[I was never clear on when she went off the medication and who made that 
decision -- whether her doctor thought she was getting better, whether she 
had quit taking it, or what.]



 From CBSNews.com:

<http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2002/03/14/national/main503693.shtml>


Yates Family Points Fingers
HOUSTON, March 18, 2002


Russell Yates says he'll sue the psychiatrist who took his wife off her 
medicine, while Andrea's relatives say he was to blame for her drowning 
their five young children last June.

Meanwhile, a judge formally sentenced the Houston woman to life in prison 
in the drownings of her five children.

Yates, clad in an orange Harris County jumpsuit instead of the civilian 
clothes she wore during her four-week trial, was fingerprinted in the 
courtroom. She looked into the gallery, but her only close supporters were 
jail psychiatrists Melissa Ferguson and Debbie Osterman.

"Good luck to you, Mrs. Yates," state District Judge Belinda Hill said as 
she dismissed the 37-year-old homemaker, who will be eligible for parole in 
2041. When Yates arrives in the Texas prison system, she will join 69 other 
women serving time for killing one or more of their children.

Yates' attorneys already have confirmed that she will appeal the sentence, 
reports CBSNews.com Legal Analyst Andrew Cohen.

One of the stronger appellate issues will be the reliance at trial, by the 
prosecution's chief expert witness, of testimony from Yates herself during 
a competency hearing last September.

In order to encourage defendants to testify during those competency 
hearings, Texas law forbids the subsequent use of that testimony at trial 
as a violation of and defendant's Fifth Amendment right against 
self-incrimination.

In an interview on the CBS Early Show, Yates says Dr. Mohammad Saeed, 
Andrea's former psychiatrist, decided two weeks before she killed her 
children to gradually take her off her medication because he thought it was 
hindering her progress. Saeed has said he saw no evidence of psychosis at 
the time, and he didn't see her again until June 18. The drownings were on 
June 20.

"I know the care we struggled to get from this doctor, I know the 
biochemical nature of her disease, I know all she needed was the right 
medication," Russell Yates said.

Yates said he knew Andrea's problem was worsening, telling Saeed, 
"'Andrea's declining, she's falling apart before my eyes, do something.' 
And he didn't."

In another broadcast interview Monday morning, Andrea Yates' family accused 
her husband of not doing enough to address her mental illness in the days 
before she drowned their five children.

Brian Kennedy, a brother of the 37-year-old Houston homemaker convicted of 
capital murder in the deaths of three of the children, called Yates' 
husband, Russell Yates, an "unemotional" husband inattentive to his 
sister's needs.

Andrea Yates' mother, Karin Kennedy, said her son-in-law told her after the 
birth of their fourth child that he had never changed a diaper.

"I think that any man and woman whose spouse was that severely down, 
confused, that sick, that I would do whatever it would take to make sure my 
other half would get the help that was necessary," Brian Kennedy said.

"They understand...an abusive, controlling husband or something like that. 
'Oh, it must have been that way. I've seen that before.' It's something 
they understand," Russell Yates said in the CBS interview.

The doctor was expecting this sort of reaction from Russell Yates, says 
CBSNews.com's Cohen. His lawyer, in fact, was sitting in the courtroom 
during much of the expert testimony in the Andrea Yates' trial in order to 
get a head start on what some of the allegations would be against Saeed and 
what other doctors involved in Andrea Yates' treatment were saying about 
those allegations.

Russell Yates will accuse the doctor of negligently treating his wife, 
predicts Cohen. "Remember, the doctor saw her two days before the killings 
last June and didn't put her back on anti-psychotic medicine even though 
most of the experts at trial agreed that she was very, very ill at the time.

The doctor will no doubt accuse Russell of interfering with his treatment 
of Andrea.



�MMII CBS Worldwide Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be 
published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press 
contributed to this report.


Reply via email to