DUXBURY, Mass.(Plimoth)— In a major legal development in the heartbreaking case of Lindsay Clancy, the husband of the Massachusetts mother accused of killing their three young children has filed a wrongful death lawsuit against his wife’s medical providers, alleging negligence and overmedication contributed to her mental health collapse and the deaths of their children.
Background: The 2023 Tragedy
In January 2023, Lindsay Clancy, then 35, is accused of strangling her three children — 5-year-old Cora, 3-year-old Dawson, and 8-month-old Callan — inside the family’s home in Duxbury.

Prosecutors say that Clancy sent her husband, Patrick Clancy, on an errand before the killings, then attempted suicide by jumping out of a second-story window. Clancy survived but was left paralyzed from the chest down.

Clancy was indicted on three counts each of murder and strangulation and has pleaded not guilty. Her trial is scheduled to begin July 20, 2026.
The Lawsuit: Allegations Against Medical Providers
On Wednesday, Patrick Clancy filed a civil lawsuit on behalf of his children’s estates, alleging that several healthcare professionals and systems were negligent in treating Lindsay’s mental health. Among those sued are:
- Her psychiatrist, Dr. Jennifer A. Tufts
- Nurse Rebecca H. Jollotta
- Aster Mental Health Inc.
- South Shore Health System, Inc.
The complaint asserts that Lindsay was prescribed a series of powerful psychiatric medications — including eight different drugs in a three-week period — which allegedly worsened her condition. The lawsuit claims providers failed to properly monitor her reactions, did not perform necessary testing, and continued to increase or add medications despite reports of insomnia, anxiety, worsening symptoms, and suicidal ideation.
It further alleges that appointments were brief and often virtual, limiting clinicians’ ability to fully assess her state, and that the providers’ actions “resulted in tragedy, namely, allegations that Lindsay took the lives of her children.”
Claims in the Complaint
The lawsuit includes claims of:
- Wrongful death
- Conscious pain and suffering
- Gross negligence
- Violations of HIPAA (related to alleged improper access to medical records)
- A jury trial request is also part of the filing.
Notes on the Case
- Patrick Clancy’s complaint contends that, had Lindsay’s care been managed differently, it is “more likely than not” their children would still be alive today.
- Prosecutors continue to maintain that Clancy acted with awareness of her actions on the night of the deaths, even planning the timing so her husband would be away.
- Despite the criminal charges, Patrick has publicly forgiven his wife and urged others to do the same, according to some reports.
This lawsuit marks a significant new chapter in a case that has drawn intense local and national attention — raising complex questions about mental health care, postpartum illness, and responsibility in the lead-up to an unspeakable family tragedy.
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