Hidden Killers With Tony Brueski | True Crime News & Commentary podcast

Lindsay Clancy: Thirteen Medications, Seventeen Minutes, Three Children

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The numbers in this case tell a story the medical system apparently couldn't read while it was unfolding. Approximately thirteen medications prescribed in roughly four months. A psychiatric appointment lasting approximately 17 minutes on a video screen the day before three children died. A dosage increase at the end of that call. And a woman who had been asking for help — using the clinical vocabulary of her own profession — at every stop along the way.

This week we look back at the most critical chapters in the Lindsay Clancy case. Before January 24th, 2023, Lindsay Clancy was a labor and delivery nurse who recognized what was happening to her and sought treatment repeatedly. According to the civil lawsuits filed by both Lindsay and her husband Patrick in January 2026, her postpartum symptoms escalated across three pregnancies. Anxiety after Cora. Bipolar symptoms that, according to expert analysis cited in the lawsuit — from Columbia University psychiatry professor Dr. Margaret Spinelli — first emerged after Dawson's birth and went undiagnosed. Then Callan arrived in May 2022, and her family said she became a different person entirely.

The medical timeline documented in the lawsuits is devastating. In December 2022, Lindsay admitted herself to a day program at Women & Infants Hospital in Rhode Island, where she reported being deeply depressed and numb to all emotion. A doctor there ruled out postpartum depression and bipolar disorder — a conclusion the lawsuit attributes to an inadequate patient history. That assessment is now central to the prosecution's first-degree murder case. On New Year's Eve, she was admitted to McLean Hospital's locked unit. She reportedly waited three days to see a doctor. She was discharged after five days. Eleven days later, auditory hallucinations returned — a voice telling her she would never be the same and the only option was to die.

Both civil lawsuits describe the care Lindsay received as a disorganized, uncoordinated course of polypharmacy — brief virtual appointments that failed to capture the severity of her condition, a failure to coordinate among providers, and a failure to involve the family members who were watching her deteriorate in real time.

Lindsay faces three counts of first-degree murder. Her trial is scheduled for July 2026. A judge recently denied her request for a bifurcated trial. Postpartum psychosis remains absent from the DSM.

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This publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.

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