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              Jury 
              out in Chiswick shooting case 
             Conflicting 
              Opinions From Psychiatrists and Friends on what made Rena Salmon 
              shoot Lorna Stewart 
            The 
              Old Bailey Jury, who have been charged with the unenviable task 
              of deciding whether Rena Salmon is guilty of murder or manslaughter 
              have been told by the judge to use ‘common sense’.  
            
               
                   
                    Floral tributes outside the shop 
                    where the shooting occured | 
               
             
            Rena 
              Salmon denies murdering Lorna Stewart on 10th September 2002 on 
              the grounds of ‘diminished responsibility’. Her defence stated that 
              she suffered an "abnormality of mind" which, if accepted, 
              would mean she should be found guilty of manslaughter.  
               
              However, after a week of continuous evidence, the court has heard 
              from experts and friends, conflicting opinions of Rena Salmon and 
              her state of mind leading up to and on the fateful day last year. 
               
              Mrs Salmon claims that she went to Ms Stewart's beauty salon on 
              the Chiswick High Road that day to kill herself as "no-one 
              would want to use a centre where someone had blown their brains 
              out". However, prosecuting QC Peter Clarke said “We say it 
              is quite clear - she went in there to kill her rival, not herself. 
              The gun barrel was pointing at Lorna Stewart throughout.”  
               
              He went on to add that "There was no question of pointing it 
              at her own head. The shots ten seconds apart were quite deliberate. 
              The gap between was quite long enough to realise, if it was a mistake 
              or to be suicide, to put the gun to one side or turn it on itself." 
               
               
              Paul Salmon Defence QC, Paul Curran disagreed stating that psychiatrists 
              had shown that "anger is a symptom of a depressive illness" 
              and was what doctors would expect to see in somebody who was clinically 
              depressed.  
               
              The court heard Mrs Salmon came to her senses hours later in the 
              police station when she said "I've really done it." Her 
              defence claimed "If that's not a clear picture of somebody 
              who is suffering an abnormality of mind when they've killed somebody 
              and their responsibility is diminished, how can anyone ask for more?" 
               
               
              Judge Neil Denison told the jury to put aside any sympathy and decide 
              on the basis of the evidence, using common sense, whether the case 
              was one of murder or manslaughter. He added people often went though 
              a period of "intense unhappiness" when marriages broke 
              up and many felt "justifiable anger" towards the person 
              they considered responsible, but "very rarely" did they 
              kill that person.  
               
              Asked for her reaction to Mrs Salmon's comments about an alleged 
              suicide pact with her children, Dr Helen Whitworth, from Holloway 
              Prison, said "She has a depressive illness. Suicide ideas are 
              much more common in people with depression and children are often 
              regarded as an extension of themselves."  
               
              When cross-examined by the prosecuting QC Peter Clarke QC, Dr Whitworth 
              agreed that a severe depressive episode was not a "licence 
              to murder".  
               
              The court has also heard evidence from Rena Salmon's sister who 
              spoke of a ‘difficult childhood’ where the girls experienced physical 
              and emotional abuse from their mother. Dr Whitworth said she had 
              made strenuous attempts to corroborate the account of her childhood 
              but social services records "were not forthcoming" and 
              that Rena Salmon’s mother had made a statement disagreeing with 
              her daughter’s claims. 
               
              One of the hardest moments of this week for Rena Salmon must have 
              been when her friend, Deborah Burke, mouthed ‘sorry’ after she gave 
              evidence for the prosecution. Mrs Burke was very emotional as she 
              told the court how she had spoken to her friend the day before the 
              shooting and that that she was "having a rough time". 
               
               
              She claimed that Rena Salmon had said 'I have got a gun. I am not 
              going to kill her, but shoot her here so she could not have any 
              more babies. (indicating to her abdomen)”.  
               
              After the incident Mrs Salmon is alleged to have said "I only 
              intended to hurt her like she hurt us. He will never forgive me 
              now. He will never forgive me now."  
               
              A further witness, family friend Bill Sims, told the court that 
              Mrs Salmon had said she wanted to "exact revenge" after 
              her husband moved in with Ms Stewart.  
               
               May 16, 2003  
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