The Mangione murder trial took a dramatic turn today as the defence abruptly abandoned its psychiatric plea, leaving courtroom observers and legal analysts scrambling for explanations. Anthony Mangione, 34, now faces a streamlined prosecution case in the state murder trial for the stabbing death of off-duty police officer Darren Walsh outside a newsagent in Bradford last November.
Mangione’s lead barrister, Helena Croft KC, informed Mr Justice Radcliffe shortly before midday that the defence would no longer rely on evidence of diminished responsibility. The move came without prior notice: just days ago, Croft had signalled in pre-trial hearings that a team of psychiatrists would testify that Mangione suffered from paranoid schizophrenia at the time of the attack. Now that line of defence has been withdrawn.
“My client has instructed me that he does not wish to pursue a psychiatric defence,” Croft told the court. “He accepts he caused the death of PC Walsh. The issues for the jury now centre on intent and the circumstances of the killing.”
Prosecutor Jameson Reed QC appeared momentarily taken aback but quickly recovered. “The Crown’s case from the outset has been that this was a deliberate, unprovoked murder by a man who knew exactly what he was doing. We welcome the defence’s clarification and will proceed on that basis.”
The victim’s widow, Denise Walsh, sat in the public gallery with her hands clasped. She declined to comment, but her sister told reporters: “This has been a nightmare. We just want justice for Darren.”
Legal experts were united in their surprise. “This is highly unusual,” said Gideon Hale, professor of criminal law at the University of Manchester. “A psychiatric defence is typically the path of last resort. To abandon it mid-trial suggests either the evidence was weaker than expected or Mangione himself has made a strategic choice to face a murder conviction rather than a hospital order. Either way, it is a gamble.”
If Mangione is convicted of murder, he faces a mandatory life sentence with a minimum tariff. A successful diminished responsibility plea would have reduced the verdict to manslaughter, with an indefinite hospital order likely under mental health legislation.
But a hospital order is not always benign: patients can be detained for decades and conditions in secure units have been criticised in recent reports. Some defendants prefer the certainty of a fixed prison term to the open-ended nature of psychiatric detention.
Outside court, members of the Bradford Police Federation expressed frustration. “This has wasted court time and public money,” said secretary Alan Thorpe. “The family have had to sit through weeks of delay while the defence played games. Now it’s clear: he did it, and he knew it was wrong.”
Croft declined to elaborate on her client’s decision. A source close to the defence indicated that Mangione had been “increasingly resistant” to the psychiatric narrative, feeling it undermined his agency in the attack.
The trial continues tomorrow, with the prosecution expected to call eyewitnesses who saw Mangione flee the scene. The judge has warned the jury not to speculate on reasons for the change. But speculation will be unavoidable in a case that has already gripped the northern town.
For the Walsh family, it means the wait for a verdict may be shorter. For Mangione, it means his fate rests entirely on whether the jury believes he intended to kill.
And for the watching legal world, a reminder that even the best-laid defences can collapse overnight.








