We need an urgent political debate in this country about “mercy killings” following a decision by the Court of Appeal today rejecting a mother’s conviction of
mFrances Inglisurder after she fatally injected her brain-inured son with a heroin injection to end his “living hell”. Why wasn’t it reduced to manslaughter?

Frances Inglis, 58, of Dagenham, was jailed for life at the Old Bailey in January after giving her son Thomas, 22, a lethal injection to end his life “peacefully and painlessly” following an accident when he fell from an ambulance and suffered catastrophic head injuries. The court reduced her sentence to a minimum of five years.

The court was told that when the mother injected Thomas with the lethal dose of heroin as he lay in a care home 16 months later, mute and in need of 24-hour care, she did not feel that she was murdering him. She believed she was “releasing” him as he had not uttered a word since the accident, nor communicated in any way beyond squeezing her hand. His devastated mother felt certain that he was in constant pain and had no wish to continue living like that.

Speaking after the ruling, Lord Judge said: “There is no doubt at all that the appellant was subjected to great stress and anguish, but dealing with it briefly and starkly, there was, as our analysis of the evidence underlines, not a scintilla of evidence that when the appellant injected the fatal dose of heroin to her son she had lost her self-control.”

Examining the concept of mercy killing in the ruling, he added: “We must underline that the law of murder does not distinguish between murder committed for malevolent reasons and murder motivated by familial love.

“Subject to well-established partial defences, like provocation or diminished responsibility, mercy killing is murder.”

That terrible moment lives with Mrs Inglis every day and I cannot imagine a more terrible action for a parent to make. However, if she had flown her son to a Swiss suicide clinic where Daniel James, a paralysed rugby player, was taken by his family for an assisted death, the chances are she may not have been charged with murder or aiding and abetting his death.