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Jury selection set to begin Monday in trial of Texas mother accused of drowning her children

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Posted 8:11AM on Monday 7th January 2002 ( 23 years ago )
HOUSTON - There is little debate over what happened in Andrea Yates&#39; home on June 20: The mother of five told police that she drowned her children. What is under dispute is her state of mind that day. <br> <br> Defense attorneys and prosecutors were expected to begin questioning dozens of potential jurors Monday in order to seat a panel that will hear the capital murder trial and determine what responsibility Yates should bear. <br> <br> Yates, 37, who has pleaded innocent by reason of insanity, could get the death penalty if jurors decide she was sane when she drowned three children ranging in age from 6 months to 7 years. <br> <br> In September, a different set of jurors determined Yates was competent to stand trial, meaning she understands the charges against her and can assist with her defense. <br> <br> Yates faces two capital murder charges: for drowning Noah, 7, and John, 5; and for drowning Mary, 6 months. In Texas, those convicted of a multiple murder or killing an infant are eligible for the death penalty. <br> <br> &#34;I want to hold her accountable for the death of those children,&#34; Harris County District Attorney Chuck Rosenthal has said. &#34;That&#39;s my job, to hold people accountable for what they do.&#34; <br> <br> Charges are pending for the drownings of the other two Yates children, Paul, 3, and Luke 2. <br> <br> Both prosecutors and defense attorneys have submitted long lists of expert witnesses to testify about Yates&#39; mental status before and at the time of the drownings. <br> <br> Testimony is not expected to start until February. <br> <br> Officers arriving at Yates&#39; home within a few moments of her emergency call to a 911 operator were greeted by her at the door with wet hair and clothes. In a back bedroom, four lifeless children were discovered under a sheet on a bed. A fifth body was face down in a half-filled bathtub. <br> <br> She had drowned them all, she told stunned officers. <br> <br> Once testimony begins, jurors will hear the tape of Yates&#39; call to 911 operator Sylvia Morris. <br> <br> &#34;Are you having a disturbance? Are you ill?&#34; Morris asked the mother of five shortly before 10 a.m. on June 20. <br> <br> &#34;Yes, I am ill,&#34; Yates replied, but provided no other clue why she wanted police to come to her one-story brick home while her husband was at work at nearby Johnson Space Center. <br> <br> It&#39;s unclear what kind of illness Yates was referring to, but her attorneys and her husband say she suffers from a severe form of postpartum depression. If found innocent, they say she will be placed in a mental hospital to get help. <br> <br> Whether her illness meets the legal definition of insanity will be a key issue, University of Texas law professor George Dix said. <br> <br> &#34;Mrs. Yates primary impairment is one of depression,&#34; Dix said. &#34;Often depression doesn&#39;t affect somebody&#39;s ability to reason. In theory, her perception has to have been so distorted she did not understand her action was wrong.&#34; <br> <br> Other evidence to be considered includes an audiotaped confession Yates gave police officers the day of the drownings, years of Yates&#39; medical records detailing her bouts with depression and suicide attempts, and a doctor&#39;s caution that Yates and her husband think twice about having additional children after their fourth child was born in 1999. <br> <br> The pretrial posturing has been subjected to legal wrangling, with State District Judge Belinda Hill appointing a special prosecutor last month to see if Yates&#39; husband and Rosenthal violated her gag order by speaking with reporters. <br> <br>

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