Married to Evil S02E02 Home Is Where the Nightmare Is

  • 2 weeks ago
Jenny and Mike were teen sweethearts but after marrying, Mike begins a campaign of control and violence against his wife and children. Just as Jenny plans to escape her living nightmare, Mike finds out and decides he will do anything to stop her.
Transcript
00:00They were a young couple, striking out against the world.
00:10She was in love with him, and she appeared to be very happy.
00:14But there was something about him that I just didn't quite like.
00:20I feared my father.
00:22Little things would set him off.
00:24He needed control.
00:26My sister and I thought this sort of behavior was normal.
00:31She wasn't his wife.
00:32She was a possession, and he was not going to let anybody or anything take his possession
00:40away from him.
00:41This was so cruel.
00:44This was evil.
00:59My sister Jenny and I were very, very close when we were younger.
01:04We were about a year and a half apart.
01:08When we were going to elementary school, we would strap on our skates, and our dog
01:14Freckles—he was a big Dalmatian dog, a big, fat one—he would pull us on the sidewalks
01:20of the school, and that was one of my fondest memories of her.
01:25We were always together.
01:26We were very, very tight.
01:30When I was eleven and my sister was nine and a half, my mom separated from my dad, and
01:36we moved from California to Maryland.
01:40I was not getting along with my mom all that well, and so I moved back to California to
01:46live with my dad.
01:48My sister and I would keep in contact, phone calls and letters.
01:54That's when she met Michael.
01:58She was very young.
02:00She wasn't but fourteen years old or so.
02:04The first time I met Michael, I have to say, there was something about him inside that
02:12I just didn't quite like, and I could never put my finger on it.
02:19He had an immaturity about him, being very boastful.
02:25When you meet these people that are just all into themselves, like they're the greatest
02:30person in the world, and the entire world revolves around them, that was Michael.
02:37But I believe that he filled a hole in her life that she was really yearning for.
02:46She was in love with him, and she appeared to be very happy.
02:56Jenny eloped with Michael when she was about fifteen, sixteen years old.
03:03She had told me that she was pregnant.
03:06And my mom was definitely not happy with the situation, but she accepted the situation.
03:14And at that point, Jenny went to live with his parents down in Virginia.
03:22I met his dad a couple times.
03:24He was very gruff.
03:26He was a very stern father.
03:31And his mother, she was very dutiful, making sure that the dinner's on the table every
03:36night, making sure that everything's clean, the dishes are washed.
03:41Jenny seemed right at home.
03:44She built a life with him.
03:48They would go camping, they would go places together.
03:52They were a young couple, you know, striking out against the world, and it at least appeared
03:59from the outside that they were a happy couple.
04:05About ten years later, Melissa came along.
04:08And now with two children, the financial strain on the family, of course, it grows.
04:16My mom worked a lot of odd jobs.
04:19She worked at a pizza place.
04:20She worked at a Mexican restaurant.
04:25And she ended up following in my grandmother's footsteps.
04:29And she worked in hospice care and took care of people.
04:34She kept her nose to the grindstone.
04:36She worked on her schooling, and she got her RN license.
04:41She was very much into the nursing field.
04:49Michael never held down a job for very long.
04:53Every time I talked to my sister, she was telling me that, oh, yeah, Michael got fired
04:57from another job or he quit this job.
05:00And so my sister had to financially support the family, and it was a constant struggle
05:07for her.
05:09She would also do as many odd jobs as she could.
05:12She would do people's taxes, and she sold Avon to try to keep money coming into the
05:18house.
05:23My father retired very young.
05:28He worked as a maintenance man at a popular hotel chain, and he said he dropped a bird
05:34bath on his foot.
05:35I never saw him limping or anything, but that's the reason he said he was retiring.
05:45After my father retired, he really became a recluse.
05:50He would just hide in his garage and just scroll eBay.
05:55He would buy all these collectible Tupperwares from the 70s.
06:00He would buy Beatles bobbleheads and records.
06:05He would never listen to them.
06:06He would never use these things.
06:07He had multiple guitars and this giant firearm collection.
06:14He just wouldn't share a common space at all with anyone.
06:17He wouldn't even eat dinner at the same time as us.
06:21He would just look at eBay all day, all night.
06:25That's all he did.
06:27He just spent, spent, spent.
06:29It was like he was just buying just to buy.
06:36I started to see that maybe it was because he needed control over it.
06:42As a child with his father, he was actually controlled.
06:47However, the spending was something where he was in control.
06:53He hadn't worked in years.
06:55He wasn't supporting the family like a mature man and husband should do.
07:01You take away the self-worth of a person, it's hard to be able to pull themselves up
07:06by the bootstraps.
07:08And I believe because of that controlling nature that was placed upon him, he ended
07:13up doing the same because that's what he felt comfortable with.
07:16That was his life.
07:23My husband and I decided that we'd had enough of California, and so we decided to move back
07:29to Maryland.
07:31And so my sister Jenny offered to go ahead and let us move in.
07:40In that month that I was there, I would hear the arguments.
07:44I would hear mainly Michael yelling at her.
07:49And my sister would be just trying to appease him.
07:53And I witnessed that on many, many occasions, pretty much almost on a nightly basis.
08:00Any respect that I really had for Michael dissipated very quickly at that point.
08:06I'll just be honest with you, I was thinking that Michael was a bum.
08:11I never really saw the love between my parents.
08:16He didn't show her kindness or anything.
08:19He just continued to do nothing but abuse her.
08:24My father would do all of these disrespectful things.
08:31He would shove her against the wall or hip check her and call her the N-word.
08:39And he would belittle her any chance he got.
08:50Her and I discussed the relationship just very briefly, but she really didn't want to
08:56talk about it.
08:59I knew my sister was in trouble, but I really didn't know how bad things were.
09:09I was four years old.
09:16And I remember chaotic screaming.
09:23He took the back of my sister's neck and slammed her against the bed frame in our room.
09:32My mother was sitting on the stairs holding my sister's head together.
09:40All I remember was her saying, it's okay honey, just stay calm, stay calm, while we waited
09:45for the EMTs.
09:48I don't know if my mom didn't report him to the police because she was scared that we
09:57would end up on the street, or she really thought that all relationships were this way.
10:04My sister and I didn't know anything else, so of course we thought this sort of behavior
10:08was normal.
10:16When my sister turned 16, she got married and moved out.
10:22I feared my father.
10:26I remember I climbed onto the roof of our home because he was afraid of heights and
10:34I knew he wouldn't follow me.
10:37Little things would set him off, would always tense up and you could never tell what he
10:42was thinking.
10:43And then he would just go for you.
11:01The first time my father threw me out of the house, I was 14 years old and it was snowing.
11:08It became a rather common occurrence for him to throw me out.
11:12It was always over something stupid.
11:15I would have to go find a couch or a friend to stay with.
11:20Really around the age of 15 on, I was no longer in the home.
11:30I would always ask my mother, why do you let this happen to me?
11:36And she would go, oh honey, I can only control myself.
11:42We just lived in fear and just tiptoed and walked on eggshells that he just did whatever
11:47he wanted.
11:50Jenny would never really open up to me.
11:55She may have been embarrassed to say that, hey, you know, things aren't hunky-dory here
12:01in paradise anymore.
12:04I to this day do not really know exactly why she stayed with him.
12:12I believe that she didn't want to throw away what she had built with her family.
12:28My mom was living in Edgewater, Maryland.
12:31She had been in a car accident and she'd been having some really bad trouble with her ankle.
12:39And so my sister said, well, I'm going to go ahead and bring her to my home here in
12:45Virginia.
12:47She put her in a spare room that they had, but then they decided that they would do an
12:52addition onto the home with a living room and a room for my mom to live in her own bathroom.
13:00My mom got right around $150,000 for the sale of her house and $72,000 went into the
13:11remodel of the home.
13:15My mom would break me fairly often.
13:17She asked me point blank, why are they still charging me $2,500 a month to live here when
13:25I paid for doing this addition for my own room?
13:30At that point, I felt very helpless.
13:45This should not be, why is she getting charged any money, you know, other than maybe food?
13:55Jenny's reply back to me was that, I know, Susie, I know.
14:01I realized that she was completely powerless to do anything.
14:07I could tell she felt horrible about it, but she had no choice.
14:13My father's spending was out of control.
14:16The money had to come from somewhere.
14:19I know they were refinancing multiple times as well, just to try to keep it going.
14:27My mom just didn't have a say in that house at all.
14:34My mom was now being taken advantage of.
14:37My sister, by far, had been being taken advantage of.
14:43She needed to get away.
14:44My mom needed to get away, but there was no place for either of them to go.
14:51It's a horrible feeling knowing that somebody is in a situation that they can't get out
15:00of and you can't help them.
15:10I told her, mom, this isn't normal.
15:13Mom, he's abusing you.
15:14And I was giving her examples.
15:16And that's when she really kind of started to slowly think of the idea of trying to escape.
15:26All of a sudden, out of the blue, get a phone call from Michael saying, yeah, Jenny left me.
15:33Do you know where she is?
15:35If I'd known what the end result would have been, I certainly would have done something.
15:44The first time my mom thought about leaving was in 2014.
15:52She had realized that she was in a loveless marriage, and she had started to see how bad
16:01the abuse really was.
16:03One day, she left work.
16:06She didn't tell him that she had put in her two weeks' notice, and she drove straight
16:11from her job to my house.
16:14And I was thrilled.
16:18I had no idea she had even left him.
16:22But I received a phone call from Michael, and he was very, very upset.
16:29And he was imploring me if I knew where Jenny was.
16:34He was very emphatic.
16:35He wanted to know where she was.
16:40I immediately called my sister.
16:45She told me that he had taken a gun, and he had pointed it to her head.
16:51And he had told her, if you ever leave me, I will kill you.
16:59That was the turning point.
17:02When she told me that, I knew who he was.
17:09But I knew what situation she was in.
17:14And so I asked my sister, well, what about mother?
17:18Because now my mom was still in the home with him and his mother, and Jenny's not there.
17:28And she replied, I know.
17:33And still to this day, I feel a little bit guilty because I asked her, what about mother?
17:41And I believe she felt a responsibility to our mom, and that's probably one of the main
17:47reasons why she went back.
17:55My father was just calling and messaging and leaving all these voicemails.
18:00I think it was just so overwhelming that she decided to give it a try again.
18:12We walked on the beach, and she just cried, but she put on a brave face.
18:20And I still have that picture of her by the ocean, smiling, but there's a sadness, too.
18:28I knew she was afraid of what was going to happen when she got there.
18:33She wasn't his wife.
18:36She was a possession.
18:40And he was not going to let anybody or anything take his possession away from him.
18:56Soon after she got home, maybe a few days or a week, she called me and told me that
19:02things were better, things were doing good.
19:05He promised her that he would get a control on his spending.
19:10They came up with this idea that they were going to bring patients to the home, and then
19:14she wouldn't have to go somewhere to work anymore, and that she wouldn't have to work
19:19as hard.
19:22Michael's father passed away, and now there was an empty room, and so they decided to
19:28go ahead and get a business license and open the home for elderly patients, receiving a
19:34monthly check for doing so.
19:38They called their home the Heflin Home, and it started with my mom and two others, and
19:44then when my mom passed away, then she was taking care of three elderly folks.
19:53In early 2016, my current husband and I took a trip out there for a couple days.
20:04I noticed that there were a bunch of cameras up around inside the home, and I asked my
20:10sister what they were for, and she had told me that if an elderly person fell, sometimes
20:17they might not even know how they fell.
20:20And so having a camera system was just good insurance, but they didn't have any downstairs,
20:26which is where her and Michael lived, because they never had any elderly down there.
20:34There were 16 cameras around the house, but the four main ones pointed into the kitchen,
20:41the residential living room outside, and the storage area that used to be the carport,
20:48and that was right outside of my father's garage.
20:55My mom's day would start very, very early, sometimes as early as like 4.30 in the morning.
21:01She would start her mornings by getting everybody up, washing them, feeding them.
21:09She would take them to doctor's appointments, and she would care for them all the way through
21:15the day.
21:16She didn't get very much time to herself at all.
21:21When my sister had three residents in the home, she was pulling down about $11,000 a
21:27month.
21:28The only expenses they had, of course, was the mortgage and utilities and food.
21:34But there was one person in the equation that was going to upset everything that she had
21:41worked for.
21:44About two months in, he started spending again.
21:49Brand new Bowflex machine, brand new exercise bike.
21:54There was all this ham radio equipment.
21:56I know that stuff's not cheap, and there was a tremendous gun collection.
22:02You can see where the money was being spent, and it wasn't on her.
22:08All the promises that he had made, he went back on.
22:12My mom was exhausted from working all the time, and things were worse than ever.
22:21There was one time that we were just walking around Winchester, and then my sister got
22:26a phone call.
22:27And it was Michael.
22:29And he was telling her, you need to get home.
22:31You need to get home right away.
22:33We had only been gone for like 20, 30 minutes.
22:38And then she looked at me, and she said, I'm sorry, I have to go home.
22:44My sister was under his total control.
22:52When Jenny came to the realization that things were not going to get better, she decided
23:01she was going to leave Michael.
23:07So one day she was delivering Avon, and I think she had let slip that things were not
23:15as it seemed at home.
23:18And this absolutely shocked her customer, and they really wanted to help her.
23:25So they put her in touch with a realtor out in California.
23:30She contacted this realtor.
23:33She told him what the situation was, that she was trying to get out, trying to escape.
23:39And the realtor said that he might have a room for rent in his own home.
23:48He was like, I would love to have a feminine touch around here.
23:52He said that he was widowed.
23:55And it wasn't so much flirting, but it was a kindness that she really was not used to.
24:05So she had a place to go.
24:09She started packing.
24:11It's not like my father even noticed.
24:14He didn't notice half her clothes were packed up and mailed to my house.
24:22She finally came to the realization that this is over.
24:37I remember the day she was going to leave very clearly.
24:43I couldn't get a hold of my mom.
24:46I figured she left her phone downstairs and was caring for a patient.
24:51And then I got a call from her.
24:58She frantically whispered into the phone, Melissa, he found out that I'm leaving.
25:06I need to leave now.
25:08And I was offering to come and get her, but she didn't want to put me in danger.
25:17And then she said, oh, no, he's back.
25:20I've got to go.
25:21Then she hung up.
25:22Frederick County, 911.
25:23Ma'am, could you send an ambulance and a police car to 215 Stafford Drive?
25:24There's been a shooting.
25:25215 Stafford Drive?
25:26Yes, ma'am.
25:27Who's been shot?
25:28Me and my wife got in a terrible argument.
25:29I caught her in an affair and I just shot her.
25:30And I swear to God, I didn't mean to do that.
25:31Where is she right now?
25:32I've got to put my belt on, the rest of my clothes on and put my shoes and socks on and
25:53be out front.
25:54I'm going to have my hands in the air.
25:55Tell the officers.
25:56Yeah, I understand.
25:57Is she awake?
25:58Yeah, she's a gurgling in there.
25:59She's breathing.
26:00Since she's breathing, if the ambulance gets here quick, she might be saved.
26:04Okay, right.
26:05Where's the gun?
26:06I have laid it on the floor.
26:10I'm going to be waiting for the police officer.
26:16Okay.
26:18I received a call from my lieutenant.
26:23He advised that a female was shot by her husband.
26:29The deputies responded to the scene.
26:37Mr. Heflin was detained without any issues.
26:42They located Mrs. Heflin in a bathtub.
26:49She sustained a gunshot wound.
26:56She was taken to the Winchester Medical Center, and then from there they flew her to Inova
27:02Hospital.
27:10I was scrolling on the local radio chatter page, 200 block Stafford Drive, Manchus Wife.
27:19I was dizzy and shaking uncontrollably.
27:24I remember running through the hospital.
27:32And I was just so relieved that she was alive, and it didn't really matter anything else.
27:41Oh my God, he did it.
27:47First time in my life, I literally dropped to my knees.
27:59And I stood at the end of her bed, and I looked at her.
28:08And I knew that she had endured something that no human being should endure.
28:16They had to remove her eye.
28:18It was beyond repair.
28:20They had a procedure the very next morning to try to connect a vein in her arm because
28:27it took the brunt of the shotgun blast.
28:31Her arm actually saved her life.
28:36She survived so much.
28:39There was multiple surgeries on her brain, and she actually started doing a little bit
28:47better.
28:48So we got very hopeful.
28:52Within two or three days, I could tell that she knew I was there, and she knew that Melissa
28:59was there.
29:00She didn't know where she was, but she knew that we were there.
29:06Mr. Heflin, I'm behind you.
29:07I don't want to startle you.
29:08How are you?
29:09I'm better.
29:10We were conducting an interview with Mr. Heflin at the Frederick County Sheriff's Office.
29:11We'd run a small nursing home.
29:12She had to go upstairs, so I seen her phone laying there.
29:13God must have made me pick that phone up.
29:14I picked the phone up, and there was some man on there.
29:15She was talking to.
29:16He was on the other end of the phone?
29:17He was texting.
29:18Texting.
29:19Okay.
29:20Well, what happened was, after I found him, I called him.
29:21I said, I'm going to call you.
29:22I said, I'm going to call you.
29:23I said, I'm going to call you.
29:24I said, I'm going to call you.
29:26I got really mad about it.
29:29I thought we had things great now.
29:30Then she came out in front and told me she'd had multiple affairs.
29:34She went through years to stay with my daughter, and she took a man down there with her, and
29:43she went away with all this, and it just broke my heart off.
29:49It broke my heart.
29:52He was putting it all on her.
29:56All the problems in their relationship was because of her.
30:00It was about everything that she did wrong.
30:04Well, my heart's been breaking all day.
30:06She should have just left.
30:07But no, she wanted to stay a month until her boyfriend could get a house for him down in Florida.
30:12Well, we got to fight because she's on the phone with him again.
30:15She knew that she's going to be on the phone with him.
30:17That's going to upset me, you know?
30:20I grabbed the phone and she was calling baby and all that stuff.
30:23Officer, I don't know. I went crazy.
30:26So tell me what happened after you lost your cool.
30:28Well, I grabbed the phone from her.
30:30She grabbed me around the arm and started pushing my arm.
30:33And we started going crazy. I mean, went nuts.
30:36What was she doing?
30:37She tore all of her Christmas present boxes up and destroyed everything.
30:41And we just completely ate s***.
30:44You grabbed the phone and she went into the bathroom, right?
30:47That's exactly how it happened.
30:49She went in the bathroom, pissed off Brian.
30:57And I got the shotgun shot through the door.
31:02I don't know what possessed me how to shoot you.
31:04But there wasn't a scare in it to straighten up.
31:06What was I thinking about?
31:08You just go wild and crazy in your mind.
31:10I'm sure both of you all have had days where things go nuts and you have trouble controlling yourself.
31:15Sure, everybody has.
31:17I think he was trying to figure out his way of saying he just lost it and it just happened.
31:28He was taken to the magistrate and charged with aggravated malicious wounding that night.
31:37The nurses were hopeful, so that gave us hope.
31:41She came out of intensive care because she was doing so well.
31:47But the damage with the buckshot in the brain started to bleed.
31:55She got this look on her face, like she was very concerned.
32:00I said, Mom, are you okay?
32:03She said, yeah.
32:06And then she had a grand mal seizure.
32:11And I remember looking at the head nurse and her eyes told me what I already knew, that my sister was gone.
32:27At that point, we knew we had a murder investigation.
32:35Oh, believe me, I really didn't mean to do this.
32:37We knew already some of what the defendant was going to testify in his defense.
32:43I pointed the gun at the bathroom door in a rage.
32:46The gun went off and it hit her in the head.
32:49She knew that she was going to be on the phone with him, that's when it upset me.
32:53I'm sure both of you all have had days where things go nuts and you have trouble controlling yourself.
32:57Sure, everybody has.
33:00That is a classic hot blood defense.
33:03He was hoping to reduce his exposure from potentially life in prison for first degree
33:09all the way down to 10 years in prison for the manslaughter.
33:15We felt very strongly that that would not be justice.
33:19First degree murder was the natural charge in this case.
33:23We owed that to the victim, to get justice for our victim.
33:27First degree murder requires premeditation and deliberation.
33:31But it doesn't require deliberation for any particular period of time.
33:36It can be very quick.
33:37You can deliberate in the time it takes to grab a knife and go after someone.
33:44When we reenacted it, it took us approximately 15 seconds to get into the gun safe.
33:51And then another several seconds to load the gun and walk to the door of the bathroom.
33:58So you're looking at between 25 to 30 seconds
34:04before he shot the gun.
34:07That's all time that he could have thought, you know, this is a really bad idea.
34:11That's a lot of premeditation, legally speaking.
34:14The timeline of this case, it was an all day event.
34:18There was a great deal of video camera footage within the home during the course of the day.
34:24And we could see them moving back and forth throughout the house throughout the day.
34:29It had started early in the day.
34:31They had argued earlier in the day.
34:34It was a lot of premeditation.
34:36It was a lot of premeditation.
34:38It was a lot of premeditation.
34:40It was a lot of premeditation.
34:41Early in the day, they had argued earlier in the day.
34:44And she had had communications with this other gentleman.
34:48And he was trying to monitor anything that she was doing on her phone.
34:52Any chance that he had to get a look at her phone so he could determine whether or not she was texting with this person.
34:57He had been focused in on this and riling himself up about this all day long.
35:03Mr. Heflin never gave Ms. Heflin any space.
35:07It's almost like he kept pushing instead of just separating himself from the situation.
35:16He continues to make contact with Ms. Heflin.
35:23He could have just left her alone.
35:32There was some fantastic work done by our investigators.
35:36Investigator Schwartz and the others on the team know that we are going to want to see some ballistics.
35:42We're going to want to see the trajectory.
35:44That's going to be very important in this case.
35:46We know that.
35:49The investigators blow the buckshot holes with dowels so that we can see the general angle of fire.
35:56And we see that it is basically straight through the door, a little bit right to left, and a little bit of a downward angle.
36:02Just a little bit.
36:04And that's critical in this case.
36:07If you think about shotgun ammunition, the cartridges all look the same.
36:12It's what's inside that plastic cylinder that's important.
36:15Mr. Heflin purposely loaded double-aught buckshot in that shotgun.
36:21Double-aught buckshot is a larger size ball where there's only like eight or nine of those balls in there.
36:29You're dealing with a very large projectile coming out at an extremely high speed with great force and impact, especially at close range.
36:39If you know that your wife is holding that door and you are going to fire through it, you know you're going to strike.
36:47The use of those dowels through the hole showing the trajectory was brilliant police work to show us what his real intent was.
37:00We were ready to go to trial.
37:03We had more than sufficient evidence to obtain a conviction.
37:06We were very confident.
37:08But there is always risk.
37:09You can never be absolutely certain that a jury will determine your way.
37:13And you end up either not getting a conviction at all or you get manslaughter.
37:19His lawyers came to us asking if there was any kind of a plea agreement we could reach.
37:24First-degree murder being 20 to life where the defendant might have some hope of seeing the outside world and not dying in prison.
37:33And that's what basically got us to trial.
37:36And that's what basically gave us the opportunity to take manslaughter off the table, take first-degree life off the table, just focus on second degree.
37:46We know we're dealing with anywhere from 5 to 40 years in prison.
37:50So we took that to the family and discussed it with them.
37:54When I heard about the plea deal, I was so angry.
37:58He deserved the worst that he could possibly get.
38:01This was so cruel.
38:04This was evil.
38:06But it just kind of made sense because they said he's going to go away for a long time.
38:13And this just ensures that he doesn't walk.
38:17I just had to trust them that they knew what they were doing.
38:20Within the plea deal, he could not appeal the sentence.
38:23And so that was a little bit more acceptable.
38:37We decided that we would treat the sentencing hearing like a mini-trial of the case.
38:44Yeah, she's a gurgling in there. She's breathing. If the ambulance gets here quick, she might be saved.
38:48We played the 911 tape. We played snippets of his interviews.
38:52We did those things just to show that the fact that he'd murdered his wife didn't seem to really affect him emotionally at all.
38:58And I got the shotgun shot through the door.
39:01He was callous, premeditated, and just came after her with the intent to kill her.
39:19It was a good verdict. It was a good sentence.
39:24And he's going to be in there for a long time before he's even eligible for parole.
39:30While I would have loved to see him get the electric chair, or a lethal injection,
39:37or never get out of prison again, I didn't.
39:41While I would have loved to see him get the electric chair, or a lethal injection,
39:47or never get out of prison again,
39:51I think he got the best that they were able to give us.
40:02If there's any lesson to be learned from this tragedy,
40:07Jenny made a blueprint of what road not to go down.
40:15And a warning to anyone out there to believe that they are in danger,
40:22and to escape from that danger, and to be able to live their life in freedom.
40:30Jenny had signed to be a donor, organ donor.
40:35And even in Jenny's death, she still gave life.
40:39Five people live today because of her.
40:43So throughout Jenny's life, she gave and gave and gave.
40:49But I know she's at peace now. She's no longer bullied.
40:54She is no longer lorded over and told what to do.
41:00And I will forever be proud of her for making that decision to finally break free.
41:13Killer clowns are something you see in horror movies, not in real life.
41:19When someone gets murdered, you immediately look to a spouse.
41:24They're never going to find out who did this.
41:29AVAILABLE NOW

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