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Dagenham carer guilty of murdering MS sufferer father | Dagenham carer guilty of murdering MS sufferer father |
(35 minutes later) | |
A carer who said she suffocated her father with a plastic bag because of his "intolerable" multiple sclerosis has been found guilty of murder. | A carer who said she suffocated her father with a plastic bag because of his "intolerable" multiple sclerosis has been found guilty of murder. |
Claire Darbyshire, 36, said she killed her father Brian, 67, at their home in Wykeham Green, Dagenham, on 2 September 2015 as part of a failed suicide pact. | |
She was found the next evening wandering around cliff tops in Kent, asking for help. | She was found the next evening wandering around cliff tops in Kent, asking for help. |
The Old Bailey jury unanimously found her guilty. She had denied murder. | The Old Bailey jury unanimously found her guilty. She had denied murder. |
Bed-ridden | Bed-ridden |
Mr Darbyshire, a father-of-two, had developed MS in 1995 and lost his wife Lynn in 2008. | Mr Darbyshire, a father-of-two, had developed MS in 1995 and lost his wife Lynn in 2008. |
His daughter had become his full-time carer when he became bed-ridden in 2014. | His daughter had become his full-time carer when he became bed-ridden in 2014. |
Prosecutor Jonathan Rees QC said Ms Darbyshire had come to an "agreement" with her father that they would kill themselves; because of his condition and because "she would have nothing to live for once her father had gone". | Prosecutor Jonathan Rees QC said Ms Darbyshire had come to an "agreement" with her father that they would kill themselves; because of his condition and because "she would have nothing to live for once her father had gone". |
However, jurors heard that Mr Darbyshire had never expressed suicidal thoughts or complained about being in pain to nurses who visited him. | However, jurors heard that Mr Darbyshire had never expressed suicidal thoughts or complained about being in pain to nurses who visited him. |
Mr Rees said a woman who worked in a jewellery shop where Ms Darbyshire volunteered had also noticed she was "more and more stressed" and complained about having to look after her father. | |
After killing him she took a train to Dover. She was found the next day on the White Cliffs by a National Trust worker. | After killing him she took a train to Dover. She was found the next day on the White Cliffs by a National Trust worker. |
Mr Darbyshire's body was discovered by police on 10 September, eight days after the killing, after a neighbour raised the alarm. | |
Police found him in bed dressed in a suit, with a teddy bear and several notes written by his daughter which praised him as a "wonderful" man and said: "He asked me to help him end it". | |
In a statement to police, Ms Darbyshire said her father had "got to the stage where he couldn't stand the misery of his life and the indignity of it any more". | |
Paul Keleher, her defence lawyer, had argued that her actions amounted to assisting suicide rather than committing an unlawful killing. | |
However, the jury rejected the lesser offences of manslaughter or assisting a suicide. | |
Ms Darbyshire will be sentenced at a later date. |