The Telegram (St. John's)

Real sexual assault could have triggered paranoia, psychiatri­st says

- Twitter: @tara_bradbury

Norris and Constantin­e broke up, and Norris was admitted to the Waterford Hospital; when she was released and was doing better, they reconciled before breaking up late in 2014 for good, but they remained friends.

When Constantin­e saw Norris in the spring of 2016, his heart broke for her, he said. She showed up at his home in the middle of the night, and accused him of breaking into the downtown women’s shelter in which she was staying and raping her in her sleep.

“I don’t know how you did it, but you did it,” he recalls Norris saying. He sat her down and tried to reason with her, telling her he’d never do that to her, and she knew him better than anyone. Eventually she relented, saying, “What is wrong with me? It seemed so real.”

Weeks after that, Norris was arrested and charged with first-degree murder.

Norris has admitted to socializin­g with Marcel Reardon, 46, and two others downtown in St. John’s on May 8, 2016. She left in the evening and

went to Walmart, where she purchased a hammer, then returned to the group. She and Reardon took a cab to her Brazil Street apartment building in the early morning hours of May 9, where she killed him by striking him repeatedly in the head with a hammer. She moved his body underneath a set of concrete steps at the back of the apartment building and returned downtown in a change of clothes, going to the waterfront and throwing a backpack containing the hammer and other items into the harbour. The backpack was recovered three days later and turned over to police. Norris was arrested May 13 at the same Walmart, where she was trying to obtain hammers, knives and other items.

Dr. Simon Avis, the province’s chief medical examiner, says Reardon’s injuries were among the “most destructiv­e” he has ever seen.

Crown prosecutor­s Iain Hollett and Jeff Summers rested their case in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador Supreme Court last week, after calling 23 witnesses to the stand to provide evidence they say shows Norris planned and deliberate­ly killed Reardon, and knew exactly what she was doing.

Defence lawyers Rosellen Sullivan and Jerome Kennedy are now making their case for Norris to be found not criminally responsibl­e for Reardon’s death by reason of mental illness.

Constantin­e testified at Norris’s trial Tuesday morning, the second witness for the defence. Norris’s father, Gary Norris, took the stand on Monday and told a similar story of his daughter’s paranoia and delusions.

Constantin­e said Norris continued to call him from jail and he went to Clarenvill­e to visit her at the women’s correction­al centre at one point. She told him some of the women there hated her.

“She thought everyone hated her,” Constantin­e told the court.

Tuesday afternoon, Dr. Kellie Ledrew testified, as Norris’s psychiatri­st and a member of the Psychosis Interventi­on and Early Recovery (PIER) team at the Waterford Hospital who treated her from May 2012 to January 2016.

Ledrew said she didn’t diagnose Norris right away, but recognized symptoms of a psychotic disorder. There’s a genetic component to such disorders, Ledrew explained to the jury, but also environmen­tal factors. In Norris’s case, Ledrew said she felt the sexual assault by the coach was the trigger, and Norris’s delusions appeared to match up. Most times delusions are based on some kind of truth, Ledrew said, which would account for the sexual nature of Norris’s delusions.

Ledrew reviewed her treatment notes for the court, providing details of the times she met with Norris or her parents over the course of the four years. Norris was started on medication, which was adjusted as needed, and she did well for a while, though she often said she didn’t want to take them. It was the side effects that bothered her, Ledrew said, including weight gain, fatigue and mental fog.

The Norris family was provided with support as well, and a social worker checked in with them regularly.

“These are illnesses with a tremendous caregiver burden,” Ledrew said.

At times Norris appeared to show insight into her mental health condition. Other times she missed appointmen­ts and refused the bloodwork that would allow doctors to check her medication levels. By October 2014, she was no longer taking her medication consistent­ly and was starting to have symptoms again, Ledrew said.

“She was experienci­ng the paranoia, but she wasn’t delusional,” the psychiatri­st told the court. “Things were just below the surface.”

Ledrew’s testimony will continue Wednesday.

 ?? TARA BRADBURY/THE TELEGRAM ?? Brian Constantin­e, Anne Norris’s ex-boyfriend, testified at her murder trial Tuesday morning, telling the court of his struggles dealing with her paranoia and delusions. The last straw in their relationsh­ip came, he said, when Norris made reference to...
TARA BRADBURY/THE TELEGRAM Brian Constantin­e, Anne Norris’s ex-boyfriend, testified at her murder trial Tuesday morning, telling the court of his struggles dealing with her paranoia and delusions. The last straw in their relationsh­ip came, he said, when Norris made reference to...
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