98 y/o woman murders her 100 year old roommate


W.o.W.

Can you imagine a 'competency evaluation' with that lady?! lol .. don't know the old ladies you know, but the ones I know tell it like it is! Kinda like Madea, but lil bit tamer ..
 
I've known really old folks to lose ALL their inhibitions, including restraining the urge not to hit people with things. (Didn't read the story, so I don't know the M.O, but I've certainly seen tempers go over the edge in that age group.)

My mom lived in a nursing home for 10 years; toward the end, when she was in a mood she used to mow people down in her wheelchair if they didn't get out of the way fast enough. (Not those who couldn't, but those were capable and wouldn't move; she made that distinction, at least.)
 
:sad2::sad2: I wonder if it was a mercy killing

...or you could read the article.

I wonder what kind of heat the nursing home has taken for this.
It just doesn't make sense that both women would have refused the alleged room change offer after the families asked and asked.
 
...or you could read the article.

I wonder what kind of heat the nursing home has taken for this.
It just doesn't make sense that both women would have refused the alleged room change offer after the families asked and asked.

I did, That is what think happend. Why do you think I didn't read the story ??

NEW BEDFORD — A 98-year-old woman is charged with second-degree murder for allegedly strangling her 100-year-old roommate with a plastic shopping bag at Brandon Woods of Dartmouth in September, according to the district attorney’s office.

New Bedford Superior Court Judge Lloyd MacDonald ordered earlier today that Laura B. Lundquist, 98, be sent to Taunton State Hospital for a 20-day competency evaluation prior to being arraigned in Superior Court.

Gregg Miliote, a spokeman for Bristol County District Attorney C. Samuel Sutter, said Sutter will be discussing the case later today with reporters.
 
I did, That is what think happend. Why do you think I didn't read the story ??

NEW BEDFORD — A 98-year-old woman is charged with second-degree murder for allegedly strangling her 100-year-old roommate with a plastic shopping bag at Brandon Woods of Dartmouth in September, according to the district attorney’s office.

New Bedford Superior Court Judge Lloyd MacDonald ordered earlier today that Laura B. Lundquist, 98, be sent to Taunton State Hospital for a 20-day competency evaluation prior to being arraigned in Superior Court.

Gregg Miliote, a spokeman for Bristol County District Attorney C. Samuel Sutter, said Sutter will be discussing the case later today with reporters.


I remember when this happened a few months back. Apparently there had been a history of animosity and the woman who committed the murder had made threats to the victim to the points that the families wanted them to change rooms but they refused. It really is a sad story.
 
On the article linked here, there's another link at the bottom for the "full article" with more details.
 
Mass. woman, 98, accused of killing roommate, 100
By ERIC TUCKER (AP) – 17 minutes ago

NEW BEDFORD, Mass. — A 98-year-old woman was indicted Friday on a second-degree murder charge that alleges she strangled her 100-year-old nursing home roommate after making the victim's life "a living hell" because she thought the woman was "taking over the room."

Laura Lundquist was sent to a state mental hospital for a competency evaluation before her arraignment. Her defense attorney, Carl Levin, said she has a "long-standing diagnosis of dementia, as well as issues of cognitive impairment."

She is believed to be the oldest murder defendant in state history, but might never go to trial because of her mental health issues.

Her roommate at the Brandon Woods nursing home in Dartmouth, Elizabeth Barrow, was found dead in her bed Sept. 24 with a plastic bag tied around her head. Police initially speculated it was a suicide, but a medical examiner ruled it a homicide after an autopsy indicated strangulation.

Barrow's son, Scott Barrow, has said Lundquist complained to nursing home officials about the number of visitors his mother received. He also has said Lundquist had made "threatening" and "harassing" remarks to her. He declined to comment on the indictment, which was handed up Friday by a Bristol grand jury.

Bristol District Attorney Sam Sutter said Lundquist suffered from paranoia and "harbored hostility towards the victim" and thought Barrow "was taking over the room they shared."

Sutter said Barrow complained in the weeks prior to her death that Lundquist was making her life "a living hell." The night before Barrow was killed, Lundquist put a table at the foot of her bed to block her way to the bathroom, then punched a nurses aide who removed it, he said.

Lundquist also told Barrow she would soon get her bed by the window because she would outlive her, Sutter said.

The two women had been roommates for about a year. Scott Barrow has said he asked nursing home officials to separate the women, but they assured him the two were getting along. He said his mother told him she did not want to leave her room because that's where she and her husband had lived for several years before he died in 2007.

A Superior Court judge, acting on a motion filed jointly by prosecutors and Levin, ordered Lundquist sent to Taunton State Hospital for an evaluation.

Sutter said the case likely won't ever go to trial because of the possible incompetency finding and because the defense will likely involve mental health issues, which take a long time to prosecute.

Levin said that if someone is found not competent to stand trial, the state would likely move for a civil commitment.

"Her family is very saddened for the loss of Ms. Barrow, and they are also very saddened by what's happened," Levin said. "Without acknowledging her responsibility, it's a sad event for both families. It just really points to the issue of mental health with the elderly."

Prosecutors pursued second-degree murder charges because they didn't believe Lundquist had the cognitive ability to form premeditation, which must be proven in a first-degree murder case, Sutter said.

Lundquist is believed to be the oldest murder defendant in state history, Sutter said.

"It is my intention to advance this case in a professional, ethical and humane manner," he said.

Sutter said prosecutors decided not to file charges against the nursing home, but did not elaborate.

Brandon Woods' chief of operations, Scott Picone, said the home was "deeply saddened by this tragic event, and our thoughts and prayers go out to both families." He declined to comment further.

In a statement, the home said the roommates acted like sisters, walked and ate lunch together daily and said, "Goodnight, I love you," to each other every night. The home said Barrow declined a room change in July and August.

The statement also said the home was establishing a scholarship in Barrow's name, and Scott Barrow was chair of the scholarship committee.
.
 
I remember when this happened a few months back. Apparently there had been a history of animosity and the woman who committed the murder had made threats to the victim to the points that the families wanted them to change rooms but they refused. It really is a sad story.

Oh wow, I didn't see that part. That is horrible why didn't let them change rooms:sad2:
 















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