A 65-year-old mother in Minnesota admitted that she attempted to kill her wheelchair-bound son by dumping crushed-up anti-anxiety pills into a feeding bag at his group home.
Julie Myhre-Schnell pleaded guilty last week to one count of attempted first-degree murder in connection with the December 2023 incident. Myhre-Schnell reached a deal with prosecutors in which she agreed to plead guilty in exchange for dismissal of the aggravating factor that the victim was "particularly vulnerable."
As Law&Crime previously reported, the attempted murder took place on Dec. 3, 2023, according to a probable cause affidavit. The victim, whose name was not released by authorities, is wheelchair-bound with spina bifida and needs a ventilator as well as round-the-clock care.
He was receiving that care at Regency Home Care in Vadnais Heights, within Ramsey County, when Myhre-Schnell tried to kill him with a Lorazepam overdose. She was "hoping he would go to sleep forever," authorities said, quoting from one of several text messages in which she confessed to the crime.
Documents said that the victim told investigators that "he liked his residence and had everything he needed" and "talked about his friends and what he enjoys doing in his spare time, including volunteering weekly at the zoo."
The Ramsey County Sheriff's Office said that Myhre-Schnell not only "admitted to multiple people," including the victim, that she crushed up her Lorezepam pills and tried to kill her son, but also admitted even more to investigators when questioned in June.
Authorities said Myhre-Schnell recalled thinking "I'm going to go to jail," worried about a toxicology report implicating her after the victim survived respiratory failure, and said she "completely regretted he survived."
"I was worried about them finding out through the toxicology, and I was probably trying to figure out what I'm going to do. I'm just going to go to jail," Myhre-Schnell told authorities.
Read complete hereBy July, authorities said, evidence also showed that two days prior to the attempted murder, the defendant refilled her Lorazepam prescription. But what investigators say happened in early August, just weeks before Myhre-Schnell's arrest, is even more shocking.
"On August 6, 2024, Defendant texted Victim, confessing to him that she put her medicine in his feeding bag hoping he would 'go to sleep forever,'" the complaint said. "Investigator Hughes received copies of these messages. Victim texted Defendant that he was 'on the fence' about deleting her number. In response to Investigator Hughes question about how Victim was feeling after learning about what happened, he responded, 'I made it, I'm still here.' In describing his reaction to Defendant's confession, Victim stated 'it was heavy' and 'it's a lot to process.'"
Mom tried to kill wheelchair-bound son with lethal 'slurry' in feeding bag
Julie Myhre-Schnell pleaded guilty to attempted first-degree murder after admitting to trying to give her wheelchair-bound son a lethal dose of anti-anxiety medication.
Myhre-Schnell was going through a divorce.
