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Aunt's Murder: Plea for Tighter Military Mental Health Checks
2 May
Summary
- A WWII soldier with a personality disorder murdered a child.
- The victim's niece advocates for better psychological screening in the military.
- The killer was a known alcoholic with a history of disciplinary issues.

The tragic murder of seven-year-old Patricia Wylie in County Tyrone, Northern Ireland, during World War Two has spurred a call for enhanced psychological screening within military forces. In September 1944, American soldier William Harrison, who had a diagnosed personality disorder exacerbated by alcoholism and a record of disciplinary issues, murdered the child after sexually assaulting her. Harrison had previously been invited into the Wylie family home, a kindness he repaid with horrific violence.
Following the murder, Harrison was court-martialed, convicted, and executed by hanging in April 1945, despite appeals for clemency. Patricia's niece, Annie Kalotschke, a mental health counselor, now lectures about the crime, emphasizing the critical need to assess the psychological makeup of service members. She aims to deliver lectures at US military academies to highlight the devastating impact of inadequate vetting and the profound, lasting trauma experienced by victims' families and communities.