Sydney Powell was a nineteen year old teen killer from Ohio who would murder her mother Brenda Powell
According to court documents Sydney Powell was suspended from University of Mount Union for poor performance and would keep the suspension secret from her parents. When her parents finally learned that their daughter had been lying to them for months an argument between Sydney and her mother Brenda Powell would break out.
Brenda Powell was on the phone with University of Mount Union officials when she was attacked by Sydney Powell would stab her mother multiple times and would beat her with a cast iron frying pan. The officials from the University of Mount Union would phone the police when they heard Brenda screaming. Brenda Powell would die from her injuries
Sydney Powell would be arrested and attempted to plead not guilty by reason of insanity however she would be convicted and sentenced to fifteen years to life
- Update – Sydney Powell conviction was overturned in the appeals court. Now prosecutors need to decide whether to pursue charges against her in the future
Sydney Powell Now
Number W112033
DOB 03/21/2000
Gender Female
Race White
Admission Date 10/12/2023
Institution Ohio Reformatory for Women
Status INCARCERATED
Sydney Powell Videos
Sydney Powell Case
Sydney Powell, 23, of Akron, was sentenced to life in prison for killing her mother by stabbing her repeatedly and beating her with a cast-iron skillet three years ago.
Summit County Court of Common Pleas Judge Kelly McLaughlin handed down the sentence Thursday. Powell, who was 19 years old at the time of the killing in March 2020, will be eligible for parole after serving 15 years in prison.
The defense argued Powell should have been found not guilty by reason of insanity, but the jury saw it differently and found her guilty last week of two counts of murder, one count of felonious assault and one count of tampering with evidence.
Brian LoPrinzi, the chief of the Summit County Criminal Division, said that the defendant had been kicked out of college and lied about it. After her mother found out, things turned violent.
“And that’s when she ran, got the first thing she could find — was probably the skillet — and hit her mom in the back of the head, and when she didn’t die, she went and got a knife and stabbed her 30 times,” LoPrinzi said.
Brenda Powell was a longtime child-life specialist at Akron Children’s Hospital Showers Family Center for Childhood Cancer and Blood Disorders.
“She was, by all accounts, a wonderful woman,” LoPrinzi said of Brenda Powell.
Sydney Powell’s attorney, Don Malarcik, strongly believes she should have been found not guilty by reason of insanity and said that she considered her mother her best friend.
“This was a brutal, brutal attack, and that brutality speaks to the insanity of this incident,” Malarcik said.
When asked then why Powell killed her mother, her attorney said, “She did it because she has a serious mental disease, schizophrenia, and that serious mental disease, as our doctor says, put her in a psychotic break.”
Jeff Laybourne, the attorney representing the rest of the family, including the defendant’s father, said the family didn’t want her to go to trial for murder.
“Victim’s under Marsy’s Law are afforded all sorts of protection and comfort and their wishes are known, so long as they’re bloodthirsty. If they want a different outcome than what the prosecutors want, then they’re cast aside,” Laybourne said.
But prosecutors said they also must consider the community’s wishes, and while the case is extremely tragic, in the end, they believe there was justice for Brenda Powell.
“The law does not require us to succumb to the wishes of the victim’s family,” LoPrinzi said. “The defendants’ families often don’t want us to prosecute their loved ones. That’s not unusual at all.”
Powell’s attorney plans to file with the Court of Appeals within 30 days, and one of the major issues will be challenging the way insanity defenses are written in Ohio.
Sydney Powell Conviction Overturned
Appellate judges on Thursday overturned the conviction of an Ohio woman charged with killing her mother in 2020.
Sydney Powell, who pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity, appealed the conviction, and the Ninth District Court of Appeals agreed that the trial court erred when it denied her attorneys’ motion to for rebuttal testimony, the Akron Beacon Journal reported.
Powell was convicted in September 2023 of killing her mother, 50-year-old Brenda Powell, and sentenced her to life in prison with parole after 15 years. Prosecutors said that Sydney Powell had not told her mother she was kicked out of Mount Union University several months earlier, and her mother was on the phone with school officials when her daughter killed her, hitting her with a frying pan and stabbing her nearly 30 times.
Experts for the defense argued that Sydney Powell, who was 19 at the time, was suffering a psychotic break when she killed her mother. Three experts found she was schizophrenic and could not discern right from wrong.
But an expert for the prosecution agreed that Sydney Powell had a mental health issues — including a borderline personality disorder — but asserted she was not insane when she committed the crime, and that was the testimony the defense was not allowed to rebut.
“The trial court denied Ms. Powell’s motion based solely on the conclusion that there has been ‘lots and lots and lots’ of expert testimony in this matter,” Judge Jennifer Hensal wrote in the decision, the Beacon Journal said. “Under these circumstances, however, Ms. Powell had an ‘unconditional right’ to present rebuttal testimony.”
Powell’s attorney, Dan Malarcik, said the ruling left Powell’s family “ecstatic and hopeful
“People like Sydney who suffer from a serious mental disease do NOT belong in prison,” Malarcik wrote. “I look forward to working with our newly elected prosecutor to ensure Brenda’s death is no longer used for political purposes.”
The prosecutor’s office said it was considering its next steps.