There were two stabbings.
Antony Waterlow was convinced his family were out to bring him down. In his disturbed mind, they were driving him to commit suicide. He fought these feelings for years and, in the end, he snapped and killed his father Nick and his sister Chloe Heuston.
We covered this distressing story on Mamamia at the time. Many people we knew were close to Chloe and Nick. Chloe and her husband Ben (who was in London visiting family at the time of the murders) had three children, the youngest of whom was only 4 months old and breastfeeding when his mother was killed. Waterlow also stabbed a child who cannot be identified for legal reasons.
It’s almost impossible to imagine a more horrific crime. Let’s not try.
Anthony Waterlow has suffered from schizophrenia for years and yesterday the New South Wales Supreme Court acquitted him of the charges on the grounds that he was mentally ill. The case was heard in the absence of a jury.
He was found Not Guilty.
Now the talk turns, as it invariably does with tragedies of this magnitude, to how the system failed. What should have been done to prevent this? Shouldn’t he have been scheduled?
What is scheduling?
Family friend Jane Campion argued for a review of the law in New South Wales that allows mentally ill people to be scheduled, or admitted into mental health facilities without their consent. The aim, of course, is to protect those around them.
Jane spoke to the Sydney Morning Herald:
“This case shows that Nick and Chloe tried really, really hard … everything that was available, but they died because Anthony could not be scheduled, not until he had done something really terrible,” she said.
“I just think this case talks to the heart of the facts that there is a real gap in the system, in my view, that Nick and Chloe died because there was no protection from mental health services or the police.”
Mamamia spoke with Barbara Hocking, the Executive Director of SANE Australia, about the handling of mental health patients in the criminal justice system and why there needs to be more support.
Top Comments
in my husband's family, a grand-daughter w schizophrenia killed her grand-mother, after years of threatening to do so.
The grand-daughter's brother is a Psychiatrist.
sad, sad, sad....
I have a brother who is a copy of Antony Waterlo. The same obsession with people out to get him. He was a voluntary patient at Rozelle Hospital many years ago. The treatment was terrible and the superintendent a man who committed the Chelmsford horror soon after whereby scores of people died. Fortunately he still had a Dutch passport and through the efforts of parents was finally repatriated to the Netherlands. Today he is still 'scheduled' and still has 'his voices' and at times still becomes violent.
However he is looked after and has a dignified life with own private room, TV and good health care, including dental, podiatry etc.
He is still alive and at 72 has been unable to hurt others or himself. Some mental disorders can't be treated by tablets and living within the community. In the case of Antony he could and should have been looked after by 'schedule' on a much more permanent basis.
The price paid for our dismal mental health care is not just the death of his father and sister but the thousands of families that are suffering year in year out. We are decades behind mental health care.
Our jails have become defacto mental hospitals. Shame on you Australia.