48 Hours - Karrie's Choice - Encore
Episode Date: February 9, 2020Could a teenager be brainwashed by one parent to help murder the other parent -- and then make it look like a suicide? "48 Hours" correspondent Erin Moriarty reports. See Privacy P...olicy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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In 2014, Laura Heavlin was in her home in Tennessee
when she received a call from California.
Her daughter, Erin Corwin, was missing.
The young wife of a Marine
had moved to the California desert
to a remote base near Joshua Tree National Park.
They have to alert the military.
And when they do, the NCIS gets involved.
From CBS Studios and CBS News, this is 48 Hours NCIS.
Listen to 48 Hours NCIS ad-free starting October 29th on Amazon Music. Today is February 13, 2018.
We are currently at the Stubank County Sheriff's Office conference room.
Present is Terry Nyrider and also her attorney.
The time now is 10.58 a.m.
At what point did your dad first approach you with this plan?
It was him and I.
We were home.
He was saying that he was going to kill himself.
He brought up that there was this other option kind of thing
where he wanted to kill my mom.
First bite.
Oh, Carrie, don't push the bib up.
Carrie is doing a good job.
The story in my eyes is about Lloyd and Michelle.
And there's the door, and there's my husband.
He was such an attentive father.
Wow!
I thought he was a really amazing person.
He's very charismatic, shows a lot of care.
Care is too cold to be happy.
Michelle is truly a brilliant person. charismatic, shows a lot of care. Michelle
is truly a brilliant person.
She's got
a wonderful sense of humor
and this great wit.
What's your favorite toy outside, Carrie?
My baby swing.
Your baby swing? My first impression was that
they were sort of like a very
perfect, ideal family. And they were really good at putting up that front.
But over time, that perception sort of started to change.
I was Michelle's lawyer. Her husband had filed for divorce.
Michelle was surprised that he filed for divorce. She was a stay-at-home mom.
She had done everything she thought she could do to make him and the family happy.
Carrie was at RIT.
She was set to graduate in another year.
She says her dad came to her.
I can't afford to pay the bills.
I can't afford to pay your mother.
There's no way out.
I have to kill myself.
I'm sorry.
You guys have to go on without me.
Or I got plan B here.
You were trying to kill my mom.
It's true.
It's true.
He made you choose?
Yes.
I have one, sir.
There's something strange happening at a friend's house.
I thought I saw the mother standing in the stairway, but she's been motionless.
And I could see through to the stairs and see that somebody was clearly at the bottom of the stairs,
and they looked like they needed some sort of help.
Did you ever think this case would go the way it did?
No.
2-993, for an update.
We're out with a male subject on the top floor of the Spring Street Garage.
He's on the ledge.
Do you have live video of this up there?
Today, sir.
We just don't have cases like this where this level of pervasive evil trickles through an entire life and then
ends in such a horrific event. Thank you. I'm going to go ahead and get back to work. On a cold January day in 2018,
45-year-old Lloyd Nyrider was surrounded by local and state police.
He's on a ledge on the fifth story of a parking garage in Princeton,
New Jersey, threatening to jump. It wasn't supposed to end this way. Almost 30 years earlier, in 1989,
16-year-old Lloyd had fallen for an older classmate, Michelle Londy. They were going to the
same high school, and she was graduating,
and we told her she could invite friends, and she invited Lloyd.
Michelle's mother, Jeannie, remembers how quickly the relationship developed.
How did she feel about him?
Oh, she was falling in love.
I pronounce you husband and wife.
Two years later, in 1991,
Michelle and Lloyd
tied the knot.
The newlyweds headed off to college.
Are we lovey-dovey now?
No. Michelle gave birth
to a daughter, and two years
later, a second child,
Carrie. Who's that?
It's my sister, Carrie. Well, hi, Carrie.
The family settled in the upstate New York community of Corning,
Steuben County District Attorney Brooks Baker. It's kind of a place where a lot of folks still
don't lock their doors. Corning is a quaint family place, best known as the headquarters of Fortune 500 company Corning Glass.
Lloyd worked there as an engineer.
Hi, Mama.
Hi.
Michelle gave birth to a third daughter, and she homeschooled the kids.
I'm making a movie of you.
You are? I'm afraid I'm not being very interesting right now.
Later, she would teach at a local college.
She was an English professor when I met her,
so she was big on reading and writing,
and she would always really encourage her girls to be well-spoken and educated.
Meena Raj met the Nye Riders' middle daughter, Carrie,
in ballet class.
Hi, my name is Carrie,
and my dance is the three little pigs.
And the two quickly bonded.
All of our dance families
were very close.
Her mother, Cynthia,
would become one of Michelle's
closest friends.
When's the very first time
you met Michelle?
I met Lloyd first because he would bring the children to dance classes.
He would do their hair, and the mothers were rather smitten with him. But as Cynthia's daughter Mina spent more time with Carrie,
she became concerned about Lloyd's overbearing parenting style.
There were times when I'd call my mom
and tell her that I was worried about how strict of a disciplinarian he was for really,
really small things. It was sort of like you never knew when he would snap. And if he decided he was
mad at one of them, he would call them over, yell front and center, have them drop to their knees
in front of everyone. The first time I witnessed that, Carrie was very close to me and I could see,
physically see her body shaking. I've seen him slap them. Slap? Across the face. On the face,
yeah. Would he do things to Michelle? He would put her down with a smile on his face. And then around Thanksgiving
2007, Michelle suddenly cut ties with her parents. Her mother believed Lloyd was behind the rift.
What do you think happened? I think that he threatened her either to harm the children
or to harm her. She said, Cynthia, it was Lloyd that made me cut off contact with him.
He didn't want her to have a place to go if she wanted to leave. But it turned out to be Lloyd
who left the following year. In 2008, he took a new job in New Jersey, leaving Michelle and the kids behind in Corning.
Once he was gone, Michelle seemed like a different person.
Better.
Better. She seemed much more relaxed.
And in 2013, after the couple had divorced, Michelle moved into this new house with the girls.
And that's when the real trouble began.
Lloyd wanted sole custody of the children. Lloyd was relentless in using the legal system to harass Michelle. It just never
ended. Michelle's divorce attorney, Susan Betts-Jatomer. There were 26 separate sets of
filings post-divorce. And how unusual is that?
That is super unusual.
If you have two or three, it's a lot.
To have 26 is astounding.
And what was he suing for?
What were these filings for?
He continually filed things making false claims against Michelle.
Lloyd was trying to get out of child support.
And Michelle accused Lloyd of trying to turn the kids against her.
The oldest daughter was already living with Lloyd, and Carrie had gone off to college.
But Lloyd continued to fight for custody of their youngest child, them 14 years old.
We agreed not to show recent pictures of her.
I think anybody who worked in the courthouse had heard about the Nye Ryder case,
this husband and wife were going at it nonstop.
So this is one of those cases that everybody sort of heard about or talked about over the
water cooler or at a bar outing, the name came up. It was one of those cases that just
didn't go away.
But in late August 2017, Lloyd did something unusual.
Susan got this text from Michelle.
And she says, I'm in shock.
Lloyd did not show up for the appearance for his petition for sole custody.
He did not withdraw.
He did not ask for an adjournment.
He did not answer the courts' phone calls or emails, nothing.
How unusual is that for him, knowing how many of these violences he's made?
It was very unusual. It was very unusual. It was unthinkable, really.
Because of Lloyd's no-show, the case was dismissed.
Michelle seemed relieved and happy.
It was summer, and she had a mutual friend of ours and the children
sliding on big blocks of ice down a hill of grass.
Two days later, Monday, August 28, 2017,
a family friend came to pick up the Nye Riders 14-year-old for swim practice.
Instantly, he knew something was very wrong.
I don't want to send her.
There's something strange happening at our friend's house.
Corning Police Sergeant John McDivitt
was the first to respond to Michelle's house that afternoon.
All right, so tell me what you did.
So I walked up to the front door here
and through these three panes of glass I could see inside and I could see a female laying at the
bottom of the stairs. Opened the door, a dog came running out, I came running in and as I got closer
I could see there was a rope around her neck. There was no pulse. She was cold and stiff to the touch.
There was a rope around her neck.
There was no pulse.
She was cold and stiff to the touch.
Here, he found 46-year-old Michelle Nyrider dead.
So your first thought when you saw her was what?
It appears to be a suicide by hanging. but corning police chief jeff spalding wasn't so sure because you couldn't figure out how she got
a mark here no i didn't i didn't like that that was unsettling it appeared as though somebody had
gone behind and thrown a rope over the neck and pulled back and down and caused that. What's more,
Michelle's youngest child, the 14-year-old at the heart of the custody battle and who was supposed
to be picked up for swim practice, was nowhere to be found. Obviously, the number of possible
outcomes there that are bad is tremendous.
outcomes there that are bad is tremendous.
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I said, have we checked basements? Have we checked attics? Have we checked garages?
In the hours after police arrived at Michelle Nyrider's home, a frantic search was on.
Lieutenant Jeff Heverly couldn't find her 14-year-old daughter anywhere.
She should have been around. I knew that she resided with mom.
Later that day, he got a phone call. This is Lieutenant Heverly. Can I help you? Hi, my name is Carrie.
It was 19-year-old Carrie Nyrider, Michelle's middle child. My friends called me earlier today and told me about my mom
and that she...
I'm sorry.
That's okay.
Take your time.
They called and told me that my mom
killed herself.
Carrie told the officer that her younger sister
was safe.
And she's still with you now?
Yeah, she's in my apartment.
She was nearly 100 miles away with
Carrie in Rochester, New York. Carrie then told Heverly how it happened. She had driven back to
Corning late Saturday night to spend one last night in her bedroom at home.
When I got there, my mom started freaking out.
She would freak out a lot.
Carrie said her mother raged at her,
accusing her of taking her father's side in their family court battles.
So she started freaking out and screaming,
and she woke up and was afraid, and she went to her room and she was yelling.
Carrie says she decided to leave, taking her younger sister with her.
She claimed that she was concerned for her younger sister. So she had taken her outside,
put her in the car, and then had driven her to Rochester.
While police were relieved that Michelle's youngest was safe,
Carrie's story didn't really make sense.
Why would Michelle be so upset
on the same day she had been celebrating her court victory?
Those who knew Michelle best
couldn't believe she'd take her own life.
I never believed it.
She was determined to have a successful life, and she did.
She had a great job, and it was not the place in her life
where she would have committed suicide
after all of the really difficult years she had been through.
While it appeared Michelle had hanged herself,
there was that odd ligature mark on her chin.
As police awaited the results of the autopsy...
I thought we would get some definite results.
They would say, oh yeah, 100%, this is a homicide.
Or yeah, 100%, this is a suicide.
But the medical examiner's conclusion surprised them.
They tell us undecided, undetermined causation.
Michelle's mother didn't need an autopsy to tell her what happened. I did not believe she killed
herself. She immediately thought murder, and one name came to mind. I'm thinking it's more than
likely Lloyd killed her, but I couldn't figure out how because
he had an alibi. Lloyd Nywriter was in fact more than 2,500 miles away in California for a job
interview when police discovered Michelle's body. How long has he been in California?
Since yesterday. Carrie told investigators all about it. Was he in Corning
at all yesterday? No, he helped move me into my apartment on Saturday, but he wasn't in Corning.
Even if Lloyd wasn't in Corning, he had been close, about 100 miles away.
So all of a sudden, he's only an hour and change away up in Rochester.
Carrie says that after her father helped her move in to a Rochester apartment on Saturday,
he spent the night in a hotel and flew out to California the next day.
He was still there when the family notified him of Michelle's death.
He was still there when the family notified him of Michelle's death.
He flew back east and within 36 hours showed up at the Steuben County Family Court.
He came to turn off his child support and maintenance payments.
That's the first place he went when he had heard his ex-wife had committed suicide?
That's correct.
Police caught up with him outside the courthouse.
Investigator Volney?
Hey, how are you?
Good, just cautious about how I approach a car.
I don't want to startle anybody. And they sit down in the investigator's car and they do a videotaped interview and have a long conversation.
Did Michelle know she was coming?
She did, yes.
Lloyd calmly echoes Carrie's story.
In the hours before Michelle's death, he was in Rochester,
helping Carrie move into her college apartment.
I go check in at the microtel.
Lloyd says he checked into that hotel Saturday.
Hotel security cameras back him up.
Carrie came over for a while.
Dark parking lot video
then shows both he and Carrie heading to her car.
I walked her out to the car.
When you go back to the hotel?
Yeah.
I invited her to breakfast the next morning.
And at 7 a.m. the next morning, cameras show Carrie arriving for breakfast,
now with her 14-year-old sister in tow.
And you also then checked his phone.
Where was his phone during that time?
I checked his phone.
It kind of corroborated what Carrie had told us,
that Dad stayed at the hotel.
But the hotel video tells a different story.
When Lloyd walked Carrie to her car that night,
he could be seen getting in the car with her
and then driving off.
And the video doesn't show him coming back that night. So while Lloyd's phone was in the hotel
room all night, where was Lloyd? Investigators had to wonder, especially when they looked at
the hotel video from the next morning.
We don't see Lloyd all night long.
Here it is, 6.30 in the morning, and here he comes onto the camera.
He's walking across the parking lot, and he's walking to his vehicle.
He still appears to be wearing the same clothes that he had on the night before.
Lloyd's story was that he stayed at the hotel room all night.
The video evidence is saying, no, he didn't.
Police were now certain Lloyd was lying to them.
They dug deeper, looking for a motive.
He was not in a good financial place.
Lloyd had over $100,000 in credit card debt,
and he was paying his ex-wife almost $6,000 a month.
Baker says that after Michelle's death,
Lloyd tried to collect on Michelle's life insurance
for a payout of $260,000.
They suspected Lloyd killed Michelle
and Carrie might be covering for him.
So we decided to go up on a wiretap
on Lloyd's phone and Carrie's phone.
I'm freaking out.
Me too.
Almost two and a half months after Michelle's death, police began listening in.
Oh, I don't know what to do. I don't know what to do. I don't know what to do.
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Hello?
Hi, sweetie. How's your drive so far? Oh, it's fine. Very good. In fall 2017,
a little over two months after Michelle Nyrider's death, Corning Police began listening in on Lloyd
and Carrie Nyrider's phone calls. Well, we didn't go up on the wire until mid-November.
This had happened at the end of August, beginning of September.
So it had been, you know, two months,
and there wasn't a lot that was being said.
So in order to, you know, kind of refresh things,
we did what was called Tickle the Wire.
Tickle the Wire.
It's a ruse familiar to cops working drug cases.
An investigator calls Carrie,
saying they have more questions. Corning Police Chief Jeff Spalding played the recording for us. Is this Carrie, the narrator? Yes, this is Chief. Okay. This is Investigator Volpe with Corning TV.
The reason I was calling, I didn't know if you were going to be around,
if you had time to meet up with me or what time you might have to stop in to see me.
I should be able to meet with you Monday if you're available.
Okay.
After hanging up with police, Carrie quickly called her father.
Just like we hoped, the next phone calls to Lloyd saying, what do I do?
What exactly did you tell him?
I don't know.
And Lloyd says, oh, it's probably just form.
Don't worry about it.
But then he says, and this is where we sort of puts our doubts aside.
He says, well, I don't think I want you talking to him.
Tell him I'm sorry.
I got a counseling appointment back in New Jersey tonight.
And tell him this has been really hard on me.
Yeah.
Could you cry?
I'm like...
God, it would be nice if it was just over.
That would be the dream.
Why lie?
Exactly. Why not just go sit down with the investigator, spend 20 minutes,
and tell the same story you already have?
Well, if it was anything more serious, I guess you'd have people coming after me anyways, right?
Yeah, he wouldn't ask you to come walk in his front door. He'd say, I have a warrant.
Yeah.
So it can't be that.
Police are clearly suspicious. But with that undetermined official autopsy
holding the case back,
the DA asked a private forensic pathologist
to take a new look
and confirm finally whether Michelle was murdered.
We take all the pictures from the autopsy,
we take all the findings, the documentation, the evidence,
and we go in and sit down with him.
There was no body for him to examine
because Lloyd had Michelle's remains cremated. evidence, and we go in and sit down with him. There was no body for him to examine, because
Lloyd had Michelle's remains cremated. But the pathologist saw that rope mark on Michelle's chin
and petechial hemorrhaging in her eyes. And then he leaps through a few more things,
kind of the way doctors do, in silence, and says, this is a homicide.
and says this is a homicide.
Michelle Nyrider was strangled to death.
Police headed out to confront Lloyd and Carrie.
I mean, at that point, you're thinking Lloyd's the ringleader.
No question.
Do you think that if, in fact, Carrie Nyrider was involved,
she was going to be the weak link?
I thought that she would be the weak link.
You put her in an interview room without dad, without her cell phone,
and you do a hard interview with her, I thought she would be the first to give.
On January 24, 2018, five months after Michelle's death, two investigators showed up at Lloyd's office in New Jersey. At the same time, a pair of state police troopers find Carrie at her
college internship in Syracuse, New York. Was this your Hail Mary pass? Was this it?
Yeah, that's what we considered game day. Investigators break the news to Lloyd.
And they say, Lloyd, look, we got to tell you something. The medical examiner has ruled this a homicide.
Were you down there that night?
No.
In Rochester.
And so that night, you were in your hotel room all night?
Okay.
And they suggested that, geez, Lloyd, maybe you want to take a lie detector test.
And to my surprise, he said sure.
So they gave him directions to a police station down in New Jersey
where we had a polygraph operator that was already on call.
Lloyd appeared confident in his innocence.
200 miles away in Syracuse, Carrie was anything but.
Carrie cracks.
Carrie cracks.
My dad came down with me.
There it was.
In barely a whisper
on a police audio recording,
Carrie admits her
father went to her mother's house with
her that night, and she
helped him get in
undetected.
You walk in the front door of the house.
You tell me at this point.
Where was Mom?
She was at the top of the stairs.
So she saw my dad come in.
And they started arguing.
So he went upstairs and they were arguing in her room.
Carrie said her mother stopped yelling.
And it suddenly got very quiet.
At first she tells police she didn't know why.
But then, she admits.
You saw her?
Yeah.
No, we didn't.
No, we didn't.
I saw her.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I know.
I'm sorry.
I just lost her.
I'm sorry. When you saw her, was she still alive?
No.
It was one of those holy cow moments.
It was like, wow.
Investigators then took Carrie to a police station.
They wanted the whole story on video.
She says her father came to her a week before the murder.
She says her dad came to her and says, I can't afford to pay your mother. There's no way out.
Lloyd gave Carrie an unfathomable ultimatum.
And so basically he was going to kill himself.
Or there is this way to make it so he wouldn't kill himself,
which was killing my mom.
She says Lloyd laid out his plan.
They would make it look like a suicide.
I just don't want to kill my mom.
It's my plan.
Carrie says she stayed downstairs, watching over her younger sister asleep in the living room. What are you doing? Why are you here? The commotion woke up Carrie's sister. So I had to take her out of there. I was freaking out. I didn't know what was going on.
I was like, oh, my God.
And I put her in my car.
When Lloyd was finished, he sneaked out the back of the house, around the side,
and then climbed into the open rear hatch of Carrie's car.
According to Carrie, her 14-year-old sister never knew her father was there.
Police were now ready to arrest Lloyd. The only problem, he never showed up for that polygraph test. He had disappeared.
They lost him.
And they did. They did lose him.
But Lloyd still had his phone, and we still were up on the wire on Lloyd's phone.
We knew that his phone was in downtown Princeton somewhere. They managed to trace it to a municipal parking structure.
And there on the roof was Lloyd Nyrider.
When the officers moved in to confront Lloyd and to pick him up,
he bolted and hopped up on the rail
and threatened to jump off the five-story parking garage to commit suicide.
What do you make of Carrie's story?
Watch more of The Confession on Facebook at 48 hours.
For two hours, Lloyd and Iwriter kept police at bay.
When he turned his back, they made their move.
This New Jersey State trooper who played football somewhere,
he makes a 10-yard sprint and just flattens him.
Tackles him.
Delta 22, 993, I want in custody.
Lloyd was arrested and charged with first-degree murder of his ex-wife, Michelle Nyrider.
How'd you do it, Carrie?
Their daughter, Carrie, who the police believed had been manipulated by Lloyd,
faced second-degree murder charges for helping her father get into the house that night.
What was your reaction when you heard that?
Not Carrie. Not Carrie.
In February 2018, District Attorney Brooks Baker began preparations to face off in a courtroom.
This became essentially our nerve center, our war room for the trial.
This is not typical for the cases you usually try.
No. Even a murder case, usually we can survive in a box or two, but to go four or five boxes
demonstrative of how much material there was here. There's a reason why you have that up there,
don't you? Yeah. This is Michelle's, the final day of Michelle's life. It is? It is. This is
a Saturday. She was murdered. This is a good day for them.
They went icing. You can't really see it, but they're on great big ice blocks.
This reminds us why we're doing it, because this lady's not here to have another day like this.
Baker knows his odds of convicting Lloyd will greatly increase
if he can convince Carrie to testify against her father.
She's looking at 15 years to life.
If she cooperates with the understanding that if she does not cooperate
and is not truthful at trial, she'll face 25 years to life.
It takes Carrie, sitting in a jail cell, a couple of weeks to decide.
She agrees to testify against her father and plead guilty.
But then, during an interview with investigators, she surprises everyone with a new detail. He opened the door and my mom was laying on the floor.
And he said he needed my help lifting her.
Admitting for the first time she had an even bigger role helping her father cover up the murder.
We dragged her around the corner, and he tied the rope to the one prong of the banister and lifted her up and put her over the side.
Sorry.
That's okay.
Okay.
She laid her hands on her mother and felt her mother's cold, dead body.
That's pretty hardcore.
This is the woman that gave you life,
and you maybe didn't directly take her life,
but you helped the individual that did.
It was so hard to understand.
How could a child do this to her mother?
Could Lloyd really have manipulated Carrie into this? And I had that
same problem. And even as we were preparing for trial, I said, Carrie, you're going to be asked
that question. There was a moment when you, your father says to you, it's either I have to kill mom
or, or I kill myself and you have to help me. And those are the only two choices. And why?
and you have to help me, and those are the only two choices.
Why?
She's a smart girl. She could have said no.
Well, and, you know, all those folks in Jonestown could have said we're not going to drink the Kool-Aid.
You think she was brainwashed?
I really think she was brainwashed.
We found out that there is a definition for what he was doing.
And are you talking about parental alienation?
Yes, I am, yeah.
Parental alienation? Yes, I am. Parental alienation. It's when one parent consistently badmouths the other in front of their children. And it's something Michelle worried about.
In fact, in these court documents filed in the years preceding her death, Michelle actually
accused Lloyd of turning Carrie against her. The district attorney thinks
that's exactly what happened. I can understand how you could cause your children to dislike
the other parent, but to kill that other parent, that seems like a step too far. I don't think
it's causing dislike. That's not what this predilection is. It causes them to
absolutely devalue them as people.
Case in point,
two years before her death,
Michelle was backing out of her
driveway while Carrie bickered with her
and tried to block her car
from leaving. Friends say
Lloyd then convinced Carrie
that Michelle tried to run her over.
Carrie even called police on her mother.
And while the charges didn't stick, the idea seemed to.
If you can brainwash your daughter into thinking that her inching out of the driveway
was your mother trying to run you over, then, well, she tried to kill you,
so it's okay for you to help try to kill her.
And when Lloyd later gave Carrie that ultimatum. So basically he was going to kill himself.
Or there is a way that he would kill himself, which was killing my mom.
The DA says Carrie felt she had no choice but to choose her father over her mother.
But would the jury believe it?
As Lloyd's trial approached, the DA was determined to paint a picture of Carrie as Lloyd's pawn.
But Lloyd had his own plans.
Is his defense going to be that she did it?
It has to be.
Is his defense going to be that she did it?
It has to be.
Find out more about the signs of parental brainwashing at 48hours.com. How much were you looking forward to trying Lloyd Nyrider for murder?
You know, you never look forward to a trial because it means 90 hours of work every week.
This one I wanted to try.
I wanted everybody to see who Lloyd was and for Michelle's sake to see what he had done to her.
The evidence against Lloyd Nyrider was circumstantial.
All the district attorney had was Carrie's word, and the jury might not believe her story.
What he needed was physical evidence linking Lloyd to the murder of his ex-wife, Michelle.
We took Michelle's clothes.
We had them re-examined by the state police
looking for touch DNA.
When we got done, what we found was Lloyd's
DNA had had contact
with Michelle's clothing.
The pajamas she was wearing
the night she was murdered.
Prosecutors gave Lloyd the damning
news and a final
opportunity to come clean.
We made to him an offer I sort of expected he would never, ever accept.
He had to plead guilty as charged to first-degree murder.
He would face a sentence of 25 years to life
with the possibility the judge can sentence him to life without parole.
And just two weeks before trial.
So what did Lloyd decide to do?
He decided to plead guilty.
trial. So what did Lloyd decide to do? He decided to plead guilty. As part of his plea deal, Lloyd had to recount his role in the murder. But when it came time to take personal responsibility...
I thought we were going to go bad from minute one because he starts off blaming Michelle.
There were no cameras in the courtroom, but Lloyd tells the judge he killed Michelle because he believed she might hurt their children.
That would be Lloyd. Blame everybody else. Blame the victim.
But then he sort of said, but that doesn't matter. I have no excuse. Murder is wrong.
And he went through and allocuted line by line of what he did.
In the end, Lloyd fulfilled his end of the plea deal, admitting he planned and carried
out the homicide and that he manipulated Carrie into helping him. So what should happen to him?
I want him to have life in prison. Don't want him to ever get out and ever hurt my grandchildren again. He has an evil mind. Michelle's mother, Jeannie,
spent days writing a statement she hopes will persuade the judge to give Lloyd a stiff sentence.
She read it to us. Lloyd and I, Ryder, abused and tortured my daughter for 25 years.
He coerced his own daughter into helping him kill her mother.
Carrie is now in jail, facing the possibility of years in prison.
Lloyd and I, Ryder, should never be given the opportunity to harm anyone again.
Please, Your Honor, give him life without Pearl. And that's exactly what the judge would do.
And what do you think about what happened today, the outcome?
Oh, I'm so overjoyed. I'm so happy.
It's life without parole.
And Michelle got justice.
Thank you.
But there was still the matter of Carrie.
And what price should she pay for her mother's death?
That's a hard one, isn't it?
That's a hard one.
I don't believe she should go to prison.
I think that she needs psychiatric help.
I think she needs a lot of therapy.
District Attorney Brooks Baker would agree.
Carrie needed therapy, but he didn't think that would be enough.
She has to pay a price. She has to serve a sanction. I think for her own sanity,
she needs to serve some penance. Remember, Carrie initially pled guilty to second-degree murder,
a charge that could put her in prison for 15 years. But the DA supported a decision,
for 15 years.
But the DA supported a decision allowing her to now
plead guilty to a lesser
charge, second degree
manslaughter.
Jeannie again
wrote to the judge.
I always ask myself
what would Michelle want me
to do? I do not
believe my daughter, Michelle,
would want a long prison sentence for her daughter. She would And the judge would be lenient, very lenient.
Carrie Nyrider was sentenced one to three years in a state prison.
years in a state prison.
It was a huge relief to Jeannie, who planned to tell her and her two sisters all about Michelle and just how much she loved them.
She knew that she had lost them, the two oldest, and she wanted them to be happy, and she wanted them to be happy and she hoped that someday they would realize what was done
and come back to her and see how hard she fought for them
and to have a good life.
She wanted to live a beautiful life, to have a beautiful life
and for them to be happy.
be. Carrie Nyrider was released from prison on parole on January 16th, 2020.
I have a lady that just came to my house and somebody attacked her.
This is horrible, this poor woman. Ezra is able to remember she was attacked on a muddy road.
Everything changed when law enforcement found the body.
48 Hours, next on CBS.
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