An alleged assassin who collapsed earlier than courtroom was hospitalised as a consequence of stress, not due to her continual sickness, a courtroom has heard.
On Friday, Raelene Polymiadis appeared by way of audio visible hyperlink to the South Australian District Court – the identical courtroom she was wheeled out of, chained to a stretcher two days earlier.
The 62-year-old diabetic lady has been charged with two counts of homicide over the deaths of her mother and father Brenda and Lynton Anderson, each 94, in 2022 and 2023.
The courtroom has beforehand been advised she allegedly used her personal provide of insulin to commit the crimes.
In a dramatic scene on Wednesday, Ms Polymiadis collapsed within the courtroom cells whereas ready for ambulance crews to reach, simply as her bail listening to was as a consequence of begin.
The courtroom then heard she had suffered a “code black” medical emergency whereas within the courtroom cells earlier than her listening to, with a cell mate calling out for assist.
At 3.36pm, an hour after triple-zero was dialled, paramedics arrived and transferred her to the Royal Adelaide Hospital.
However, on Friday, prosecutor Karen Ingleton stated the hospital notes hadn’t discovered Ms Polymiadis to be struggling on account of her diabetes.
“The release notes from the hospital suggest there was no concern identified at that time in relation to either her blood sugar or her blood pressure,” Ms Ingleton stated.
“The episode that happened in court this week seems to have been stress-related.”
Ms Polymiadis claims her sickness is being mismanaged whereas in custody, and has requested the courtroom to grant her house detention bail so she will handle her diabetes “successfully,” as she has carried out for the previous “forty years.”
Her lawyer Marie Shaw KC advised the courtroom her consumer can be within the palms of people that weren’t outfitted to handle her sickness if not granted bail.
“She will potentially – for the next two years, day in and day out, without the scrutiny of a Supreme Court justice – be at the mercy of prison health services whose management has been described as inept,” Ms Shaw stated.
“When she returned from hospital, she requested to split her insulin and was refused. When she requested to speak to a doctor about it, she was told there was no doctor available that day.”
Justice Julie McIntyre adjourned the courtroom till subsequent month to listen to closing submissions, however commented on the weird size of the bail evaluate listening to.
“We do need to bring this to finality,” she stated.
“We are at risk of setting a record for this type of matter.”
Source: www.news.com.au