brief hearing at Cairns Magistrates Court yesterday as she is recovering from her wounds in a hospital.
Magistrate Alan Comans rejected a request from Warria’s lawyer to have the case’s next hearing in a mental health court.
Criminal cases are sometimes referred to such courts if the defendant is believed to be mentally ill or has an intellectual disability. The court then decides what the defendant’s mental state was when they committed the offense.
Photo: EPA
The case has been adjourned until Jan. 30.
Police have not said how the children died, but Queensland Police Detective Inspector Bruno Asnicar said that they are examining several knives in the home that might have been the weapon used to kill them. Suffocation was also a possible cause of death, he said.
Officials were still trying to determine exactly what happened inside the house, and had collected more than 100 witness statements, he said.
A coroner was conducting autopsies, but police would not be releasing the results as the case was now a matter for the courts, he said.
The children, four girls and four boys, ranged in age from two to 14.
Police were not looking for any other suspects, Asnicar said.
“This is very raw and it is a very emotive time for everybody,” he said. “The family is deeply upset but the community is pulling together.”
Asked how the children’s five fathers were coping with the tragedy, Ascinar replied: “I don’t think we need much imagination to understand how they are feeling.”
Dozens of weeping mourners visited a makeshift memorial of flowers, stuffed animals and candles set up in a park next to the family’s home.
“My babies, my babies,” one man wailed.
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