Última hora
DEMehrfamilienhaus in Weddingstedt brennt – Keine Verletzten nach ersten ErkenntnissenKR행안부, 호우주의보 발효 따라 중대본 1단계 가동RUИран атаковал базы США в Кувейте и Бахрейне в ответ на удары ВашингтонаVNMỹ tập kích hơn 80 mục tiêu tại Iran đáp trả vụ tấn công tàu thương mạiCN汪浩:印太戰略智庫執行長遇襲案 應定性為國安事件RUУкраинский военнопленный: украинцы в Польше работают больше поляков за меньшие деньгиTRCristiano Ronaldo'nun Kariyeri ve Portekiz'in Dünya Kupası'ndan Elenmesi TartışılıyorDEEisdiele, Abitur und ein bissiger Polizeihund: Was in Hamburg wichtig istTRGüngören'de 4 Katlı Apartman Hakkında Yıkım KararıFRDeepfake porn site administrator sentenced in ParisDEMehrfamilienhaus in Weddingstedt brennt – Keine Verletzten nach ersten ErkenntnissenKR행안부, 호우주의보 발효 따라 중대본 1단계 가동RUИран атаковал базы США в Кувейте и Бахрейне в ответ на удары ВашингтонаVNMỹ tập kích hơn 80 mục tiêu tại Iran đáp trả vụ tấn công tàu thương mạiCN汪浩:印太戰略智庫執行長遇襲案 應定性為國安事件RUУкраинский военнопленный: украинцы в Польше работают больше поляков за меньшие деньгиTRCristiano Ronaldo'nun Kariyeri ve Portekiz'in Dünya Kupası'ndan Elenmesi TartışılıyorDEEisdiele, Abitur und ein bissiger Polizeihund: Was in Hamburg wichtig istTRGüngören'de 4 Katlı Apartman Hakkında Yıkım KararıFRDeepfake porn site administrator sentenced in Paris
Newsgather
BackDefence Suggests Father May Have Administered Insulin to Himself in Murder Trial
En desarrollo
ABC Top Stories16.06.2026Crime2 dk okumaAustralia

Defence Suggests Father May Have Administered Insulin to Himself in Murder Trial

En resumen

  • A defence lawyer suggested in court that a 94-year-old father accused of being murdered by his daughter might have administered insulin to himself.
  • Raelene Polymiadis, 65, denies murdering her parents, Brenda and Lynton Anderson, who died 14 months apart.

Resumen generado por IA

Por qué importa

Raelene Polymiadis is accused of murdering her parents, Brenda and Lynton Anderson, by injecting them with insulin. The trial is taking place in South Australia's Supreme Court.

Tamaño de fuente

The defence lawyer for a woman accused of murdering her parents by injecting them with insulin has told a jury there is a "reasonable possibility" her 94-year-old father administered the drug to himself.

Raelene Polymiadis, 65, of Craigmore, is standing trial in South Australia's Supreme Court after pleading not guilty to the separate murders of her parents, Brenda and Lynton Anderson.

The pair were both 94 years old when they died 14 months apart, in 2022 and 2023.

Prosecutor Michael Foundas previously told the jury it was alleged Ms Polymiadis, their youngest daughter and type 1 diabetic, injected both her parents with "fatal doses of insulin".

"She poisoned them to death, she murdered them," he said.

The court heard neither Mr or Mrs Anderson were diabetic.

Defence counsel for Ms Polymiadis, Marie Shaw KC, told the jury today they would need to consider several "key issues" when arriving at a verdict.

Mrs Shaw said the jury would need to "exclude as a reasonable possibility" that Mrs Anderson's decision to "enter the end-of-life care phase" was because she had pre-existing medical conditions, and not because of issues allegedly caused by the administration of insulin.

She also said the accuracy of Mrs Anderson's blood tests, which identified insulin, would be questioned.

Mrs Shaw said when considering the death of Mr Anderson 14 months later, the jury would need to consider whether the prosecution's case had excluded "the reasonable possibility that Mr Lynton Anderson administered the insulin to himself".

"He had not only talked about suicide but had stated to a … support worker that he knew how he would do it, that will be an issue for you."

Mrs Shaw also told the jury if the prosecution proved the "substantial cause" of Mrs and Mr Anderson's deaths was the administration of insulin, the jury would also need to be convinced it was Ms Polymiadis who administered it.

She said Ms Polymiadis denied administering the drug to either of her parents.

Ms Polymiadis's brother Graham Anderson also gave evidence in the trial on Wednesday.

Mr Anderson said that, after the death of their mother, their siblings had discussed the presence of insulin in her system.

"All the options were on the table, so my belief was it could be human error or something.

"I'll be honest, I didn't know."

The trial is expected to continue for three months.

Preguntas abiertas

  • Was the insulin self-administered by Lynton Anderson?
  • Were Mrs Anderson's blood tests accurate?
  • Who administered the insulin if it was not Ms Polymiadis?

Temas relacionados

This article was originally published by ABC Top Stories.

Noticias relacionadas

Más sobre este temamurder trial