apparently It was a form of religious concept that lay behind, as the 38-year-old Carly Ann Harris from the small british town of Tonypandy 8. June was only four years old daughter, Amelia, to death.
It tells prosecutor Michael Jones according to, among others, The Guardian and the BBC.
In the court of Newport, she has denied to have committed the murder of his daughter, but explained to the police that she sees herself as ‘a fallen angel, which was to prove his strength’ and that her daughter should ‘be washed and burned’.
In the court in Newport has the 38-year-old woman also told what she said to her daughter just before she drowned her in a bathtub filled with water, and then put her corpse on a table in the garden and set fire to it:
‘Now you shall see the angels. We will see you in heaven’.
Neighbors have told that they heard a child screaming from the house shortly before the 38-year-old mother came out front and told him that Amelia was gone to heaven. Photo: WALES NEWS SERVICE
the Prosecutor in the case, Michael Jones, has described for the judge and the jury that Carly Ann Harris the day, Amelia in a filled bath and intentionally drowned her. Then unpacked she her not yet cold corpses in toilet paper, covered it with a sheet and carried it out on a round table in the garden. Here, she set fire to the small, lifeless body.
Michael Jones also says that the 38-year-old mother has problems with the mental health and among other things, part of anxiety, as was evidenced by the fact that she felt persecuted.
Neighbours have described how on the morning of 8. June heard the scream from the woman’s house in Trealaw. Shortly after came Carly Ann Harris out in front of his house and warned the people against going on behind, because the ‘Amelia is drawn to the heavens’.
Carly said, ‘I would never do harm to my daughter, but she is born to Jesus, and she is with the angels now, describes one of the neighbors, Darren Griffith.
Carly Ann Harris is in court charged with the murder of her daughter. Photo: WALES NEWS SERVICE
When police arrived to the terrifying scene in the woman’s garden, she said, supposedly to the ushers:
’the Angels asked me to do it. Just arrest me, it’s okay’.
Repeatedly she explained that it was Jesus who had given her the orders to take the life of his daughter, and assured, moreover, that she weren’t crazy.
Later, at the police station, it is however also reported that she also should have said ‘I’m a monster’.
the Trial continues in the court of Newport, and the jury has been asked to have the woman’s ‘deep psychological problems’ into consideration, when judgment shall fall.