
Lindsay Clancy: Malpractice Lawsuits, Prosecution Strategy, and a DSM Gap
The Lindsay Clancy case now operates on two legal tracks that directly contradict each other — and the collision between them will define her July 2026 trial. In January 2026, both Lindsay and her husband Patrick filed separate civil lawsuits in Norfolk Superior Court alleging medical malpractice by her psychiatric providers. Those lawsuits describe a woman in severe psychiatric crisis who sought help repeatedly and received what they characterize as a disorganized, uncoordinated course of polypharmacy that exacerbated her condition. The prosecution, meanwhile, is citing one of those providers' assessments — a December 2022 finding at Women & Infants Hospital that ruled out postpartum depression and bipolar disorder — as evidence that Lindsay was not mentally impaired at the time of the killings.
This week's look back at the most consequential legal and medical developments examines the evidentiary foundation for both positions. According to the civil complaints, Lindsay Clancy's postpartum symptoms escalated across three pregnancies. Expert analysis by Columbia University psychiatry professor Dr. Margaret Spinelli, cited in Lindsay's lawsuit, concluded that bipolar symptoms first emerged after the birth of her second child and went undiagnosed. After her third child's birth in May 2022, approximately thirteen medications were prescribed in roughly four months. The lawsuits allege providers failed to coordinate care, conducted appointments via video that were too short to adequately assess her condition, and failed to involve family members despite clear warning signs.
The December 2022 Women & Infants assessment — which the lawsuit attributes to an inadequate patient history — ruled out the diagnoses that Lindsay's defense now relies upon. The prosecution is treating that assessment as dispositive. The defense will argue it was negligent. The same medical record is simultaneously the foundation of a malpractice claim and the prosecution's key evidence of mental competence.
Lindsay was admitted to McLean Hospital on New Year's Eve 2022. She reportedly waited three days to see a doctor and was discharged after five. Hallucinations returned eleven days later. Her final appointment — approximately 17 minutes on a video screen on January 23rd — ended with a dosage increase. She faces three counts of first-degree murder. Her insanity defense goes to trial in July. A judge recently denied her motion to bifurcate the proceedings.
Postpartum psychosis is not included in the DSM. It occurs at an estimated rate of one to two per thousand births. That diagnostic gap affects every clinical decision, every insanity evaluation, and every question a jury will be asked to answer.
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