Mum Says Police Officers Ignored Her Calls for Help When Husband Killed Their Son

Family enjoying a sunny day outdoors with smiles and laughter.

A mum, whose four-year-old son was killed by her mentally ill husband, said�that police officers ignored her frantic calls outside a station the day her son and husband�disappeared.

Julia Trinne told the Advertiser�that on the morning of July 8, 2014, she banged on the doors of the Norwood Adelaide police station and rang the doorbell for over 30 minutes, but was only brought inside for an interview at 8am, when the station had officially opened.

“I could see people in the station but they would not open the doors because it was not opening time.

“I understand protocols but when it is obvious something major is wrong you would think surely they would be able to realise this and act,” she said.

At the time, she had no idea�that her then-husband, David Janzow, 38, who suffers from bipolar disorder, had slipped into a psychosis and stabbed their four-year-old son, Luca to death.

Joyful family with parents and child smiling happily outside.

She has since lodged a formal complaint with�South Australian Police, saying that there was a lack of professional action. She claimed that�officers were more concerned with why she did not know her husband’s registration number on his vehicle. “I had tears streaming down my face, and at one point even crouched down in the corner of the station and was very distressed with, what I believe, was a lack of empathy and lack of professional and appropriate action,” she told The Advertiser.

South Australian Police has yet�to comment on the matter.

Mum Says Police Officers Ignored Her Calls for Help When Mentally Ill Husband Killed Their Son | Stay at Home Mum

In an interview with The Project earlier this year, Ms Trinne said her ex-husband would have not�harmed their son�if he had gotten help. She said that Mr�Janzow, who is now locked up in a secure mental health facility, is tortured by his actions and regrets not asking for�help before it was too late.

Mr Janzow was�charged with murder in July last year, but a Supreme Court judge found him not guilty by reason of mental incompetence as he was suffering from�psychotic symptoms along with�depression and was unaware that his conduct was wrong.

His psychiatrist Craig Raeside said Mr Janzow feared that Luca was becoming bipolar and was on his way to becoming a ‘psychopath’ — the word he used to describe himself to police and paramedics he confessed to while still covered in his son’s blood.

Mum Says Police Officers Ignored Her Calls for Help When Mentally Ill Husband Killed Their Son | Stay at Home Mum

Ms Trinne said she had felt anger towards Mr Janzow, but knows he was ‘not in his right mind’�and now, she no longer blames him for Luca’s death.

“So it is a very challenging position to be in because the person that I loved the most, as my husband, did the most horrific thing imaginable to one of our boys,” she said.

Sources:�Dailymail.co.uk�and�Au.news.yahoo.com

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Clare Whitfield Chief Editor
Clare Whitfield is the Editor of Stay at Home Mum and a recognised voice in practical home management for Australian families. Based in the northern suburbs of Sydney, she balances editorial leadership with life as a stay at home mum to two school age children. Her background in home economics and more than a decade of experience in recipe development, family budgeting, and household systems inform her work.

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