Woman described son (2) as ‘fake child’ before killing him

Hazel Waters has pleaded guilty to the manslaughter of her son in Dublin in 2014

Undated photograph of Muhammad Hassan Khan
Undated photograph of Muhammad Hassan Khan

A woman, who was suffering from a personality disorder, described her two-year-old son as a “fake child” on the day she killed him by stabbing a pair of scissors into his neck, a court heard on Tuesday.

Hazel Waters (47) of Ridge Hall, Ballybrack, south Dublin has pleaded guilty to the manslaughter of her son Muhammad Hassan Khan between October 15th and 16th, 2014.

The toddler, described as a lovely, happy and thoughtful little boy, was found dead in the bedroom of their home on October 16th.

It also emerged in court that social workers were trying to contact Ms Waters to arrange a meeting on the day of the killing. At a sentencing hearing on Tuesday, two psychiatrists told the court that Ms Waters has a personality disorder that diminishes her responsibility for the killing.

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Justice Patrick McCarthy will sentence her on June 1st.

Detective Sergeant Joe O’Hara told prosecuting counsel Luán Ó Braonáin SC that Ms Waters sent a text message to her other son, Jessie, on the morning she killed Hassan.

The text said, “Hassan is a fake child,” and added: “They are making people and children to look the same.”

She had also claimed that her son and her sister were “clones”.

Det Sgt O’Hara said the alarm was raised when, later that day, Ms Waters arrived at her sister-in-law’s house without Hassan and was unable to say where he was. She told her sister in law, Maria Waters, that “they” had taken him, but was unable to say who they were or where they had taken him.

Maria also noticed that Ms Waters was carrying a wooden spoon that the child usually carried and that she was not wearing her hijab. Ms Waters had converted to Islam, her husband’s faith, and was extremely devout.

Maria called gardaí who went to her home, entered through an unlocked door, and found the apartment in disarray and the child dead in the bedroom. A post mortem showed that he had suffered multiple wounds to his neck from a pair of scissors.

A number of the wounds were superficial, but Deputy State Pathologist Dr Michael Curtis identified two deep wounds that caused the boy’s death. When gardaí interviewed Ms Waters she said she couldn’t remember harming the child, that she would never harm him, and she didn’t know what had happened to him.

When the text messages to her son were read to her, she described them as “bizarre” and said she couldn’t remember sending them.

Det Sgt O’Hara agreed with Brendan Grehan SC, defending Ms Waters, that she had been married to a man named Saleem Khan and had taken a barring order out against him after he took Hassan away from her. Gardaí were called and the social services had become involved with the family as a result of that incident.

In the weeks before the killing, Ms Waters’s family had become concerned about her mental health. Dr Brenda Wright of the Central Mental Hospital said she wrote a report on Ms Waters on behalf of the prosecution. In the report, she noted that Ms Waters’s history suggested that she had a mental health issue for some years. Her relationship with Mr Khan was “difficult”. They had married shortly after they met and Ms Waters said he would become violent for no reason. She said he assaulted her while she was pregnant and that he had attempted to strangle her on two occasions. Concluding her report, she said that Ms Waters had a personality disorder characterised by instability, mood swings, intense episodes of anger, depression and anxiety that could last hours or days.

At the time of the killing, she said Ms Waters was suffering from an acute and transient psychotic disorder that could have caused delusions, hallucinations and bizarre behaviour. However, she said there was insufficient evidence to say whether she qualified for Section 5 of the Criminal Law (Insanity) Act, which allows a person to be found not guilty by reason of insanity.

Dr Wright said she could not make that assessment because Ms Waters claims to have no memory of the killing and therefore her state of mind at the time cannot be established. She said amnesia is probably a method Ms Waters uses to cope with traumatic situations by blocking them out.

The court also heard from relatives of Hassan. His father, Saleem Khan, wrote a letter to say that since his son’s death he suffers from severe depression, has lost his business and has moved back to Pakistan.