The court heard Claire Darbyshire
killed her father Brian at the home they shared in Dagenham, east London, on 2nd
of September 2016.
The woman who was the sole
carer of her bedridden father has been found guilty of murder after she
suffocated the 67-year-old due to his "intolerable" multiple
sclerosis.
A jury at the Old Bailey
convicted thirty-six-year-old Claire Darbyshire after almost twelve hours of
deliberations.
The following night she was
found walking near cliff tops in Kent in a distressed state, shivering and wet,
and asking for help.
During the trial,
Prosecutor Jonathan Rees QC told the court Darbyshire accepted responsibility
for killing her father, but claimed it was part of a "suicide pact".
"In essence, she
asserts that they had come to this agreement because his life had become
intolerable due to multiple sclerosis and she would have nothing to live for
once her father had gone," he told the court.
However, he told jurors
that Mr Darbyshire had never expressed any suicidal thoughts before or
complained about being in pain to nurses.
Mr Darbyshire developed MS
in 1995 and saw his condition worsen over the ensuing years, eventually
becoming bedridden.
His daughter became his
sole carer in 2014.
The court heard that
Darbyshire and her father led a reclusive life, although she befriended the
owner of a jewellery shop in Dagenham where she did volunteer work.
Over time the friend
noticed that Darbyshire was getting "more and more stressed" and
complained about having to look after her father.
On 10 September, eight days
after Mr Darbyshire's death, police were called to the home after a neighbour
raised the alarm.
Police discovered Mr
Darbyshire's body in his bed with various handwritten notes scattered nearby.
The defendant wrote:
"Dad couldn't go on any more being bedbound. He asked me to help him end
it.
"Now I have to end it
too as my action is claimed as a crime.
"If it was an animal
then you would stop its suffering, but when it comes to a member of your own
species you want to prolong the suffering as long as possible.
"We have the cheek to
call ourselves civilised. Don't waste your time looking for me. My phone call
to the district nurse was my last action."

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