A mother has been handed an indefinite hospital order after admitting to killing her 10-year-old daughter.
Jaskirat Kaur, 33, denied murder but pleaded guilty to the manslaughter of Shay Kang on the basis of diminished responsibility at Wolverhampton Crown Court in August.
The court heard Kaur was suffering from paranoid schizophrenia and believed she was being targeted by “lasers and technology” before stabbing her daughter 11 times in the chest as she slept on Monday 4 March.
Hours after the stabbing, Kaur phoned West Midlands Police and said: “My kid is dead.”
When police arrived at the home in Robin Close, Rowley Regis, Kaur told officers she had seen “projections coming in and out” of the room, adding: “It was me (that killed her) because I didn’t want her getting took by.”
Kaur showed no emotion whilst being sentenced on Friday.
She previously admitted she had wanted to kill her daughter for the past seven months, telling detectives during a police interview: “They can’t adopt her, they can’t take her. It’s not going to make sense, but to me it does.
“I was worried about Shay growing up. I knew that there needed to be an end date.
“I would kill her again. I wanted her to die, I don’t regret it.”
A ‘fun-loving child’
In a tribute released by Brickhouse Primary School, Year 5 pupil Shay was described as a “bright, happy, fun-loving child who was well-liked by all”.
Kayleigh Colclough, a friend who Shay and her mother lived with for the first five years of the youngster’s life, said Shay “was an old soul – she was special, advanced, clever, funny”.
“I just have the best memories of her, she made me happy,” she told Sky News.
“She would make me feel warm. That’s the sort of person she was.”
Ms Colclough, who said Shay called her godmother or aunt, “fell to the ground” and “just screamed” when she found out she had been killed.
Kaur had “disgusted and disappointed” her, Ms Colclough added.
“She just doesn’t exist to me now,” she said. “At one point I had so much love for her as a sister, as a friend and there are certain points we had the best memories.
“But she just broke me when she took Shay and that’s one thing I can’t forgive.”
Ms Colclough said Kaur would have “angry outbursts” and while she knew she’d suffered “trauma”, she didn’t see any “signs of mental health” problems.
“I wanted it to go to trial. I just think it’s the easy way out,” she said of Kaur’s manslaughter plea.
She added: “For me, Shay will never be forgotten. I will always speak Shay’s name.
“Shay deserves justice. She’s a special child. She didn’t ask for a lot, she just wanted to be loved.
“I miss her and I’m heartbroken and I just want the world to change.”