Retrial opens in deadly meat-cleaver attack

 Defense attorneys argue that defendant is mentally ill 

By Jennifer Peltz
Associated Press

NEW YORK (AP) — Prosecutors began their third try Monday at convicting a schizophrenic who turned a Manhattan psychotherapy office into a lethal bloodbath, retrying a murder case repeatedly thrust into limbo by questions about his mental state.

David Tarloff admits he killed psychologist Kathryn Faughey with a meat cleaver in her Upper East Side office. His defense argues the oft-hospitalized Tarloff was too psychotic to be held criminally responsible.

But Manhattan Assistant District Attorney Evan Krutoy told jurors as the murder trial opened Monday that Tarloff “knew exactly what he was doing” when he lashed out at Faughey on Feb. 12, 2008. She shared office space with a psychiatrist whom Tarloff has said he aimed to rob, seeking money to spirit his mother out of a nursing home and make a life for them in Hawaii.

“What he saw was someone who stood in his path for his task at hand,” an obstacle to be removed, Krutoy said. “He removed Dr. Faughey by murdering her.”

Tarloff’s lawyers say that while Tarloff had a plan, its strangeness only shows he was mentally ill and unable to tell right from wrong.

Tarloff targeted a psychiatrist who hadn’t seen him in 17 years, he thought he could get $40,000 or more with the doctor’s ATM card, and he believed God had given him the OK to do it for his mother’s sake, defense attorney Frederick Sosinsky said.

“This is an absolutely crazy, insane, delusional way of thinking,” Sosinsky said in his opening statement as Tarloff, 45, who has previously been prone to courtroom outbursts, watched quietly.

The retrial comes after a jury deadlocked last year. A 2010 attempt at a trial stalled during jury selection because of Tarloff’s unstable behavior. For long stretches after his 2008 arrest, he was found unfit even to stand trial.

Faughey, 56, had never treated Tarloff, a promising high school student who was diagnosed with schizophrenia while in college. Faughey’s officemate, Dr. Kent Shinbach, had had Tarloff hospitalized the first time, in 1991, but hadn’t seen him since.

Hospitalized more than 20 times over the years, Tarloff has recounted seeing the “eye of God” on the kitchen floor and interpreted pieces of paper on the street as a special message from God, according to court papers. And by 2008, he’d become fixated on his fears that his mother was being mistreated in a nursing home.

Looking to stick up Shinbach, Tarloff encountered Faughey first. He slashed her 15 times with the cleaver and fractured her skull with a mallet.

“I didn’t go there to hurt anybody,” Tarloff said later in a video-recorded statement. He said he reacted out of a belief that Faughey “was going to kill me,” though he also has told doctors he thought she was maliciously aligned with Shinbach.

Prosecutors acknowledge Tarloff’s sickness but say he acted as a scheming criminal.

Tarloff bought weapons for the robbery, called ahead to find out the office’s hours and quickly volunteered a lie about what he was doing in the building when someone passed him in the stairwell, Krutoy noted. After the attack, Tarloff successfully avoided authorities for a few days before police identified him through fingerprints.

Some of Faughey’s six siblings have attended every one of Tarloff’s court dates, and five were there Monday as prosecutors outlined the brutal details of her death for a new jury.

“We have to relive Feb. 12, 2008, every single day of these trials,” one of her brothers, Michael Faughey, said afterward.

If convicted, Tarloff could face up to life in prison. If his insanity defense succeeds, he could be held indefinitely in a psychiatric hospital.