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This is NOT the God that I worship. I don't know WHO the crazy lady and the village idiot are talking to.
Woman felt God commanded her to cut off arms, doctor says
02/20/2006
By JULIA GLICK / Associated Press
A woman accused of killing her 10-month-old daughter felt that God was commanding her to cut off the baby's arms as well as her own arms, legs and head, a state psychiatrist testified Monday.
Dena Schlosser saw a TV news story about a boy being mauled by a lion and thought it was a sign of the apocalypse, triggering events that led to the death of Margaret, Dr. David Self told the jury on the sixth day of Schlosser's capital murder trial.
"She felt she was basically commanded, in essence, to cut Maggie's arms off and her own arms off, and her legs and her head, and in some way to give them to God," said Self, who evaluated Schlosser in the months after her arrest.
Police responding to a 911 call in November 2004 found Schlosser in her living room, covered in blood, still holding a knife and listening to a church hymn. She had cut her own shoulder as well as the baby.
Schlosser, 37, has pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity, and her attorneys are trying to prove she didn't know right from wrong when Margaret, also known as Maggie, was killed. Prosecutors, who are not seeking the death penalty, argue Schlosser knew what she was doing and should be sent to prison for life. If found not guilty, Schlosser would be hospitalized.
The Sunday before Maggie's death, Schlosser talked about her daughter's "little arms" and told her husband that he must be planning something big because he was shopping for a clock radio, Self testified. He also said Schlosser felt compelled to dress Maggie "as finely as possible" because she planned to give her to God or Doyle Davidson, the pastor of Water of Life Church in Plano, which the Schlossers attended several times a week.
"It is layer upon layer of this craziness, this psychosis," Self said.
Self said he spent about 10 hours evaluating Schlosser in the weeks before a hearing where she was declared mentally incompetent to stand trial. In May, after doctors treated her, she was found competent by a judge.
In the months following Maggie's birth, a psychiatrist diagnosed Schlosser with post-partum psychosis. After her baby's death, she was diagnosed with manic depression. She had stopped taking anti-psychotic medication about four months before Maggie was killed.
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