Schizophrenic woman who killed seven-year-old girl had been in and out of institutions
Schizophrenic Albanian woman who stabbed seven-year-old girl to death at random in front of her parents in park on Mother’s Day was brought to UK by people smugglers and had been in and out of institutions
- Eltiona Skana denied murdering Emily Jones but pleaded guilty to manslaughter
- The paranoid schizophrenic killed the seven-year-old in a park in Bolton in March
- Skana, 30, was smuggled into the UK in a lorry and was sectioned repeatedly
- Though she refused treatment, Skana was released back into the community
- Prosecution today dropped the case due to no realistic prospect of a conviction
A paranoid schizophrenic who stabbed a girl to death in a park on Mother’s Day was smuggled into the UK in a lorry and was sectioned for attacking her own family – but was considered well enough to be released into the community.
Eltiona Skana, 30, slashed Emily Jones’ neck with a craft knife as the seven-year-old called to her mother as she rode towards her in Queen’s Park, Bolton.
She pleaded guilty to manslaughter at Manchester Crown Court on the grounds of diminished responsibility but was charged with murder.
But on the seventh day of her trial, the jury was told the prosecution were discontinuing the case, with prosecutor Michael Brady QC claiming there was now no realistic prospect of a conviction. The judge subsequently asked the jury to formally return a not guilty verdict at crown court.
The court has heard how Skana, from Albania, arrived in the UK in 2014 in a lorry and had been having injections of anti-psychotic drugs each month since 2017.
Dr Victoria Sullivan, who treated Skana at a medium secure mental health unit in Manchester after her arrest, said the defendant’s sister, Klestora, told them she had not been taking her anti-psychotic medication before the attack.
Skana also told medics this medication had caused her mental health to deteriorate and she began taking tablets instead of injections. But when police raided her flat in Bolton after her arrest they found a stash of untaken, anti-psychotic drugs.
From mid-December of last year until March 11, the defendant had no face-to-face contact with her mental health workers, the jury heard.
In 2017, Skana had stabbed her mother and in another incident attacked her sister and had been admitted to psychiatric hospitals three times – yet was extraordinarily deemed well enough by doctors to be released back into the community.
Emily Jones was killed by Skana as she was riding her scooter through Queen’s Park, Bolton, on Mother’s Day
Floral and cuddly toy tributes to the seven-year-old. Following her death, Emily’s parents paid tribute to her, describing their only child as the ‘light of our lives’
In 2014, her sister had paid an agent to take Skana to the UK, via Italy and France in a lorry. The refusal was later reversed on appeal and she was given a residency permit to remain in the UK until November 2020 and then leave to remain until 2024.
Skana lived in a terraced house with a fellow Albanian woman in Bolton, where the pair nailed the front door shut, according to neighbours.
The court also heard how she was sectioned then detained under the Mental Health Act in 2015 and was admitted to psychiatric hospitals three times but was deemed well enough by doctors to be released into the community.
Skana had been having injections of anti-psychotic drugs each month since 2017, but had told medics the treatment had caused her mental health to decline.
She was referred for treatment in March 2015 and was later admitted to the psychiatric unit at the Royal Bolton Hospital after her sister reported that she had grabbed a knife, thinking she would be attacked and wanting to protect herself.
In 2017 she was hospitalised again after stabbing her mother through the hand and hitting her on the head with an iron, Manchester Crown Court heard.
In a third incident, she went to the house of a friend armed with a knife without leave and asked to see her daughter. When asked about her haircut, she said ‘she cut her hair off rather than cutting off people’s heads’, the court heard today.
The Albanian was returned to hospital in handcuffs by police but was never prosecuted over the incidents. Though she regularly refused treatment, Skana was deemed well enough by doctors to be released back into the community.
The court has heard in harrowing detail how Emily’s father thought she had fallen over before realising she had been stabbed, and how he and her mother were forced to watch as paramedics battled to save their daughter’s life.
The prosecution had alleged that Skana planned the killing, buying a knife and selecting a victim in the park and was hiding behind her mental condition.
After her arrest, Skana told doctors: ‘It was premeditated, I waited in a park and picked my victims, I did what I did then tried to run away.’
Emily had visited Queen’s Park in Bolton with her father Mark Jones and mother Sarah Barnes on March 22, this year.
Michael Brady QC, prosecuting, said Emily, who’d been doing ‘laps’ on her scooter, spotted her mother in the distance.
She told her father, ‘Daddy, daddy. I want to go to mum’ and she’d scooted off.
Emily also called out to her mother, who didn’t hear her due to distance between them and the fact she was hearing headphones.
The court heard how Skana was sitting on a bench and armed with a craft knife that was one of a pack of three she’d bought earlier that day from a shop in Bolton town centre.
Emily had visited Queen’s Park in Bolton (pictured, police at the park after the killing) with her father Mark Jones and mother Sarah Barnes on March 22, this year
She stood up as Emily rode past her on a scooter and in ‘one movement slit her throat’ with the craft knife and thew her to the ground.
Mr Brady said: ‘Emily’s path towards her mum took her past the defendant who, as Emily scooted by, grabbed her and in one movement slit her throat with the craft knife and then threw her to the ground.
‘There had been no interaction between Emily and the defendant. The wound was unsurvivable and Emily died shortly after.’
Emily’s father had seen a person on the bench standing over his daughter but assumed Emily had fallen off her scooter and was being helped up.
But he’d then heard a woman shout: ‘She’s been stabbed’.
He went to Emily and saw she was bleeding from the neck and tried to comfort her, before a member of the public handed him his shirt to try and stem the flow of blood from Emily’s neck.
A woman, believed to be a trained nurse, took over first aid and by this stage Mr Jones was ‘frantic’.
Emily’s ‘inconsolable’ mother then arrived and watched as paramedics who’d been called to scene as they battled to try to save their daughter.
But Emily had suffered a cardiac arrested and was airlifted to Salford Royal hospital, where was pronounced dead shortly before 4pm.
Prior to the attack, which happened around 2.15pm, a woman – believed to be Skana – had been spotted in the park by a witness who described her as as looking ‘agitated’ and with a ‘vacant’ look on her face.
Skana ran off still armed with the knife but at some point placed it in her backpack, where it was later recovered.
Mr Brady said a passer-by, Tony Canty, who been out for a walk with his wife and daughter witnessed Skana ‘manhandling’ and ‘screaming’ at Emily and pushing her to the ground. Skana screamed: ‘She tried to kill me.’
She then repeated it as she ran past Mr Canty.
At that stage, Mr Canty ‘had no idea how serious the situation was, he hadn’t seen a knife and didn’t realise that Emily had been fatally wounded,’ Mr Brady said.
But he was ‘sufficiently’ concerned to run after Skana, with his wife shouting after him that she had a knife. He briefly lost sight of Skana but soon caught up with her and either ‘barged or pushed’ her to the ground.
Skana fell on to her back and Mr Canty was able to detain her until the police arrived. Mr Brady said that as Mr Canty sat on top Skana she started rambling about the ‘Home Office, her family and that he had killed ‘the girl.’
When Mr Canty telephoned and told them that a young girl had been involved, Skana responded: ‘I’m a girl, I’m a child.’
Psychiatric experts had told the jury that she had a history of mental illness, had paranoid schizophrenia and had killed Emily in a psychotic episode.
Michael Brady QC, prosecuting, had told jurors the main issue was whether Skana’s paranoid schizophrenia was the reason behind the killing of Emily or if her illness was simply ‘a convenient excuse behind which to hide?’
The court heard that Dr Crosby, a prosecution instructed psychiatrist, and Dr Whitworth, a psychiatrist for the defence, agreed that at the time Skana was suffering from an ‘acute psychotic episode’ caused by her ‘paranoid schizophrenia’.
But Mr Brady told the jury that Skana had murdered Emily given her ‘clear intent’.
The seven-year-old had been riding to meet her mother when the defendant sprang from a bench, grabbed her and cut her throat with a craft knife she had bought that morning. Pictured, officers at the scene
He added that Skana was aware of her condition and did not feel responsible for her actions, something she had ‘tried to manipulate and play upon’
But Dr Crosby told the court that Skana had a partial defence to murder as she was suffering an abnormality of mental functioning which was likely to have substantially impaired rational judgement and her ability to exhibit self control.
He said she would perceived herself to be ‘under threat’ and was having a psychotic episode at the time of the killing.
Asked whether Skana could have selected to attack Emily, he said: ‘In my opinion it could have been anyone who came into contact with her at that point.
‘There is no evidence that Emily Jones was singled out for any particular reason.’
Today, the prosecution barrister told the jury that the Crown Prosecution Service would no longer pursue a murder charge and asked them to find Skana not guilty of that offence.
Speaking to the jury, he said the prosecution had decided that was ‘no longer any realistic prospect of conviction’ for murder.
‘This is not a decision that has been taken lightly by the Crown,’ he said. ‘It’s a decision taken with care and mindful of the sensitivity of this case.’
He explained that the decision to drop the charge had come following evidence from Dr Saifullah Syed Afghan – a consultant forensic psychiatrist who is treating Skana at Rampton Hospital.
He told the court he had no ‘alternative’ explanation for her actions on March 22, aside from previous explanations of psychosis brought on by her diagnosed paranoid schizophrenia.
The jury then found Skana not guilty of murder. The sentencing for manslaughter is expected to take place next Tuesday.
A CPS Spokesperson said: ‘The CPS has a duty to keep cases under continuing review and, following a further review, we concluded there was no longer sufficient evidence to provide a realistic prospect of conviction for a murder charge.
‘Eltiona Skana pleaded guilty to manslaughter on the grounds of diminished responsibility, and will be sentenced for that offence at a later date.
‘We met with Emily’s family earlier today to explain the reasons for our decision. This is a very tragic case and all our thoughts are with them at this time.’