1 case tagged “maternal mental health”
Subject: Andrea Pia Yates
On the morning of June 20, 2001, a thirty-six-year-old Houston woman dialed 911 at 9:34 a.m. and told the dispatcher three words that would ignite a decade of legal and psychiatric reckoning: 'I just killed my kids.' Andrea Pia Yates had drowned all five of her children, ages seven months to seven years, one by one in the family bathtub. She then laid their bodies on the bed and waited. What followed was not a simple story of evil. It was a story of a shattered mental health system, a traveling preacher whose fundamentalist teachings poisoned a household, a psychiatrist who ignored explicit warnings from a colleague, and a husband who left his visibly psychotic wife alone with five small children on a morning that could not be undone. Andrea Yates was convicted, then acquitted, then quietly disappeared into a Texas psychiatric hospital, where she remains today at sixty-one. The case reshaped Texas law, redefined public understanding of postpartum psychosis, and asked a question American courts still struggle to answer: when a mind is so thoroughly broken that it cannot distinguish reality, what does justice require?