If you or someone you know is having thoughts of suicide, please contact the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 988.
A Massachusetts judge will allow forensic psychiatrist to evaluate Lindsay Clancy, a Duxbury mother who has been accused of strangling her three children last month, Clancy's attorney told Fox News Digital.
Kevin Reddington, a defense lawyer representing Clancy, sent Fox News Digital a text after Friday afternoon's emergency court appearance that the judge granted his motion.
The update in court followed a Boston Globe report where Reddington said Clancy had been overmedicated.
He told the news outlet that he hired a toxicologist to review the strength of the dosages, the number of doses prescribed and how the medications interacted with each other.
"One of the major issues here is the horrific overmedication of drugs that caused homicidal ideation, suicidal ideation," Reddington told the Boston Globe. "They [Lindsay and her husband Patrick] went to doctors repeatedly saying, ‘Please help us.’ This was turning her into a zombie... the medications that were prescribed were over the top, absolutely over the top."
Clancy still can't get out of bed or walk, Reddington said.
He added, "They went through hell, and they didn’t come back."
Clancy, 32, is accused of strangling her three young children, 5-year-old Cora, 3-year-old Dawson and 7-month-old Callan, who all died.
She is scheduled to appear virtually for her arraignment in Plymouth District Court on Tuesday, while she will remain hospitalized. Her defense attorney will appear in person, a spokesperson for the Plymouth County District Attorney’s Office told Fox News Digital.
The Duxbury mother of three, a former labor and delivery nurse, is recovering from an alleged attempt to take her own life as she faces at least eight criminal counts — two for murder, three for assault and battery with a deadly weapon and three more for strangulation.
HUSBAND OF MASS. MOM ACCUSED OF STRANGLING 3 YOUNG CHILDREN DETAILS 'SHOCK AND PAIN'
Her husband, Patrick, called police around 6:10 p.m. on Jan. 24, after Lindsay jumped from the window of the family’s Summer Street home in Duxbury, Plymouth County District Attorney Timothy Cruz said.
Rescuers arrived to find the three children inside the home "unconscious with obvious signs of trauma," officials have said. Dawson and Cora were pronounced dead. Callan, the youngest of the three kids, was rushed to a local hospital but ultimately could not be saved.
Beth Stone, the DA's spokesperson, did not respond to Fox News Digital’s request for information about any new charges related to Callan’s death.
On Saturday, Patrick issued a statement via a GoFundMe page created to support him. He not only wrote about how his family "was the best thing that ever happened" to him, but also shared kind words about each of his children.
"I took so much pride in being Lindsay’s husband and a dad to Cora, Dawson, and Callan. I always reminded myself that each day with them was a new gift," he wrote. "They gave me purpose, and I never took it for granted. There is now a massive void where that purpose once was."
MASSACHUSETTS MOM LINDSAY CLANCY ARREST WARRANT REVEALS EIGHT COUNTS FOR ALLEGEDLY STRANGLING KIDS
He further described how his marriage with Lindsay was "wonderful and diametrically grew stronger as her condition rapidly worsened."
"I took as much pride in being her husband as I did in being a father and felt persistently lucky to have her in my life," he said. "We mutually understood the reality that people can have bad days, but we stuck to the rule that when one of us got lost, the other was always there to bring them home, always. She loved being a nurse, but nothing matched her intense love for our kids and dedication to being a mother. It was all she ever wanted."
MASSACHUSETTS MOM ALLEGEDLY KILLED TWO OF HER KIDS, INJURED BABY BEFORE JUMPING OUT WINDOW
Patrick asked the public to forgive Lindsay as he had, he wrote.
"The real Lindsay was generously loving and caring towards everyone — me, our kids, family, friends, and her patients," he wrote. "The very fibers of her soul are loving. All I wish for her now is that she can somehow find peace."
Lindsay appeared to have a picture-perfect life on social media, where she frequently shared photographs of her smiling family.
"So unbelievably thankful for this family and life," she captioned a photo illustration shared in November 2020. "I feel like the luckiest mama in the whole wide world," she wrote just days before Christmas in 2019.
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
But in other posts, not publicly available on Lindsay Facebook page as of Monday, she described her battle with postpartum anxiety and her efforts to overcome the mental struggle, the Boston Globe reported.