Hundreds of pages of new documents and hours of video and audio have been released in the John Jonchuck case.

Jonchuck is the man accused of throwing his daughter off the approach to the Skyway Bridge.

Court records released portray a man who family and friends say was losing his mind in the days leading up to his daughter's murder. The records also show Jonchuck being interviewed by police and photos of the crime scene.

Video from a St. Petersburg police interrogation room shows Jonchuck shortly after detectives say he threw his 5-year-old daughter Phoebe off the Dick Misener Bridge to her death on January 8.

At first, Jonchuck doesn't want to answer basic questions and just shakes his head. After a few minutes, Jonchuck begins to talk and asks for some food and his bible.

Police photos show two bibles they recovered from Jonchuck's car.

Friends say he claimed he was God and the Pope, which he touched on with detectives.

John: “Father Bill, he told me that I wasn’t going to be ready this Easter but next Easter and that I was the Pope.” 

You can also see the Phoebe's toys in the trunk.

According to the records, Officer William Vickers witnessed the incident and shouted at Jonchuck to "get back in the car."

Vickers says Jonchuck replied "you have no free will" before throwing his daughter into the bay.

In the interrogation room, after sitting for 50 minutes, Jonchuck asks the detective if his daughter survived the fall.

Jonchuck: “Phoebe was my daughter. Phoebe J. Jonchuck. Is she okay?”

Officer: “I don’t know John.”

Jonchuck's mom told police her son was bipolar and had schizophrenia. His stepmom said he had become obsessed with people jumping off the Sunshine Skyway and wanted to be baptized.

Police also found lines of sea salt Jonchuck had poured around his home to keep the demons out.

In February a judge found Jonchuck mentally incompetent, meaning he's not capable of fully understanding the charges against him.

He’s currently receiving treatment.

The case against him can resume if he becomes mentally competent.

The next hearing in the case is September 8.