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Kathrine
DUFRESNE
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics:
Parricide
Number of victims: 1
Date of murder: October 22, 2011
Date of arrest: Same day (suicide attempt)
Date of birth: 1958
Victim profile:
Her
adopted daughter Sophie Fitzpatrick, 7
Method of murder:
Strangulation
Location: Chelsea, Quebec, Canada
Status:
Committed suicide by hanging herself in the jail shower on January
11, 2012
Tragedy eludes explanation
OttawaSun.com
Thursday, January 12, 2012
After at least one other failed suicide
attempt, Kathrine Dufresne — the Chelsea woman who killed her
seven-year-old daughter Sophie Fitzpatrick — has ended her own
life.
Dufresne, 53, died in hospital Wednesday night
after being found hanging in the jail shower.
Last fall, Dufresne and her adopted daughter
Sophie were found injured inside the family home — a discovery
made by Dufresne’s husband and Sophie’s father Murray Fitzpatrick,
who had just returned from a business trip.
Sophie was pronounced dead in Hull hospital.
The girl had been strangled and Dufresne had
tried to kill herself, police said at the time.
A suicide note was discovered at the house.
After a psychiatric assessment, the court ruled
Dufresne was fit to stand trial.
That was on Monday.
Three days later, she was dead.
“Something like this is extremely rare,” said
her lawyer Wayne Lora, who learned of his client’s death from the
media.
So why would a woman, who’d spent months trying
to adopt a child, end up killing her? A daughter by all accounts
she was head-over-heels in love with.
Lora said he’s never dealt with anything like
this before.
His explanation: “She didn’t know herself.”
As for any mental health condition, any
medication she might be taking, Lora isn’t saying.
But he has admitted in the past to having the
same questions as everyone else.
“This is a very pathetic case,” he said at an
earlier court appearance. “A seven-year-old child?”
He’s dealt with infanticide, usually a result
of a mother’s postpartum depression, but he said it occurs when
the child is eight to 10 months old.
“Not an older child — I’ve never had that,” he
said.
And Dufresne’s husband, Murray Fitzpatrick, is
now left without his family, first losing his daughter, then his
wife. Understandably, he isn’t interested in talking.
Contacted by the Sun Thursday, he hung up the
phone — politely, but quickly.
So now friends and family can only wonder how a
woman who appeared on the outside as a happy, loving parent, could
take her own daughter’s life.
For most of us, it’s unthinkable, unimaginable.
At the time of little Sophie’s death, friends
and neighbours described Dufresne as a loving, attentive mother.
Good friends Sue Marchand and her husband
Claude have known the Fitzpatricks for almost 20 years. They were
the best kind of parents, they said at the time of Sophie’s
shocking death.
Little Sophie was the light of everyone’s
lives, according to the couple. Sophie had been in Canada for 5½
years, adopted by the Fitzpatricks from China.
“Kathy is a very good friend of mine and so is
Murray,” said Sue Marchand, adding she went to the movies with
Dufresne every Tuesday.
Sue Marchand had seen Sophie just days before
he death as the girl made her way home from school with her
mother.
While some have hinted at marital discord, Lora
has earlier insisted the relationship between Fitzpatrick and
Dufresne had nothing to do the attempted murder-suicide.
Whatever demons danced in Kathrine Dufresne’s
head likely died with her.
Lora said through all of his dealings with his
clients, she appeared normal.
“From everything I saw, she seemed quite sane
when I was dealing with her,” he said.
He can’t explain what happened when she took
her daughter’s life.
“It was 10 minutes of insanity when she killed
her daughter. Killing herself was probably the sanest thing she
did.”
Chelsea killer mom dies in
hospital
By Larissa Cahute - Ottawa Sun
Thursday, January 12, 2012
The Chelsea mother who killed her
seven-year-old daughter used her few minutes of privacy in prison
to end her life.
Kathrine Dufresne, 53, died in Hull hospital
around 9 p.m. Wednesday after hanging herself in the Hull
Detention Centre at 11 that morning.
“Mrs. Dufresne was under visual (monitoring)
almost full-time. There was a short moment to take a shower that
she took advantage of,” said the president of the Quebec prison
guards’ union, Stephane Lemaire. “The guard had a bad feeling, she
broke down the door and went in the shower and saw the woman had
hanged herself.”
On Oct. 22, Dufresne’s husband, Murray
Fitzpatrick, returned to the family’s Chelsea home after a
business trip to find his daughter, Sophie, strangled and his wife
injured.
Quebec police sources at the time told QMI
Agency it was a botched murder-suicide. A letter found by police
outlined the circumstances, according to sources.
Dufresne was awaiting trial on first-degree
murder charges.
“This is at least the second (suicide
attempt),” said her lawyer, Wayne Lora.
Earlier this week, a Quebec judge found
Dufresne fit to stand trial.
“I wasn’t very happy (about that),” said Lora.
He believes his client suffered from some sort
of mental illness or condition.
“It was 10 minutes of insanity when she killed
her daughter,” he said. “If you think it takes someone to be
mentally ill to try to commit suicide it would be proved.”
He was planning a second psychiatric
assessment.
“I had hired probably one of the best
psychiatrists in the area,” he said. “We were just trying to get
things into motion.”
As Dufresne awaited trial, Lora said, she
wasn’t on suicide watch, although she was supposed to be checked
on often to see if she was depressed, and if so, taken to
hospital.
Lora said her death isn’t a result of a lapse
in jail protocol.
“If someone is going to commit suicide they’re
going to do it — you can tie them down and they’re still going to
find some way of doing it,” he said. “Maybe this was the best
thing for (Dufresne).”
Lora said Dufresne was an intelligent woman who
knew what she wanted.
“And I think she took the measures to assure
herself of that,” he said. “She had tried to kill herself before
in a very serious way — it’s just truly accidental that she
survived.”
According to Lora, Dufresne was “functioning
fairly well in other aspects.”
Police are still investigating.
A man who answered Murray Fitzpatrick’s phone
Thursday declined to comment.
Chelsea mom fit to stand
trial
Jessica Beddaoui - Ottawa Sun
Monday, January 09, 2012
A Chelsea mother charged in the death of her
7-year-old adopted daughter has been cleared to stand trial.
Kathrine Dufresne, 53, made a brief appearance
in Gatineau court Monday and was remanded until Feb.28.
Dufresne was dressed in grey sweatpants and a
white sweater, her blond hair only slightly disheveled.
At her first court appearance in October she
appeared dazed and stunned but on Monday she was alert while
speaking to her lawyer and scanning faces in the courtroom.
On Oct. 22, Dufresne’s husband Murray
Fitzpatrick returned home from a business trip and found his
daughter Sophie Fitzpatrick unconscious and his wife injured
inside their family home in the Kingsmere neighbourhood of
Chelsea, Que.
Sophie was pronounced dead in Hull hospital and
Dufresne suffered from non-life-threatening injuries.
Neighbours told the Sun that Sophie had just
started Grade 2 at the Montessori school on Old Chelsea Rd — she
was adopted from China almost six years ago.
After reviewing a medical report on her well
being, court was told the case could proceed to trial.
Defence lawyer Wayne Lora said the report
suggested Dufresne be monitored regularly while in provincial
prison because her risk of suicide is believed to be high.
“They have asked the prison to watch her and to
test her regularly,” Lora told the Sun.
Mom charged in Chelsea murder
Seven-year-old girl strangled in home
By Justin Sadler and Kelly Roche - Ottawa Sun
Saturday, October 22, 2011
CHELSEA — The mother of seven-year-old Sophie
Fitzpatrick has been charged with murder in the strangulation
death of her daughter.
The adopted girl from China was found inside
the family home Saturday by her father, Murray Fitzpatrick, who
had just returned from a business trip.
His wife, Katherine, 53, had tried to kill
herself, police sources told QMI Agency, and remained in hospital.
Sources said a letter was allegedly found in
which the horrific act is explained.
Sue Marchand and her husband Claude have known
the Fitzpatricks for almost 20 years.
“Horrible,” Sue Marchand said before police
confirmed the mother had been charged. “It’s beyond belief.
“She was a fantastic girl.”
They were the best kind of parents, Claude
Marchand said.
Earlier Sunday, three sunflowers lay at the top
of the Fitzpatrick laneway at 80 Barnes Rd., perhaps one for each
of the lives shattered in the alleged murder-attempted suicide.
Little Sophie was the light of everyone’s
lives, according to her neighbour.
Sophie had been in Canada for five-and-a-half
years, adopted by the Fitzpatricks, who were described as loving
and caring parents.
“Kathy is a very good friend of mine and so is
Murray,” said Sue Marchand, who went to the movies with Katherine
Fitzpatrick every Tuesday.
Claude Marchand said Sophie’s birthday wasn’t
known when she was brought to Canada, so the Fitzpatricks
celebrated it on Canada Day.
But somehow, the unthinkable happened Saturday
inside the family home.
Away on a business trip, investment adviser and
financial planner Murray Fitzpatrick returned home to find Sophie
strangled and his wife, who had tried to kill herself, Quebec
police sources told QMI Agency.
The pair was rushed to hospital, where the girl
was pronounced dead.
Murray Fitzpatrick’s grief manifested in anger
when he answered the door of the family home Sunday morning and
demanded reporters leave the property.
“Please, give us privacy,” he said.
“You think you know someone,” Sue Marchand
said. “To hear that something’s happened to the family, it’s
beyond belief. When you’re a parent and you have a child, you just
can’t imagine.”
Sue Marchand had seen Sophie on Thursday as the
girl made her way home from school with her mother.
Nothing seemed awry with Katherine Fitzpatrick,
her friend said.
“She was just like she always is; bubbly,
outgoing, friendly, funny. She asked me if I wanted to pay her
bills 'cause we were at the mailbox and I said, ‘No, I’ve got
enough, thanks’. ”
Sophie had just started a new school year —
Grade 2 — at the Montessori school on Old Chelsea Rd.
“For Murray, Sophie was the highlight of his
life, the child he always wanted and he got one,” Sue Marchand
said. “And Kathy, the love of his life, and I don’t know how he’s
going to cope with all of this. I don’t know how anybody copes
with it.”
The victim
Seven-year-old Sophie
Fitzpatrick was killed at her home at 80 Barnes Rd. in Chelsea,
Que., by her mother Kathrine Dufresne, who later committed
suicide.
(Justin Sadler/Ottawa Sun)