Killer Will Find Jail More Difficult, Psychiatrist Says

A forensic psychiatrist gave evidence that the Mr. Sako had severe personality disorder, major depressive disorder and body dysmorphic disorde
Killer Will Find Jail More Difficult, Psychiatrist Says
Police block off a street at Bondi Junction, an eastern suburb of Sydney on June 27, 2023 after a shooting incident. Australian police said a man was killed in Sydney's famed Bondi neighbourhood on June 27, in what local media called a "gang hit". (Photo by Andrew LEESON / AFP) Photo by ANDREW LEESON/AFP via Getty Images
AAP
By AAP
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A man who brutally stabbed a young woman to death has a severe personality disorder that will make his time in custody more difficult, a psychiatrist says.

Luay Sako, 39, has admitted murdering Celeste Manno in her Mernda home in Melbourne’s northeast in the early hours of Nov. 16, 2020.

The pair were briefly co-workers but he began harassing and stalking her after she turned him down romantically.

On the night before her death, Ms. Manno posted a photo of her boyfriend for the first time on Instagram.

A few hours later, Mr. Sako broke into her bedroom while she was sleeping and killed her.

The 39-year-old has pleaded guilty in the Victorian Supreme Court to Ms. Manno’s murder but he’s argued he only caused two of the 23 stab wounds.

Forensic psychiatrist Rajan Darjee gave evidence on Jan. 30 that Mr. Sako had severe personality disorder, major depressive disorder and body dysmorphic disorder.

Those conditions were crucial factors to Mr. Sako’s offending and they would make his time in custody more burdensome, the psychiatrist said.

But Mr. Sako was mentally fit to plead, with the court told he tried to fake psychosis symptoms during his psychiatric assessments.

“He was exaggerating and he was trying to persuade me that he had a mental impairment defence,” Mr. Darjee told the court.

The forensic psychiatrist’s evidence will continue on Jan. 31.

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