Jury to begin deliberations in New York City therapist murder

NEW YORK

A prosecutor and defense lawyer laid out their final views of David Tarloff in closing arguments Tuesday. Deliberations are expected to start Wednesday in the murder trial.

Tarloff doesn't dispute killing therapist Kathryn Faughey in February 2008 as he tried to carry out a weird robbery plot targeting her officemate. He's pursuing an insanity defense, which means jurors must decide whether he understood the consequences of his actions well enough to be held criminally responsible.

Defense lawyer Bryan Konoski called it a case of "an insane plan by an insane man who was legally insane when it happened." But Manhattan Assistant District Attorney said Tarloff's conduct showed "a level of craftiness (and) a level of deceit" that show he knew what he was doing.

"Mental illness plays a role in this crime, clearly. The question is wrongfulness," Krutoy said.

About a dozen of Faughey's relatives lined rows of courtroom seats as the case, delayed for years because of Tarloff's psychiatric problems, neared its end. Tarloff, who has a history of courtroom outbursts, shifted in his seat and rubbed his face with his hands but listened quietly.

Tarloff, 45, has been in and out of psychiatric hospitals for more than two decades. Years of medical reports trace out his delusional world: He has said he hears voices, believes he's the Messiah, talks to God and has seen God's eye in tables and floors.

Convinced that his mother was suffering in a nursing home, Tarloff hatched what he saw as a scheme to save her.

He decided he would find a psychiatrist who'd had him committed in 1991, hold up the doctor for his ATM code, withdraw $40,000 or more, grab his mother out of the home and run off with her to Hawaii, he told authorities.

He had never met Faughey, 56, who shared an office with the psychiatrist he targeted, Dr. Kent Shinbach. Faughey encountered Tarloff first and confronted him. He slashed her 15 times, later telling authorities he thought she was evil and believed she'd attack him. Shinbach came to her aid and was seriously injured.

Tarloff prepared for his plan, making a series of phone calls to find out where Shinbach's private office was and what hours it kept, buying knives and a meat-pounding mallet and arriving with a suitcase of adult diapers and clothes for his mother. He fled afterward; police ultimately found him by matching fingerprints from the crime scene to prints taken from him a few weeks earlier, when he was arrested on charges of punching a security guard at a hospital where his mother was being treated.

Prosecutors say Tarloff's preparations, actions and escape show he was cognizant that he was doing wrong and breaking the law. After taking Shinbach's wallet, Tarloff spotted the doctor's address, threatened to kill his family and gave him a fake name, Krutoy noted.

"It's cold, it's calculating, and he's able to do it," the prosecutor said. "Was there anything that evidence psychosis? Not a single thing."

But defense lawyers say the strange plan shows how disconnected Tarloff was from reality, and his conviction that God approved it illustrates the depths of his delusions. Konoski said Tarloff had, "at best, surface capacity" to recognize the wrong he was doing.

"There may be appearances of rationality when you break it down to its minutia," Konoski said. But ultimately, "there is nothing about this case that is rational or makes any sense."

If convicted, Tarloff could be sentenced to life in prison. If his defense succeeds, he will be acquitted but held in a mental hospital until - if ever - doctors and a judge decided he was well enough to go free.

---

Copyright © 2024 WLS-TV. All Rights Reserved.