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Amandascott

Active Member
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NEW HAVEN, Conn. — LeRoya Moore, the 36-year-old East Haven mother whose two children were found dead in her home on June 2, was charged Wednesday with two counts of murder, and a suicide note she left indicated she said the Lord's Prayer with the children before they died, according to an arrest warrant.

Moore was arraigned Wednesday in Superior Court in the deaths of Aleisha Moore, 6, and Daaron Moore, 7. She was held on $2 million bail and put on suicide watch.
http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/crime...-children-arrest-warrant-indicates/ar-BBkWboR
 
I wonder how it is she doesn't recall how she killed the children?

Crazy, fucked up on all those pills, or pretending crazt to try to get off.

Psycho!
 
I wish they'd stop putting these fuckers on suicide watch. Maybe they'll get it right the next time.

RIP, poor children. You deserved better than a skanked up cunt for a mother.
 
I'm with Krystal on this one, these fucktards always claim they were going to commit suicide and die with their children and somehow these evil POS cunts always live.newsflash morons that whole suicide defense has been played over over and over again and never works!!!
 
How come they can always manage to succeed at the murder part but fail at the suicide?

We need to pass the following information along: When planning a murder-suicide, always remember to start with the suicide part and once successful then go ahead with the murder. It's better for the children that way.
I love this! I think it should be on billboards and t-shirts. You are so right!!!
 
A Connecticut State Police detective Thursday read aloud in court an emotional letter from defendant LeRoya Moore in which she said that she and her two young children “were meant to die today.”

Detective Brian Connolly testified he found the letter near the bodies of Aleisha Moore, 6, and Daaron Moore, 7, when he searched their East Haven home for evidence.

Moore, 39, is charged with two counts of murder. The bodies of her son and daughter were discovered the afternoon of June 2, 2015. When police led her out of the house on Strong Street, they noticed she had cuts on her arms and wrists.

An associate with the state office of the chief medical examiner testified Wednesday that Aleisha died from acute intoxication of diphenhydramine and alcohol, while Daaron died from acute intoxication of diphenhydramine.

Moore began the lengthy letter by saying, “I’m sure there’s an expert somewhere that will say the children suffered, but I let them know they were loved very much and they were going to heaven. We said the Lord’s Prayer to protect their souls.”

She continued: “I know this was meant to end the way it did. I don’t know the reason why, but we were meant to die today.”

She wrote that at age 35, “I was convinced for a while I would be okay and I wouldn’t ever be this sad again because I had great jobs, good kids and a house and car and I did these things all by myself. I am all by myself still.”

“I’m not meant to be here past this time,” she said. “It’s okay and I’m not scared. I’m numb and if I burn for eternity, at least I’ll know why I deserve it. I don’t know what I did to deserve this life and these kids don’t deserve to be brought into it to have sadness and suffering all of the time. I watch them cry and act out because they don’t know what they did for their parents to leave them to fend for themselves.”

In her letter Moore made repeated references to her marital struggles with Michael Moore, the father of the two children. She wrote: “I told you when I first got pregnant with Daaron that I could not be a single parent again.”

Michael Moore has not appeared in court during the first two days of testimony.

In the letter she wrote, Moore said, “I couldn’t leave any more of my kids to the system. They don’t all get a happy ending. I love them all. I love them all so much. I only wanted to be better for them but they were missing the one thing I couldn’t ever give them on my own. They were in pain and now they’re in heaven.”

Moore added, “I will be cremated and the bank will get the house and the car. ... I really tried. ... I asked God to stop me if I was making a mistake. I asked (him) to show me I was wrong and save them. They should not be left to burden anyone because I am the only one who could love them like a mother. Not an institution or a social worker.”

She said of her children, “They will be in heaven with the people who we lost and loved. They deserve that.”

Moore then wrote, “They got to do all of the things they wanted to do before they died today. They ate their favorite things. They had ice cream and they wanted to paint their nails, so we got nail polish and they had fun and really liked how it came out. I saw them truly happy, not being shipped off to multiple babysitters and just hanging out with mommy.”

Moore alluded to her three other children; she had lost custody of them to the state Department of Children and Families. She wrote: “I made the mistake the first time and didn’t end things when I could have, before I made it far and had more kids. My older kids escaped the same fate because I was too depressed to move and make it happen. My angel saved me, saved us. Now they are suffering. I won’t do this injustice to my other kids.”

Toward the end of her letter, Moore wrote, “There’s no more pain for Daaron and Aleisha. They left this world as innocent as they were when they came into it ... not scarred and heart-broken by people who make promises to love and protect them.”

In the final paragraph of her letter, Moore wrote: “I’m done. There’s nothing else to say and no further explanation to give. We love you and be proud of these two angels that will watch over and protect you all.”

Moore showed little or no emotion during the testimony, even when photos of her dead children were displayed on a computer screen near her.

Her defense team is expected to pursue a strategy of impaired mental health.
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Another parent that wanted to die but miracously survived while her children did not.

I want to know if her rights were terminated to the children that she "lost to the system."

Was it due to mental illness or failure to comply with the service plan?

Were there any other family members aware of this woman's mental health issues?
 
@Satanica
A Connecticut woman who claimed it was God's plan for her to kill her two children was convicted of murder Friday by a three-judge panel that rejected her insanity defense.

The guilty verdicts against LeRoya Moore, 39, came after a trial that featured conflicting testimony by psychiatrists for the state and defense about whether Moore was in a psychotic state during the 2015 killings at the family's home in East Haven.

A successful insanity defense would have resulted in Moore being sent to the state's maximum-security psychiatric hospital.

Sentencing is pending.
 
@Satanica
A Connecticut woman convicted of killing her two children saying it was God’s plan was sentenced to 120 years in prison without the possibility of parole.

LeRoya Moore, 39, was sentenced Thursday, following her conviction in March of two counts of murder for killing her 6-year-old daughter, Aleisha, and her 7-year-old son, Daaron, at the family’s home in East Haven in 2015. For each count of murder, she received 60 years.

“It’s a no win today, the sentence reflects the seriousness of the crimes but the children are still gone,” New Haven State’s Attorney Patrick Griffin said.

Moore’s attorneys tried to use an insanity defense, saying she was in a psychotic state at the time but the three-judge panel rejected the defense in March.

Autopsies showed the children died from antihistamine intoxication, but a defense psychiatrist said Moore told him she drowned them while trying to “baptize them” after God told her she had to kill them. She also stayed in the house for three days with the bodies telling the police she “saved them.”

A Yale psychiatry professor testified at trial that Moore suffered from schizoaffective disorder during the killings and still suffered from it.

Moore will serve the sentences consecutively at York Correctional Institution.
 
I have no doubt she was mentally ill but obviously she still knew right from wrong.
 
These are the types of sentences every kid killer needs.
Gone for good!

And remember it was God's will that sent her away as a murderer.
He loves a good court case and we live to be his Law and Order: Gods Will.

Cue the music...
 
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