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A 59-year-old woman is facing serious allegations, including the attempted murder of her son earlier that same year.
The woman, Crabtree, has firmly denied all charges, which include murder, attempted murder, and fraud, as her trial commenced today at Brisbane Supreme Court.
Describing the scene to the jury, Crown prosecutor Caroline Marco revealed that paramedics discovered Crabtree’s son deceased at 9:55 a.m., lying on his bed with his legs dangling toward the floor, a Spider-Man backpack at his feet.
Marco explained, “A pathologist concluded that the cause of his sudden and unexpected death was an excessively high level of oxycodone in his bloodstream.”
Authorities noted that no traces of the prescription painkiller or its packaging were found in the son’s room, nor among the medications contained in his Spider-Man backpack.
“The Crown will prove it was his mother who killed him by deliberately giving him a drink in the form of a shake that she prepared with a blender in the kitchen of their home that contained the oxycodone that killed him,” Marco said.
The jury was told they would hear from Crabtree’s daughter Tara, who would testify that she helped her mother by keeping a lookout as she prepared the drink and of later hearing the son struggling and coughing throughout the night.
“Tara will tell you the next morning her mother told her Jonathan was dead but it was four hours later that (Crabtree) called Triple Zero,” Marco said.
“Tara says that was not the first time that her mother had given a drink to Jonathan containing oxycodone with the intent of ending his life.”
Jonathan was a “troubled man” with abusive behaviours who used drugs and had been charged with robbing a chemist, the jury heard.
A car crash in 2015 had left him with permanent injuries that meant he required physical care.
Crabtree lived in the Maudsland home that was jointly owned by her two children.
“She told Tara that Jonathan’s involvement in the robbery had put the family’s finances in jeopardy, which was the reason why she needed to kill him,” Marco said.
Crabtree found her living situation with her son “no longer tolerable” but she did not have the money to buy out his stake of the house, the jury heard.
Investigators found numerous bottles of liquid oxycodone in the family’s home and a smoothie blender that tested positive for drugs, Marco said.
Defence barrister Angus Edwards was expected to make an opening statement.
The trial is due to run for five weeks before Justice Martin Burns and hear from 60 witnesses.