

A woman who walked into a Clairemont church on Easter Sunday two years ago and made violent threats while holding her young son was committed Thursday to a state hospital.
Anna Conkey, of Bonita, who also brandished an unloaded gun that day, pleaded guilty in June to felony and misdemeanor charges that include child endangerment, making criminal threats and possession of a firearm in a school zone.
She was committed Thursday for a maximum term for 33 years.
Prosecutors said Conkey, 33, called 911 and emailed her former employer, NBC San Diego, and told them a woman with a gun was going to “blow up the foundation of the church.”
Though the bomb threat turned out to be unfounded, Conkey later walked onto the stage in the auditorium of Mt. Everest Academy while holding a pistol in her right hand. She cradled her young son in her left arm.
According to preliminary hearing testimony, Conkey told the congregants in attendance that she was a martyr, saying, “You are all going to die.” She urged them to listen to her message regarding her religious beliefs.
Before police arrived, churchgoers disarmed her and took her baby away from her, but after bystanders handed the pistol to the officers, Conkey lunged forward, grabbed the gun and ran. Officers tackled her, according to witnesses.
A video of the service that was played during Conkey’s preliminary hearing showed Pastor Benjamin Wisan turn to see Conkey behind him and ask, “Is that a gun?”
Wisan testified that he was unsure whether it was a gun or a stun gun. He told the crowd though that it was a stun gun to calm them down, then instructed them to leave the building and pray.
Several of the congregants testified that Conkey waved the gun without leveling it at any specific person. Others alleged she pointed the gun at her baby.
However, all of the witnesses expressed that they did not believe she had any intention of shooting anyone.