The Standard (Zimbabwe)

US doomsday mother found guilty of killing children

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ANGELES — A United States mother with “doomsday” religious beliefs was found guilty Friday of murdering two of her children and conspiring to kill her husband's ex-wife.

Lori Vallow was on trial in the northweste­rn US state of Idaho over the deaths of her 16-year-old daughter Tylee Ryan and adopted seven-year-old son Joshua “JJ” Vallow.

Vallow, who has reportedly claimed to be a goddess charged with preparing humanity for the second coming of Christ, faces up to life in prison without parole.

Her fth husband Chad Daybell, the self-published author of several apocalypti­c novels will soon go on trial separately over similar charges, which also include the murder of his rst wife, Tammy.

The couple’s “religious beliefs” were cited by prosecutor­s as a factor in the murders, and their story was the subject of a Net ix true-crime documentar­y series Sins of Our Mother, released last year.

The case rst drew national headlines in late 2019 following the disappeara­nce of Vallow’s children, which was rst reported to authoritie­s by Joshua's grandparen­ts.

The police inquiry quickly took a macabre turn as it emerged that several people associated with Vallow and Daybell had died in recent years, and she was arrested in Hawaii months later.

Vallow's third husband, Joseph Ryan, Tylee’s father, had died in 2018 of a heart attack.

She was in the process of divorcing her fourth husband, Charles Vallow, when he was killed by a gunshot, red by her now-deceased brother, in July 2019.

In October 2019, Daybell’s wife Tammy died ostensibly of natural causes. Vallow and Daybell moved to Hawaii a few weeks later, where they married.

Vallow and Daybell never reported that the children were missing, and their bodies were found in June 2020 on property owned by Daybell in Idaho.

The judge agreed to take the death penalty o the table for Vallow, whose sentencing date has not been set.

Daybell has pleaded not guilty to all charges, and could still face the death penalty if found guilty.

Vallow, raised a Mormon, became increasing­ly radical in her religious beliefs over time, coming to believe she could communicat­e with angels.

In 2018, she met Daybell, the leader of a radical Mormon sect that was preparing for the end times at a religious conference in Utah.

Her previous husband Charles Vallow said she had claimed to be “a god assigned to carry out the work of the 144 000 at Christ's second coming”.

Some religions believe that 144 000 of the faithful will be resurrecte­d during the Apocalypse to spend eternity in heaven.

Prosecutor­s also claimed a nancial motive for the crimes.

Vallow was also convicted of grand theft, having obtained social security bene ts intended for her already deceased children.

Daybell is charged with insurance fraud.

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