Crime & Safety

Attorney Expresses ‘Bonafide Doubt’ About Grandma’s Sanity

Assistant public defender for Oak Lawn woman accused of murdering infant granddaughter hints he may be mounting an insanity defense.

The assistant public defender representing the Oak Lawn woman accused of murdering her six-month-old granddaughter, expressed a “bonafide doubt” about his client’s sanity in court on Wednesday morning.

Alfreda Giedrojc, 62, appeared in Cook County Judge Colleen A. Hyland’s courtroom in Bridgeview wearing dark blue jail scrubs, after a delay due to a tardy jail bus.

Giedrojc’s attorney, assistant public defender Michael Wilson, who was also late to court, hinted that he may be preparing to mount an insanity defense.

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“I have bonafide doubt that she is fit to stand trial,” Wilson said.

Wilson based his doubt on police reports from Oct. 6, when Giedrojc’s infant granddaughter, Vivian Summers, was found gravely injured in the grandmother’s home. The infant had been battered with a sledgehammer, and when the infant would not stop moving, Giedrojc slit her granddaughter’s throat, prosecutors have alleged.

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“I’ve been reading the police reports,” the assistant public defender said. “I have doubt that she made a statement in the reports.”

Wilson did not elaborate in court which of Giedrojc’s statements he questioned. The afternoon of Oct. 6, Giedrojc was questioned by Oak Lawn police, who say that she admitted to killing the baby in a video statement.

Giedrojc allegedly told police of putting the sledgehammer in the closet the night before she was left alone in the house with the baby.

The judge also granted requests for releasing Giedrojc’s hospitalization and medication records. In the days after the alleged murder, Giedrojc was held in the Cermak Hospital division of Cook County Jail.

Statements made during that stay to the psychiatrist cannot be used at trial, unless Giedrojc’s attorney raises an insanity defense.

Should she refuse to participate in the psychiatric evaluation yet pleads insanity, the fact that she refused can be used in court.

Two relatives of the Oak Lawn grandmother were also in the courtroom on Wednesday, but left before Giedrojc’s appearance. The relatives did not indicate if they were immediate family members and did not wish to speak to reporters.

Giedrojc is due back in court for a status hearing on Jan. 29.


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