Mother 'drowned her children to protect them'

WARNING - DISTRESSING CONTENT: A woman suspected of killing her three children in the midst of a bitter custody battle said she drowned them to keep them away from their father, in an explosive television interview in the US.

In a jailhouse interview, Liliana Carrillo, 30, told KGET-TV in California that she wanted to “protect” them from abuse, the station reported.

“I drowned them ... I didn’t want them to be further abused,” Ms Carrillo said, who was interviewed at the Lerdo Pre-Trial Facility in Kern County. “I promised them when they were born that I was going to protect them.”

Liliana Carillo speaks to KGET from inside prison.
Liliana Carillo told a television station she drowned her kids to protect them from their father. Source: KGET

“I hugged them and I kissed them and I was apologising the whole time,” she said. “I loved my kids.”

“I wish my kids were alive, yes,” she said. “Do I wish that I didn’t have to do that? Yes. But I prefer them not being tortured and abused on a regular basis for for the rest of their lives.”

Woman planned to 'drive off cliff' after children killed

Ms Carrillo, who wore a brown Kern County Jail jumpsuit, had her arms shackled to her waist. There was a cast or bandage on her left arm. She cried several times during the nearly half-hour interview.

Ms Carrillo’s children — three-year-old Joanna Denton Carrillo, her two-year-old brother, Terry, and six-month-old sister, Sierra — were found dead on Saturday by their maternal grandmother in her apartment in the Reseda neighborhood of Los Angeles.

She was arrested later that day in Tulare County, nearly 322 kilometers north of the scene.

In the interview, Ms Carrillo said she had driven north intending to drive off a cliff and kill herself but the car became stuck in a ditch and she instead took the vehicle of some people who had stopped to help her.

However, she pleaded not guilty on Wednesday in a Kern County courtroom to four felony counts of carjacking, attempted carjacking and auto theft.

Ms Carrillo hasn’t been charged with the deaths of her children in Los Angeles County pending further investigation.

Photos, candles, flowers and balloons are placed as a memorial for three children who were killed at the Royal Villa apartments complex in the Reseda section of Los Angeles
Mourners laid photos, candles, flowers and balloons in a memorial for three-year-old Joanna Denton Carrillo, her two-year-old brother, Terry, and six-month-old sister, Sierra. Source: AP

Ex-partner claimed Ms Carillo was delusional

Police haven’t disclosed a motive for the killings. But court filings showed there was a bitter custody dispute between Ms Carrillo and the children’s father, Erik Denton.

The children had been staying with Ms Carrillo.

Fearful for their safety, Mr Denton petitioned a court for custody on March 1, alleging that Ms Carrillo was delusional and had taken the kids and refused to tell him where they were.

Ms Carrillo, in turn, filed a restraining order against him and claimed Mr Denton was an alcoholic who may have sexually abused their eldest child.

Mr Denton’s court filings tell of Ms Carrillo’s post-partum depression following the birth of their middle child. She began therapy but quit. She self-medicated with marijuana, he claimed. In texts and social media posts, she said things like “I wish I never had kids” and threatened to kill herself.

Ms Carrillo also believed she was “solely responsible” for the coronavirus pandemic, Mr Denton wrote, and she thought that Porterville — where the family had lived until the end of February — was home to a “giant sex trafficking ring.”

A passerby goes past a memorial outside the apartment where three young children were killed Saturday morning in San Fernando.
The three children were killed inside an apartment in San Fernando. Source: Getty

In her interview, Ms Carrillo said she had dealt with depression, anxiety and PTSD her whole life and had sought out a therapist for post-partum depression but contended that it was her husband who posed a threat to the children.

Ms Carrillo alleged that her daughter and son had shown signs of abuse and that she had tried but failed to obtain help through social workers and law enforcement.

“They were just going to hand them off to the dad,” she said.

Ms Carrillo sought a temporary restraining order in Los Angeles County. Through the courts, Mr Denton and Ms Carrillo agreed to swap Mr Denton’s days to see the children — a few hours every other Sunday.

Last Sunday was supposed to be just his second visit with the kids under the new schedule.

Ms Carrillo said she expects to spend the rest of her life in prison.

Asked what her final message to her children, she replied: “I love you, and I’m sorry.”″

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