Jessica Camilleri, covered in her mother's blood, outside the family home on the night of the killing in July, 2019. Photo / Channel 7
WARNING: GRAPHIC CONTENT
When she attacked her mother with steak knives to stab her 200 times and decapitate her, Jessica Camilleri effectively made her own horror movie.
The tormented young woman who was obsessed with scary film franchises like Texas Chainsaw Massacre, Saw and Jeepers Creepers emerged from her abominable acts like one of her favourite characters.
Standing outside her family home in a blue-flowered dress drenched in her mother's blood, the then 25-year-old asked repeatedly, "Mum's head is on the concrete over there? Can they sew the head back on?"
Rita Camilleri had been butchered by her own daughter, who had blithely dropped her mother's head outside the neighbour's house because she was too busy holding mobile phones.
Jessica asked uniformed police and then detectives who descended on the macabre scene: "Can you bring someone back to life if they don't have a head?
"There's nothing you can do? She's a goner? Cos I know doctors can do miracles. They can't resew her head?"
Police officer: "That's a bit of a stretch."
Camilleri: "I thought doctors can do miracle surgeries and put the head back on. No?"
It was the most bizarre of sights for anyone watching it replayed at Camilleri's trial on the police bodycam footage starting at 11.43pm on July 20 last year, when Senior Constable Anthony D'Agostino pressed the record button.
12 Dec, 2020 10:06 PMQuick Read
12 Dec, 2020 08:18 AMQuick Read
12 Dec, 2020 07:08 AMQuick Read
12 Dec, 2020 05:50 PMQuick Read
Or watching her at the police station the following day, still covered in her mother's blood, gesticulating with her hands sheathed in brown paper evidence bags.
From the stories during the NSW Supreme Court murder trial of Jessica Camilleri, it was a strange and torturous life led by her with her mother, Rita.
Jessica Camilleri was found not guilty of Rita Camilleri's murder, but guilty of her manslaughter.
The story told by Jessica, and by family members, friends, neighbours and psychiatrists who have examined her, revealed what that existence was like before a tragic and probably preventable death.
It had almost ended well, or as well as could have been expected, before Jessica carried out the worst of murders likely motivated by jealousy, fear and, sadly enough, plain old hunger.
On the night she died, 57-year-old Rita had been determined to turn a corner and start living a life for herself rather than giving everything to her Jessica and her needs.
On July 20, 2019, Rita had stopped her daughter from ordering a second round of Red Rooster, and was threatening to send her back to a mental health unit.
In Jessica's mind, Rita was also giving another relative too much attention.
In interviews with police and doctors since, Jessica has indicated that she knew her life as she had led it was coming to an end and she would do anything to prevent that happening.
The tragedy is the torturous life Rita had endured caring for her beloved and unique but profoundly mentally challenged daughter might have been about to be resolved in a positive way for the devoted mother.
Now, Jessica Camilleri sits in Australia's harshest women's jail a convicted killer.
The only person left who would care for her was dead by her own hand, and the few certainties in her looming future entail confinement, prison routine, and two-thirds of every day in a 3m by 4m cell.
There will be no access to past pleasures like her favourite pile of DVDs, takeaway food, and shopping trips.
Nor the endless hours in the sanctity of her childhood bedroom playing over and over with treasured toys and movie character figurines.
Or the opportunity to play with favourite numbers and make forbidden calls to strange men, hundreds of times a day, developing crushes on them and threatening to chop off their heads with a chainsaw if they hung up.
As Jessica herself told police in her bloodied state after killing Rita: "She's had enough of me. She was at her wit's end.
"I want everyone to know this. I have hurt a lot of people in the past, but I have never laid a finger on my mum until tonight.
"I understand she has had enough of me, because I am a piece of work.
"My mum lost her patience.
"I wanted to give her a taste of her own medicine, but not to kill her.
"I had to keep stabbing her.
"I think that's what happened and then her head just came off."
Jessica Camilleri's life began as the second daughter of Maltese Australian parents, Vince and Rita.
Her older sister Kristy was normal, but Jessica from an early age was clearly not.
According to Professor David Greenberg, with whom she consulted while in prison after her arrest last year, she was born with an intellectual disability which meant she had an IQ of 55 to 60.
That put her in the bottom 1 per cent of the population - normal IQs are 90-110 - although Jessica was still articulate and able to communicate.
Professor Greenberg said Jessica had delayed developmental milestones, such as walking, talking, and co-ordination at a young age.
Placed in intermediate class at school, teachers noted her delays in reading, writing, maths and language.
Years behind her age group, "that led to being teased, taunted and harassed by her peers as being different" and that flowed into her reactions of rage, the intermittent explosive disorder (IED).
By way of her autism, Jessica also had "deficits in judgment and awareness of other people's thoughts, feelings and empathy".
Growing up she would have difficulties with complex daily activities such as grocery shopping, catching transport, banking, home care and employment.
Her autism would also make her fixated on certain things, which unfortunately in Jessica included a fascination with horror movies which was allowed to develop unchecked.
"She spent hours and hours every day for weeks, months, years, decades looking at the same videos," Professor Greenberg said.
She was also on the autsim spectrum disorder, and would develop something called intermittent explosive rage disorder.
"This is not just normal anger, it is a mental disorder that usually starts at the age of 6, and intensifies in adolescence and early adulthood."
It relates to a lack of serotonin, the mood hormone, in the brain.
"She explains that when she perceives a person is looking at her strangely or disrespectfully, she had minor reaction," he said.
"But if they touch her or does something physically, she loses all control."
At school, Jessica had explosive outbursts, attacking other students or teachers, and got suspended.
It was almost always females, but on one occasion she bit a male student and even when they tried to pull her off him, she refused to disengage her teeth.
"After leaving school, she was placed in supportive environments where she had explosive outbursts and was asked to leave," Profess or Greenberg said.
"She was unable to cope in all of these environments, so she ended up on disability support pension, [and eventually when it came into being] the NDIS.
"She won't lose control on every occasion, loses control when there's a stressor, or she perceives provocation.
"And so from 2013, in fact she was sitting at home."
"She prefers to talk to men, because that excites her. She is not particularly interested in talking to women, if they insult her or become angry or distressed by her calls, she becomes distressed and that kicks into her IED," the court heard.
Jessica has favourite numbers and colours, and associates the two together in a condition known as neurasthenia.
Number two was yellow, five was purple and three was green.
She would make up phone numbers and then call them and try to speak to people, preferably men.
She called the number of a Bangladeshi family unknown to her up to 100 times a day just because she liked their number.
In 2018, Jessica began calling the numbers of staff at a Victorian meat company in Daylesford, and developed a crush on the boss, Matthew Layfield.
After she had called several male staffers, then moved on to Layfield's wife and sister-in-law who Jessica told "I'll cut your head off with a chainsaw and flush it down the toilet" he called Rita Camilleri, saying things were "getting out of hand".
She had also been aggressive to women in the street and at shopping centres.
Jessica had been banned from a doctor's surgery after she became paranoid about a female patient in the waiting room, became aggressive and had to be restrained.
Driven to Nepean Hospital in western Sydney by Rita, Jessica became aggressive with a female nurse.
She was admitted at Nepean Pialla Unit psychiatric unit for nine days for an episode of severe mood disorder and placed on lithium for purported bipolar affected disorder and antipsychotic medicines.
That had been in early 2018, but by late that year, Jessica was off her medication, which also served to suppress her IED.
Jessica's parents separated while she was a teenager, and Vince Camilleri despaired that his estranged wife could not discipline Jessica, and that his daughter treated her mother badly.
Rita's elder daughter Kristy Torrisi testified at the trial about her sister's troubled childhood and how, once in desperation, her mother had paid a medium $2500 to get "the demon out of Jessica".
Professor Greenberg said despite Jessica's low self esteem, she exhibited personality problems with narcissistic features.
She "presents as egocentric or self-centred, has a history of demanding attention and a problem when attention not focused on her," he said.
"She has a sense of entitlement, and an unreasonable expectation of favourable treatment.
When her needs are not met, she can be furious.
"She believes she is unique because of her disability, and her sense of self importance and can be exploitive.
"[She feels her disability] makes her needs special, fails recognise others also have feelings and needs.
"She is very sensitive to criticism, and may react with disdain or rage."
By July last year, Jessica "had had a reasonable amount of therapy, seen multiple psychiatrists".
But "the gains have been very small because of her mental disorder" and her three conditions, intellectual disability, autism and explosive rage exacerbated one another.
The day of the alleged offence, Jessica became very distressed with her mother's preoccupation with another family member.
She also perceived her mother had humiliated her in front of a man, who was merely walking past them in a car park.
They visited her sister's place and pressure was building up, with Jessica arguing and her mother trying to placate her.
As the evening progressed, Jessica asked her mother to call a doctor, but when the doctor arrived she left very quickly "in fear of her life".
Jessica chased her down the driveway as the doctor escaped in a vehicle.
Jessica had been on the phone, callling Red Rooster three times at 9.18, 9.20 and 9.21pm, agitating for more food.
According to Professor Greenberg, she said her mother had told her, "I've had enough. I'm ringing triple-0, to get an ambulance here and put you back into care, back into the mental health care system".
And that's when the attack began.
Jessica Camilleri's relatively calm state of mind by the time police arrived, Professor Greenberg said, was not unusual.
"I'm of the view her temper quickly dissipated after the alleged offence," he said.
"I think this was at the end part of the rage attack. She rapidly de-escalates."
In diagnosing her for the purpose of the court trial, he said he found no sign she suffered from schizophrenia or auditory or visual hallucinations.
Nor did she suffer from delusions of grandeur such as people who think they are the Queen of England or symptoms of thought control, when a person believes the TV is telling them what to do.
He found that when she described the macabre and horrific details of killing her mother she was quite "matter of fact" in her manner.
"She doesn't use social gestures in communicating. There's quite a bland lack of emotion on her face," he said.
Perhaps the professor's saddest conclusion was that Jessica's best friend, her mother, was now dead and in fact Rita Camilleri had been Jessica's only friend.
In her interview at St Marys Police Station the day after killing he mother, Jessica tells officers: "I don't know how my sister and my dad is going to be towards me after this."
The officer tells her that, no, they are very upset at this moment.
Read more here:
Jessica Camilleri: Inside the true horror story of girl who beheaded her mother - New Zealand Herald
- Netflix Controversial R-Rated Adaptation Is A Horror Comedy Masterpiece - Giant Freakin Robot - July 25th, 2024
- Longlegs' Twist Ending Disappointed Me, And That Final Shot Left Me With A Major Question - CinemaBlend - July 25th, 2024
- Red-Band Trailer For The Heavy Metal Horror Film WOLVES AGAINST THE WORLD - GeekTyrant - July 25th, 2024
- The Summers Best Indie and Art-House Horror Movies Are All Out This Month - Vogue - July 25th, 2024
- The Exorcism of Emily Rose (2005) WTF Really Happened to This Horror Movie? - JoBlo.com - July 25th, 2024
- Second Time's a Charm: 4 of the Best Horror Remakes of the 1980s - The Lineup - July 25th, 2024
- How Chris Stuckmann Went From YouTube Film Critic to Making His Own Horror Movie Courting Neon and Mike Flanagan in the Process - Variety - July 25th, 2024
- Friday, July 19: These 5 New Horror Movies Just Released Today - Bloody Disgusting - July 25th, 2024
- Terrifier 3 teaser trailer promises the scariest & goriest horror movie of 2024 - Dexerto - July 25th, 2024
- The 10 Best Horror Movies of the 2020s So Far, According to Letterboxd - Collider - July 25th, 2024
- New 'terrifying' horror movie thats left audiences 'screaming' in theatres draws near-perfect Rotten Tomatoes score - UNILAD - July 25th, 2024
- A New Horror Movie Is Over 95% Fresh On Rotten Tomatoes, But You Might Not Have Heard Of It Yet - CinemaBlend - July 25th, 2024
- The Terrifying Monsters in This Nicolas Cage Horror Movie Were Inspired by Goofy - Collider - July 25th, 2024
- Netflix Horror Movie Goes Beyond Disturbing Within The First Few Minutes - Giant Freakin Robot - July 25th, 2024
- What is Longlegs about? Everything to know about the hit horror movie starring Nicolas Cage - Entertainment Weekly News - July 25th, 2024
- Oddity is THE scariest film of the year: Critics rave about new horror movie - The Independent - July 25th, 2024
- Eric Banas Only Appearance in a Horror Film Was Based on a True Story - MovieWeb - July 25th, 2024
- 1970s Horror TV Movie Thrilled A Generation But No One Remembers It - Giant Freakin Robot - July 25th, 2024
- The Beast Within Exclusive Clip Kit Harington Transforms in Werewolf Horror Movie - Bloody Disgusting - July 25th, 2024
- This Is the Hands Down The Weirdest Horror Film on Prime Video Right Now - Collider - July 25th, 2024
- Maika Monroe Sells the Terror of Oregon-set Horror Film Longlegs With Her Eyes - Willamette Week - July 17th, 2024
- Nicolas Cage's New 86% RT Horror Movie Is The Silence Of The Lambs Replacement I've Wanted For Years - Screen Rant - July 17th, 2024
- Review: Longlegs is the Silliest Horror Film of the Year - The Cosmic Circus - July 17th, 2024
- How Longlegs Shocked the Box Office to Become the Summers Breakout Horror Hit - Variety - July 17th, 2024
- Longlegs: The scariest horror movie of the year knows exactly how to weaponise Nicolas Cage - The Indian Express - July 17th, 2024
- Budget horror movie earns $22 million at the box office all by hiding its A-list star - UNILAD - July 17th, 2024
- The New Horror Film That Knows How to Rattle the Nerves - The Daily Beast - July 17th, 2024
- 'The Deliverance' Trailer - Netflix Spent Big Money on This Horror Movie from Director Lee Daniels - Bloody Disgusting - July 17th, 2024
- Apple's brilliant new iPhone ad is a mini horror movie meant to scare Android users - PhoneArena - July 17th, 2024
- Bride of Re-Animator (1990) WTF Happened to This Horror Movie? - JoBlo.com - July 17th, 2024
- Review: Starve Acre Is an Homage to Classic Folk Horror - The Mary Sue - July 17th, 2024
- The Most Acclaimed Horror Movie of the Year Is Here. Is It As Scary As Everyone Is Saying? - Slate - July 17th, 2024
- This Maika Monroe Movie Gave Us One of the Most Chilling Moments in Recent Horror - Collider - July 17th, 2024
- Celebrating Film Nostalgia With Ooze and Ahhs at Blobfest - The New York Times - July 17th, 2024
- Horror movie Longlegs has gone viral with its creepy marketing campaign. But is it more than just a stunt? - Northeastern University - July 17th, 2024
- Five Sci-Fi/Horror Movies That Take Place Inside an Apartment Building - Reactor - July 17th, 2024
- 8 New Horror Movies Releasing This Week Including Longlegs - Bloody Disgusting - July 17th, 2024
- Neons Longlegs scaring up strong box office as big-budget Fly Me to the Moon struggles - Los Angeles Times - July 17th, 2024
- The Deliverance: release date, trailer, cast and everything we know about the Lee Daniels horror movie - What To Watch - July 17th, 2024
- POLL: What Are The Best Horror Movies of 2024 (So Far)? - JoBlo.com - July 17th, 2024
- The Exorcism's Adam Goldberg, Ryan Simpkins and Filmmakers on Making the Meta Horror Film (Interview) - Nerd Reactor - June 20th, 2024
- Hanky Panky Review: The Right Kind of Silly - Fangirlish - June 20th, 2024
- 40th Anniversary screening of Children of the Corn coming up in July in Whiting - KTIV Siouxland's News Channel - June 20th, 2024
- Who Watches The Watchers? Unfortunately, Me - Reactor - June 20th, 2024
- 10 Best Horror Sequels Of The 1990s - Screen Rant - June 20th, 2024
- The Inheritance trailer: Alejandro Brugus horror film reaches theatres and VOD in July - JoBlo.com - June 20th, 2024
- Metal & Movies Mash-Up: Motorhead and Hellraiser III: Hell on Earth - JoBlo.com - June 20th, 2024
- Live-Action Horror Film Sayuri to Open on August 23 - Anime News Network - June 20th, 2024
- The Netflix Sci-Fi Horror Action Blockbuster That Kicked Off A Mega Franchise - Giant Freakin Robot - June 20th, 2024
- Peyton List Wishes She Was Left Out of the Will in New 'The Inheritance' Trailer - Collider - June 20th, 2024
- Can't wait to never sleep again!: The Horror Film That Could Make or Break Mike Flanagan's Stellar Career Gets ... - FandomWire - June 20th, 2024
- MaXXXine team discuss blending fact and fiction by including a real-life serial killer in the horror movie sequel - Gamesradar - June 20th, 2024
- Where suspense and silliness collide - theSun - June 20th, 2024
- NWA wrestler Max the Impaler to star in horror movie - Figure Four Online - June 20th, 2024
- NWAs Max The Impaler To Star In Dolly Horror Movie - Wrestlezone - June 20th, 2024
- Fans all notice one particular thing as trailer drops to sequel 'so gory and disgusting' that star vomited - UNILAD - June 20th, 2024
- Shriek If You Know What I Did Last Friday the 13th: The Forgotten Horror Parody Movie - Flickering Myth - June 20th, 2024
- The Exorcism review: "The Russell Crowe horror veers more ridiculous than terrifying" - Gamesradar - June 20th, 2024
- Bloody Smile 2 trailer finally explains movie's mysterious marketing and promises a bigger scale for sequel to the hit ... - Gamesradar - June 19th, 2024
- Award-Winning Horror Movie Fang is Now Streaming on Amazon Prime and Apple TV - EIN News - June 19th, 2024
- My most anticipated horror movie of the year just got a whole lot creepier thanks to Nicolas Cage - Yahoo News UK - June 19th, 2024
- The Best Horror Anthology Ever Is Being Kept Away From The New Generation - Giant Freakin Robot - June 19th, 2024
- Kit Harington Shows Off the Real 'Beast Within' in New Horror Film - Collider - June 19th, 2024
- A sequel to the Netflix cult horror film Circle is in the works - imdb - June 19th, 2024
- Nicolas Cage's upcoming horror movie debuts to perfect Rotten Tomatoes score, with critics calling it "the scariest film ... - Gamesradar - June 19th, 2024
- 5 best horror movies on Prime Video with 90% or higher on Rotten Tomatoes - Tom's Guide - June 19th, 2024
- Max The Impaler To Star In New Horror Film 'Dolly' - Fightful - June 19th, 2024
- Jordan Peele, Lee Cronin Have New Horror Films On The Way - Bleeding Cool News - June 19th, 2024
- This Horror Film Was Livestreamed: One More Round With Generation Loss - Alternate Reality Gaming Network - June 19th, 2024
- I'm Delighted This Horror Movie Is Now A Streaming Success After Its $53M Box Office Letdown 2 Months Ago - Screen Rant - June 19th, 2024
- Nicolas Cage's new apocalyptic horror movie often leaves viewers in the dark, but that's actually a good thing - Gamesradar - June 19th, 2024
- Fans and celebrities to gather for Tampa Bay Screams Horror Convention - Tampa Bay Newspapers - June 19th, 2024
- This Classic Horror Movie Influenced the Harkonnens of Denis Villeneuve's Dune - Collider - June 19th, 2024
- The Nasty Torture Horror Movie That the UK Branded Too Depraved for Release - Collider - June 19th, 2024
- Critics are shocked by Nicolas Cage's new horror movie and it's 100% on Rotten Tomatoes - Tom's Guide - June 19th, 2024
- Joko Anwars Nightmares and Daydreams: Cast and Plot - Netflix Tudum - June 19th, 2024
- NWAs Max The Impaler To Star In Dolly Horror Film - eWrestlingNews - June 19th, 2024
- Bizarre dance with the unexpected - theSun - June 19th, 2024
- The Best Horror Movies on Max to Watch Right Now - CNET - June 1st, 2024
- This New Winnie-The-Pooh Horror Movie Might Actually Be Better Than Blood & Honey - Screen Rant - June 1st, 2024
Reviewed and Recommended by Erik Baquero