The ex-partner of a former Fife College IT technician accused of murdering their son found a message on her phone that left her fearing he would kill himself and the child, a court has heard.
Patrycja Szcześniak said she drove straight to the flat of Lukasz Czapla when she saw the text he had sent her after she had earlier dropped off Julius to stay with his father.
After knocking on the door she saw her former partner staggering and bloody after looking through a letterbox.
She told the High Court in Edinburgh: “When I saw him covered in blood I started shouting and kicking the door.”
Czapla is accused of murdering two-year-old Julius by repeatedly striking him with a skewer, shooting him in the head with an air pistol and smothering him with a pillow.
Miss Szczesniak told police when she got into the property she asked Czapla where Julius was and he indicated a bedroom.
She said her son was on a bed in the room.
“His head was covered in blood and his face was blue. I knew he was dead,” she said.
Miss Szczesniak said she managed to get out the door of the flat and shouted to a neighbour to call the police saying: “He has killed Julius.”
Lockdown break-up
The hairdresser said she had met Czapla as he was a neighbour in the Muirhouse area of Edinburgh and they had a relationship for eight years and lived together with their son.
She said during lockdown in March in 2020 they were arguing more and separated in June, with Julius going to stay with his father every second weekend.
She said Czapla found out she was seeing another man and was not happy about it.
He said he told her he had been to the doctor and was given tablets for depression.
She said she never had concerns about Julius going to stay with his father and told detectives as much.
Pizza excitement
She went to Czapla’s home in Muirhouse Place West on November 20 in 2020 to drop her son off with his father and said her former partner seemed “fine, normal”.
She said her son was excited as he was to get pizza.
“Julius was happy to go with his dad as was Lukasz to have him,” she told police in a statement that was read to jurors by advocate depute Alan Cameron.
She returned home after dropping the toddler off and the following morning turned the flight mode off on her iPhone and saw a text that had earlier been sent by Czapla.
She could not remember the exact wording but “that he meant he would kill himself and Julius”.
On the first day of evidence, neighbour Joanne Gorrie described Julius as “really bright”.
“He knew both languages. He was out of nappies. He was outgoing with the other kids.
“He was a lovely, happy wee boy.”
Ms Gorrie said she thought that Mr Czapla was a good parent.
She added: “I would say he was a good dad. I never heard him shout at him.”
Plea offer
Czapla, 41, is accused of murdering Julius Czapla on November 20 or 21 2020 at his home by assaulting him, repeatedly striking him with a skewer on the body and repeatedly discharging an air pistol at him and repeatedly shooting him on the head and placing a pillow on his face and asphyxiating him.
Czapla offered to plead guilty to a lesser charge of culpable homicide but this was not accepted by the Crown.
He has lodged a special defence of diminished responsibility.
The jury heard in agreed evidence that on the evening of November 20 or the morning of the following day at the flat in Muirhouse that Czapla killed his son.
Police and paramedics were called and a paramedic found the child to be “obviously dead”.
A post mortem was carried out on the toddler and three steel ball bearings were found in underlying tissue of his head which had caused bleeding and a fractured skull.
There were wounds to the child’s left temple caused by the discharge of a ball bearing gun.
He had also suffered a stab wound to the chest and pathologists found signs that were consistent with suffocation.
It was also agreed that during police searches at the flat mushrooms containing Psilocin were found along with LSD, ecstasy and cannabis.
The court heard the accused came from Poland and had came to the UK when he was 25-years-old.
The trial before Lord Beckett continues.