Lindsay Clancy: The Night That Destroyed a Family

Lindsay Clancy: The Night That Destroyed a Family

Patrick Clancy came home with dinner on January 24th, 2023. His wife was injured in the backyard. His three children were in the basement. Cora was five. Dawson was three. Callan was eight months old. Within 72 hours, all three were gone.

Lindsay Clancy — a devoted mother and labor and delivery nurse at Massachusetts General Hospital — allegedly strangled all three children with exercise bands before attempting to take her own life by jumping from a second-story window. She survived. She is now paralyzed from the chest down, held at Tewksbury State Hospital, awaiting a trial currently scheduled for July 2026.

She has pleaded not guilty. Prosecutors allege premeditation — that she calculated Patrick's absence, sent him on a deliberate errand, and created the window intentionally. Her defense maintains she was in active psychosis at the time, hearing a commanding voice she could not resist, the result of a serious illness the medical system allegedly failed to diagnose or treat.

In the days after the deaths, Patrick released a public statement of forgiveness that divided the country. The debate it sparked has never stopped.

Part 1 of our five-part deep-dive into the Lindsay Clancy case, presented in partnership with Hidden Killers, establishes the foundation: who was lost, who Lindsay was, and what it looks like when two opposing accounts of the same devastating night collide for the first time.

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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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