Betrayal - EP 18 - Sara
Episode Date: November 14, 2024An online friend makes Sara question everything, including her ability to be a parent. If you would like to reach out to the Betrayal Team, email us at betrayalpod@gmail.com. See omnystudio.com/lis...tener for privacy information.
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Sometimes where a crime took place leads you to answer why the crime happened in the first place.
Hi, I'm Sloane Glass, host of the new True Crime podcast, American Homicide.
In this series, we'll examine some of the country's most infamous and mysterious murders,
and learn how the location of the crime becomes a character in the story.
of the crime becomes a character in the story. Listen to American Homicide on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
From audio up, the creators of Stephen King's
Strawberry Spring comes The Unborn, a shocking true story.
My babies, please, my babies.
One woman, two lives, and a secret she would kill to protect.
She went crazy.
We shot and killed all her farm animals, slaughtered them in front of the kids, tried to burn her
house down.
Listen to The Unborn on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
Had enough of this country? Ever dreamt about starting your own?
I planted the flag.
This is mine.
I own this.
It's surprisingly easy.
55 gallons of water, 500 pounds of concrete.
Or maybe not.
No country willingly gives up their territory.
Oh my God.
What is that?
Bullets.
Listen to Escape from Zakistan.
We need help!
That's Escape from Z-A-Q-istan
on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
This whole experience really made me doubt my abilities
as a parent and myself as a person.
Basically every aspect of my identity
that I had spent so long trying to find,
it like shook everything.
I'm Andrea Gunning and this is Betrayal,
a show about the people we trust the most
and the deceptions that change everything.
This is the story of an entire community.
One group of parents who experienced a shocking deception
and overcame it together.
We'll hear more from the larger community later,
but for the majority of this episode,
we're going to tell it through one person's perspective.
We'll call her Sarah.
Sarah is living her best life
as an organic farmer in Vermont.
She exudes cool.
She's covered in tattoos and rocks a shaved head.
I never have to have a bad hair day.
I just don't ever have hair.
She grew up in the Northeast as the oldest child in her family.
When she was little, her parents struggled to make ends meet and her father battled addiction.
Sarah remembers a time when her parents were skeptical about organized religion.
Even the Christian undertones in cartoons like Veggie Tales made her parents uncomfortable.
I remember a conversation where my parents were like going back and forth and they were
like, well, it's just vegetables.
It seems fine even though there's the religious stuff.
My parents were pretty anti-religion.
But when Sarah was around 10, her parents' religious beliefs began to shift.
My dad kind of got warmed up to it when he was in Alcoholics Anonymous.
And then less than a year later, we were completely embroiled in a cult.
It started when her mom was recruited to join a local church.
They were really nice to us.
They were really supportive of my mom.
She made friends and she struggles a lot to make friends.
And so she felt very at home there.
And my dad kind of hit it off with a couple of the other dads.
It seemed like a really good community.
Before we knew it, we were involved in Quiverful.
Quiverful is a fundamentalist Christian movement
focused on having and raising as many children as possible.
Her parents seemed happy in their new church,
and they became more involved in Sarah's life than ever.
I'd just turned 11 at this time.
So this was an improvement. It seemed like when people said, like, this is the right path, life than ever.
This church became her new normal. and speaking in tongues and stuff like that. But I was like, okay, well, sometimes I had a potluck after.
For an 11 year old,
the potluck desserts like Jell-O were enticing.
Then I started kind of moving beyond the Jell-O
and we all got baptized.
And then there was like purity stuff,
a lot of purity stuff.
So I pledged my virginity to the church and my dad.
And it was almost like a wedding.
These pretty white dresses and go up to an altar.
And it literally looks like a mass wedding,
but it's like little girls all marrying their dad.
But I was like 11.
So I was like, oh my God, I get to dress fancy
and have a little present and more jello.
So yay.
The standards around purity were very high.
It was normal for people in our community to save their first kiss for marriage.
Sarah's naturally curious.
And that was tough to navigate in this community.
Between me not having been raised in this environment and having like a rebellious spirit
is what I always got told.
Just mostly just because I asked a lot of questions.
It really put a bad light on our family.
Eventually, she fell in line. It's definitely been kind of hammered in there to trust authority completely.
There's a reason they're in this position.
I was totally 100% in.
I believed it fully.
Her little sister, who was nine, struggled and was deemed a bad kid by church standards.
She got kind of stuck with the bad kids.
Everyone said that they were always pulling shenanigans
and they were too loud,
which they were just normal kids looking back.
They were just like nine-year-olds.
Some families in their church had as many as 20 children.
For the church, big families served a higher purpose.
You are basically trying to birth an army for the end times, which you're told could
come at any time. So it already feels too late because it takes like, you know, a couple
years for kids to be able to grow up. So they're like, you got to have babies now.
Even though they already had six kids, Sarah's mom felt pressure to grow their family,
but she was struggling to have more.
She was getting blamed for her issues
with not being able to have like a ton of kids.
It seemed like her fault for having a rebellious
and like worldly family.
The church believed that God blessed you
with as many kids as you could handle.
So if a family was struggling to have more children,
it was because their existing kids were disobedient.
In order to get closer to God,
Sarah's mom tried to control her kids
and she did it by following the church teaching.
You start corporal punishment at birth.
If they bite you, well, they're nursing, you pull their hair.
If they don't have hair, you use the switch.
Sarah was only 12 when her mom asked her to use a switch on her newborn sister.
I'm also a kid, and no matter how much indoctrination there was, I just could not bring myself to do that.
It felt like some Stanford prison experiment kind of thing.
This was a defining moment for Sarah.
At that point, I started questioning,
is it because I'm not faithful enough?
Is it because I shouldn't be a mother?
Or is this just wrong?
And that was the first
time I had considered it might be wrong.
She started questioning the church, specifically how they parented and the strictly enforced
gender roles.
One of the weird things about Quiverful is like, boys will be boys until they're 45. But girls are future mothers in training from day one.
When Sarah was 14, she started going to public school.
This was actually a form of punishment.
But there she met a new friend who opened her eyes
to another way of living. And her friend's mom was worried about Sarah's home life.
They were so concerned, and rightfully so.
She basically told me to come and live with them and she would lie to my mom
about where I was if she asked.
My mom was not that invested to be honest, she didn't really come look in.
Soon, Sarah stopped coming home altogether.
And so I ended up moving in with this family,
and they really did everything in their power to help me out.
And so I do refer to her as my foster mom,
even though I was never officially
in the foster care system.
She adored her new foster family,
especially her foster mom. She wanted me to have
like good role models and got me involved in the community and a Jewish community. She's never pushy
about anything and they were really good role models. Jewish people don't proselytize, which I found
very strange. I was like, are they trying to convert me?
And she's like, they don't want you to convert.
That's not a thing.
They just want to give you some food.
And I was like, oh, cool.
Through her foster family, she was welcomed into the Jewish faith.
They nurtured her natural curiosity.
That was what was most appealing to me.
I had a million questions and they were excited to answer the questions with more questions.
There was never like a shut up, don't ask that.
It was like, so this is three different opinions that most people have and this is my opinion.
What do you think?
Sarah was smart and inquisitive about the world, but she'd fallen behind in school.
My parents had taken me out of school in fourth grade.
And so from fourth grade to the end of sophomore year, I had no education.
On her 18th birthday, Sarah dropped out.
After that, she decided to leave her foster family's home, too.
I didn't want to burden this family, so I left them as well.
I hadn't been taught how to live with normal people.
It was just like time for me to go.
But they were instrumental in my running away from the cult.
And so I left and I went to the nearest city
and I was homeless for a year.
At first, I was on the street and then I was in a shelter.
For the first few months, it was really rough.
And then I got a job at a tattoo studio
and I became a body piercer there through an apprenticeship.
It was like my passion. It was so much fun.
She didn't leave everything from her old life behind. She still wanted faith in her life somehow.
Being exposed to Judaism in her foster family inspired Sarah to officially convert.
It gave me a sense of community and a sense of stability that I think I was missing. And like this very kind group of people
who want to support you
and you don't owe them anything for that.
That's really nice for me.
It's comforting.
Like I don't like go to bed wondering
if I'm gonna wake up still part of my only community.
She also decided to start dating.
That's when she met Paul.
She was swiping on Tinder and his profile made her laugh.
He had like mostly pictures of frogs,
but they were like from Google with like the watermark.
I was like, that's really strange.
And so I was curious and started talking to him
and he was like hilarious.
For their first date, he brought her a surprise.
He brought me a Stuart Little Two poster as a gift.
I was like, what a weird guy.
They dated casually for about six months, going on dates when they both had time and
money to spare.
That was until...
The day of COVID lockdown in 2020, I found out I was pregnant.
As soon as she saw the pregnancy test,
she knew she would keep the baby.
I have terrible PCOS,
so I did not think that I was able to get pregnant,
which is part of why I wanted to keep the pregnancy so bad.
She was prepared to go it alone with or without Paul.
After she took a few minutes to process the news,
she called him.
Both of us were just kind of crying
and just like trying to figure out
like what to say to the other person.
And so I told him like,
I wanna be a mom like really bad.
And I was like, you don't have to have anything
to do with this.
But he really wanted to be like a present and good dad.
After that day, Sarah moved in with him.
On some level, she felt prepared for parenthood.
After all, she'd been taking care of young children
her whole life.
I felt very comfortable with my ability
to keep babies alive.
Like I've done this a million times.
I know exactly what I'm doing.
But the environment she'd grown up in
wasn't emotionally healthy or nurturing.
And she knew one thing for certain.
She wasn't going to raise her baby the way she was raised.
She would have to find another way.
She would need resources.
Being an emotionally present and caring parent who's raising a person, I was like, oh my
god, I have no idea what I'm doing. Like I need help now. Whenever a homicide happens, two questions immediately come to mind.
Who did this and why?
And sometimes the answer to those questions can be found in the where.
Where the crime happened.
I'm journalist Sloane Glass, and I host the new podcast American Homicide.
Each week, we'll explore some of this country's most infamous and mysterious murders.
And you'll learn how the location of the crime became a character in the story. On American Homicide, we'll go coast to coast and visit places like the wide-open New Mexico
Desert, the swampy Louisiana Bayou, and the frozen Alaska wilderness.
And we'll learn how each region of the country holds deadly secrets.
So join me, Sloane Glass,
on the new true crime podcast, American Homicide.
Listen to American Homicide on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
In the quiet town of Avella, Pennsylvania,
Jared and Christy Akron seemed to have it all.
A whirlwind romance, a new home and twins on the way.
What no one knew was that Christy was hiding a secret
so shocking it would tear their world apart.
911 response, what's your emergency?
My babies, please, my babies!
One woman, two lives, and the truth more terrifying
than anyone could imagine.
They had her as one of the suspects, but they could never prove it. You're going to go to jail. One woman, two lives, and the truth more terrifying than anyone could imagine.
They had her as one of the suspects, but they could never prove it.
You're going to go to jail if you don't come with us right now.
Throughout this whole thing, I kept telling myself, nobody's that crazy, crazy.
Uncover the chilling mystery that will leave you questioning everything.
A story of the lengths we go to protect our darkest secrets.
She went crazy, shot and killed all her farm animals. Is your country falling apart? Feeling tired, depressed, a little bit revolutionary?
Consider this. Start your own country.
I planted the flag. I just kind of looked out of like, this is mine. I own this.
It's surprisingly easy.
There are 55 gallons of water, 500 pounds of concrete.
Everybody's doing it.
I am King Ernest Emmanuel.
I am the Queen of La Donia.
I'm Jackson I, King of Capriberg.
I am the Supreme Leader of the Grand Republic of Montonia.
Be part of a great colonial tradition.
Well, why can't I create my own country?
My forefathers did that themselves.
What could go wrong?
No country willingly gives up their territory.
I was making a rocket with the black powder,
you know, with explosive warhead.
Oh my God.
What is that?
Bullets.
Bullet holes, yeah.
We need help! We need help! We still have the off-road portion to go.
Listen to Escape from Zakistan.
And we're losing daylight fast.
That's Escape from Z-A-Q-istan on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get
your podcasts.
Sarah's pregnancy was a fresh start for her a chance to mold a new life
in a safe supportive family. It started with her and Paul. I like dated a couple
people before but I had not had a partner. She would learn the meaning of
true partnership during pregnancy. I did have a super high risk pregnancy and I had to be on bed rest from like week 12.
It was awful.
It was terrible.
I had to quit my job.
He had to support me and take care of me, like physically put me in the shower and help
me shower.
And like, he was amazing.
He bought me a Kindle, loaded it up with like every book ever, and
he would like put my socks on me so my feet didn't get cold, so I didn't have to like kick the blanket around
to try to get back over me. And he would do his work in the bedroom whenever possible
so that I just had like a person nearby.
He just took amazing care of me.
And she learned by his example.
So that really turned things for me.
I was like, okay, a successful relationship
between friends, between partners,
between parents and children is like a huge mutual effort
to make the other person feel cared for.
She reached out to her friends who had young kids,
and she started by calling two friends
whose parenting styles she admired.
They had both suggested that I join
some gentle parenting groups on Facebook.
Being bedridden for her entire pregnancy
meant she had a lot of time on her hands.
She browsed group after group
until she found one that really resonated.
And it was a huge community.
I think at the height, there was like a couple hundred thousand.
And everybody in there, it seemed,
was like focused on the same goal that I was,
where like raising a functional, confident,
compassionate person.
And I was like, okay,
this seems like a really good place for me to be.
She started spending hours every day in the group,
reading every post and asking questions of her own.
I was trying to absorb every single molecule of gentle, kind parenting advice that I could
fit in my brain in the course of nine months.
Sarah made real friends through the group, and she noticed a pattern.
Almost everyone in the group was trying to break some kind of cycle of abuse or neglect.
And a lot of people were like, my childhood was hellish and I'm never letting that happen.
So it just seemed like a really supportive community for people who were trying to do
better for their kids.
For Sarah, this was more than just a Facebook group.
It was personal.
She was estranged from her family, so this group became a real community, supporting
her through pregnancy and celebrating with her.
With groups based around cycle breaking, some people don't have a family to celebrate with
them.
And so we would be that family.
A person you don't even know would be like,
oh my gosh, after four years of trying,
we're finally pregnant and we got our first soldier sound
and it's twins and we would all be like, oh my God.
Genuinely, I was so excited for these people.
There was a hierarchy in the group.
Four admins approved every post
and enforced the community guidelines.
So the admins in the group, they were like moderating, approving posts,
but they were also kind of like leaders in the group.
Because, you know, people come there with crisis level stuff.
So if you're really struggling with something, they're the first people
to see the post because they approve it and they really go out of their way to make sure that people are safe.
Sarah had a lot in common with one of the admins, who we'll call Becky.
She had posted a lot about being a Jewish parent.
Becky was a huge presence in the group.
She was like an admin and a super frequent poster.
People were very invested in her life.
People knew her kid by first name.
People had her birth announcements on their fridge.
Becky was a successful attorney who'd overcome a great deal of adversity.
She had just a really difficult upbringing.
I mean, the odds were completely stacked against her.
She was a teen mom.
She had her first baby so young.
She had also suffered child loss, which was unimaginable to me.
Just like thinking about, you know, how much I loved my son before I had
even met him. I think that's every parent's worst fear. Becky's toddler had
passed away unexpectedly. She was a resource and a guiding light for other
parents in the group who experienced the same tragedy. Becky managed this grief
while raising six other kids. But the tragedy didn't end
there. Her oldest child had recently been the victim of an anti-gay hate crime.
The sympathy and like hurt that I felt for her knowing that her kid had been through
this. Awful. Becky posted all the details of the hate crime in the group.
There were hundreds of comments being like, we love you, Becky. People were just so genuinely
caring for her. She was receiving gifts, some of them monetary.
She was getting constant affection and attention
from everyone.
But despite all this hardship,
Becky was thriving in her career
and putting her all into raising her six children.
She was a super mom.
Like she's amazing.
You know, she had her kid
in these cultural emergence schools
and she was taking these incredible trips.
Like they went to Scotland
and like she had these beautiful, enriching,
individualized lives that she had built for these kids.
And I was like, wow, I need to get my act together if I want to be able to
parent like this. And so I think I kind of idolized her a little bit. Becky posted videos of herself
giving updates on her family's life. In all the videos, she was alone. There were no kids sounds or never her husband.
It was just her.
I assumed that it was like her five minutes alone.
She wanted to connect with other parents.
Becky's husband and their oldest kids
were all on Facebook too.
Her whole family was for the most part on Facebook.
Becky and her husband were always flirting
with each other in the group. It was a lot. It seemed like it was in good fun, but it was uncomfortable to see publicly.
When Sarah joined the group, she was finishing the process of converting to Judaism. She looked
at Becky as a resource and inspiration for raising kids in the Jewish faith. But when Sarah tried to
connect over this, Becky wasn't interested.
I was like, why are we not friends?
And she didn't even want to acknowledge it,
which was very odd to me.
It wasn't just that they were both Jewish.
They were interested in the same things.
I'm passionate about heritage language.
Like that's my thing.
And she's a Jewish person who's passionate about heritage language, like that's my thing. And she's a Jewish person who's passionate
about heritage language and she would not speak to me about it." But Becky would post videos of herself
showcasing her language learning skills.
She was speaking Ladino, which is like Judeo-Spanish. It's sort of adjacent to Yiddish, which is one of my languages. And it really
drove home to me and a lot of other people how smart she was.
Sarah learned that Becky was also a convert. It's not that common, so she really wanted
to bond over that shared experience.
I wanted to ask questions about that. I was like really looking for that
advice from her.
And unfortunately, she just
would not.
And there was another reason she felt
connected to Becky.
They both had difficult upbringings.
When Becky posted about her childhood,
Sarah chimed in.
She understood because she'd
been through some of the same things.
I jokingly sometimes refer to myself as a rescue.
It's like, you know, I was literally living on the street and then living in a studio.
When I met my husband, I had probably like 20 bucks.
So I was like, that happens. That's crazy. We both had our Cinderella moment.
And she just like did not
The kinship thing wasn't mutual and I was like, okay, I'm being weird
Sarah began to worry that maybe she'd said something to offend Becky and I was like, oh
Did I like say something? So I was really concerned that I had really hurt her
So she tried to connect with other people in the group. I started seeking out other Jewish parents in that group and everyone was like,
you gotta talk to Becky.
And I was like, oh, okay, I'll try.
Sarah would ask Becky about things like breastfeeding and keeping kosher.
Every time I asked her a question, I would get an answer, but it didn't line up with
anything that I had ever heard before.
But I guess she would know.
And so I started to sort of get back to that place where I was like, am I qualified for
this?
The interactions with Becky always left her feeling worse than before.
She wasn't even a parent yet, but she started to doubt her ability
to raise her son in the Jewish faith.
I don't know anything.
I was like, maybe I am further behind
with conversion than I thought I was.
In the winter of 2020, Sarah's son was born.
She had unexpected complications
and the birth didn't go as planned.
I had a very traumatic birth.
It was really, really bad.
He was almost completely fine.
But I needed a lot of help.
At the very end of the birth, while my son was being put in my arms, I had a psychotic
break and I ended up going into postpartum psychosis. was being put in my arms. I had a psychotic break,
and I ended up going into postpartum psychosis,
and I had no idea what that was.
About 2% of women develop postpartum psychosis
after they give birth.
It can start with obsessive thoughts
about the baby's wellbeing
and concerns that something is wrong,
but it spirals into hallucinations and delusions. It's a condition
that can be really dangerous for both the mother and the baby.
I was hallucinating very vividly, but I had no idea that I was hallucinating.
And so I was experiencing really intense paranoia.
paranoia. You know, a lot of people have like intrusive thoughts, scary violent ones, and once those thoughts start sounding like a good idea, you need to
talk to someone. I was having those thoughts toward myself because I thought
that if I didn't get myself out of the picture,
something would happen to my baby.
She was scared, and she didn't know what was going on.
So she reached out to a doctor.
When I sought advice from medical professionals, I was actually told it was normal, but I didn't
know how to effectively communicate how serious it was.
And so I was at home in full psychosis with a new one.
This lasted for two months until she hit a breaking point.
I had like a full breakdown episode
and I was admitted to a hospital.
episode and I was admitted to a hospital.
I stayed there for a little over a week, I think. Time really wasn't, I'm not really sure about that.
It was really hard to be away from my baby, you know?
But I did feel that he was safer and I felt safer as well.
After she left the hospital, she was stable,
but the experience was traumatic,
so there was still some fear there.
I was really afraid to hold my son
or be alone with him for a long time.
I loved him, but I didn't trust myself to be a good parent.
I didn't even trust myself to be like a babysitter.
I just was so afraid that I would do something terribly wrong.
So she turned to her support system, the parenting group.
And then as soon as I got out, I went to the group because I was like, I don't know who
else that I could possibly ask about this. And I started asking like, has anyone had this happen before?
And the person who kept popping up was Becky.
And she had postpartum depression before and anxiety and OCD.
She knew what she was talking about.
She had been through like a similar situation.
Not psychosis to my knowledge, but really, really rough mental health stuff following
the birth of a baby.
And I was so grateful to have that resource.
This was some of Becky's advice.
Just like go to therapy, just drink water, just wait. And I was like, oh okay.
She would know, not me. Sarah didn't just need advice. She needed someone who'd been through
this and made it out on the other side to tell her that she was going to be okay,
that it wasn't her fault, and that she wasn't a bad mom. But Becky did the opposite.
She was definitely implying that I wasn't cut out for this.
You know, this just isn't for some people.
Maybe it's not for you.
Not being cut out for parenting was Sarah's worst fear.
At the time, she was isolated by COVID
and her postpartum recovery.
So Becky's words cut deep.
I mean, just validation would have gone a long way,
but she really went out of her way
to make it seem like anyone who was struggling
was just so beneath her and that she was just like supermom.
And so I was really questioning everything and not in a good way.
This was one of the darkest times in Sarah's life.
She was suicidal with a newborn.
To keep herself grounded, Sarah focused on the positives she did have.
At this point, we are about two months away from being officially Jewish.
I'm going to the mikvah and I'm so excited.
It's like a huge deal.
A mikvah is a spiritual ceremony, and it can be used to officially anoint someone in the Jewish faith.
So Sarah's first mikvah was like a baptism.
I got dunked and it was amazing.
It was so great.
And I passed my little exam and I got my certificate for me and for my son and it was the best.
You know, I can't even describe like how symbolic and amazing it felt after my weird,
quiverful baptism experience to go to a mikveh of my own volition.
During the postpartum recovery, her faith was everything.
She started teaching her son Yiddish and leaning into her identity as a Jewish parent.
It took me like two or three years to be what I would consider back to myself.
But my light at the end of the tunnel is that I'm the Jewish
parent in my son's life and I have to stick around and I
have to keep him in touch with his culture.
Slowly, Sarah and her husband learned to parent in a way that felt right to them.
The Facebook group was instrumental in helping them get there.
As their son got older, Sarah began to have more questions about raising a child in an
interfaith marriage.
My husband is not religious at all, but we technically are an interfaith family because he's not
Jewish and I am. And it's really hard to find supportive interfaith parenting
spaces. And Becky was a Jewish parent in an interfaith family. And so I was like,
hey, I really need your help. And she was receptive to that and gave a lot of advice
that was maybe more critical than I was expecting.
Every time I asked her a question, I would get an answer,
but it didn't line up with anything
that I had ever heard before, but I guess she would know.
And so I started to sort of get back to that place
where I was like, am I qualified for this?
At the time, Becky had made a post about how she keeps a kosher kitchen.
She was very much positioning herself as an authority.
And she made this big deal out of keeping kosher.
Sarah was considering keeping kosher for the first time herself. So in the comment section, she asked a follow-up question about setting up a kosher kitchen.
I just had a question about separate sides of the kitchen because I haven't done it.
But strangely, Becky deleted her comment from the post.
It was weird.
My comment got deleted very quickly when I asked the question.
And so I don't even think I saw what her reply was.
So finally, she turned to her rabbi.
I contacted him in tears, just like crisis mode.
I don't think I'm supposed to be doing this.
I can't be a parent like this
like you made a mistake by letting me be Jewish like I don't know what's going on. And he was the
first person to ask who is this person? Do you see them a lot? Can you stop seeing them?" I was like, they're just a person on Facebook. And he's
like, why are you listening to that? Like, what, what is their role? What is their authority
here? And I was like, dude, I don't know, actually, I don't call my rabbi dude, but you know, I
was like, yeah, that's a good question.
I had been interacting with her for almost three years
and I never realized how badly it had been affecting me until he said that.
Pretty soon Sarah would get an answer to that question.
One, she wasn't expecting.
So I was at home and then I got added to this group chat
that had like 200 messages and it's called Therapy Sesh
and it had the name of the parenting group.
I was like late to be added
and I was like, what is happening?
And then one of my friends from the group was like, I'll catch you up. Thank God, you know, thank you so much. And she
tells me, we just found out Becky, the admin in the parenting group was like, oh, I know her, go on.
She just was like, she's not real. Whenever a homicide happens, two questions immediately come to mind.
Who did this and why?
And sometimes the answer to those questions can be found in the where.
Where the crime happened.
I'm journalist Sloane Glass, and I host the new podcast, American Homicide.
Each week, we'll explore some of this country's
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So join me, Sloane Glass, on the new True crime podcast, American Homicide. Listen to American Homicide on the iHeartRadio app,
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In the quiet town of Avella, Pennsylvania,
Jared and Christy Akron seemed to have it all.
A whirlwind romance, a new home and twins on the way.
What no one knew was that Christy was hiding a secret.
So shocking, it would tear their world apart.
911 response, what's your emergency?
My babies, please, my babies.
One woman, two lives, and the truth more terrifying
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They had her as one of the suspects,
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You're going to go to jail if you don't come with us right now.
Throughout this whole thing, I kept telling myself,
nobody's that crazy.
Uncover the chilling mystery that will leave you questioning
everything, a story of the lengths
we go to protect our darkest secrets.
She went bat shit crazy, shot and killed
all her farm animals, slaughtered them in front
of the kids, tried to burn their house down.
Audio Web presents the Unborn on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcasts.
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After three years of interacting with Becky, an admin in Sarah's parenting group, the truth was revealed.
Becky wasn't who she said she was.
She was like, she is a catfish.
She's been stealing people's pictures of their children, pretending that they're her
kids and giving them these crazy backstories.
Immediately, my brain went to the child that had a hate
crime committed against them. What possesses a person to see a picture of a child they
don't know and invent a hate crime against them? This cannot be real.
The community was reeling. Sarah went to the Facebook page and Becky was gone. And then I saw the announcement from one of the admins,
just like how heartbroken and shaken she was.
200 of the most active group members were all in a text called Therapy Sesh,
comparing their notes, trying to understand what was happening.
How could she not be real? I had seen her talking to her husband. I'd seen videos of her.
And things just kept coming out over and over, all day. And that whole day,
I just completely abandoned my work and just stayed in the group chat.
Becky had posted videos of herself, her real self, with her real name,
but nearly everything else about her was a lie.
She didn't have six kids. She didn't have any. She had never been a parent at all.
We found out that none of her children are real.
Her children were pictures of someone else's children
that she had been taking from an account
that she was following.
Her son that was talking to children of other people
in the group on Kids Messenger was her.
And she had given him this really traumatic backstory, but he wasn't real at all.
And then she had her husband that was her as well.
There was no husband. Becky just made a fake account where she posed as her husband
and filled out his profile using stolen pictures from the internet.
She had taken pictures from, I believe, an actor from Thailand.
Her entire family was her.
Some people were friends with Becky in real life,
and they were blindsided too.
People had met her in person while she was pregnant, but she wasn't pregnant.
And it was like, she fooled these moms of multiple kids.
Nobody could have seen this coming.
Becky lied about the death of her two-year-old daughter to a group of parents, some of whom
had actually lost kids of their own.
The thing that sticks with me was the amount of other parents in the group who had lost their children, like toddlers and even older or younger,
who were consoling her and sharing their similar struggles.
Like, what? Who could do this?
It was the extent of her lies that kept people from questioning her.
If you say something like,
did you even have the death of a child and you're wrong,
you are the worst for doubting this person.
No one who's an actual normal person would want to do that.
Then there's also the practical side of it where she can just delete your
comment. She can just kick you out of the group. She was an admin, so she could get
rid of you.
The admins, the people most intimately involved in running the group, were the ones who discovered
Becky's fraud. And they needed answers.
When she was confronted by the admins that she was close with, she said that she can't stop.
I don't understand why, but I do believe that she can't stop.
After Becky's accounts were deleted, the parenting group banded together to find out more about the real Becky.
When we started finding out more about her and we spoke to someone in her life
who knew more about her as a real person and her background,
they revealed to us that she had been doing this
since high school, making up people and making up herself.
There was one thing she didn't lie about.
She was actually a lawyer and the kind of lawyer who protected vulnerable people.
I think that's the only thing she has ever told the truth about, other than her cat's
name.
One of the admins gathered evidence and reported Becky's actions to the Bar Association in
her home state, but as far as the group knows, nothing has ever come of that report.
It seemed like it was a joke to a lot of people
because I think that there is this attitude
where if something happens online,
like mainly online, it's not real.
And it was very real to a lot of us.
It was very real for Sarah, especially when she found out.
She wasn't Jewish at all.
For three years, Sarah was repeatedly dismissed
and belittled by Becky, told that she didn't know
what she was talking about when it came to her faith.
And worst of all, when Sarah was going through
a mental health crisis, Becky was there,
saying she'd been through something similar
and telling Sarah that maybe she wasn't cut out
to be a parent.
For me, it was transparently life or death at one point.
With stories like this, if I hear them from other people,
you know, like on like that Catholic show,
I'm like, at what point would this person call it?
At what point would this person be like, okay?
And for her, it was not a new mom considering ending things.
So I don't know what it could possibly be, because anyone in their right mind would have stopped.
She knew what I was going through, everyone did.
And she just did that regardless."
It was an insidious kind of interaction that undermined Sarah's trust in herself.
Becky was like a personification of Sarah's worst fears.
That insecurity was there and it's not like her doing that it was there.
A lot of it was just that I felt that way.
But she really honed in on it. She could really sense that stuff.
And it's taken until like a couple days ago to realize how awful and how deep it went
and how much it affected me.
This whole experience just really made me doubt my abilities as a parent and myself
as a person and just like basically every aspect of my identity
that I had spent so long trying to find it like shook everything.
But then she started seeing it all differently.
I saw that she had lied about something that made me feel like an imposter.
And she was the imposter the whole time.
I had actually done it.
Like I had overcome a lot of the same things that she had lied about.
She's not just talking about parenting.
She's talking about persevering after a tough childhood and homelessness,
finding identity in a new religion and surviving a postpartum mental health crisis.
It went from me being angry about that and feeling like I had let myself down,
to me feeling like I am really proud of myself. I did this thing that is so hard that she had to lie about it.
I did it for real.
One question Sarah still has is that out of all the groups to catfish, why did Becky choose
this one?
I really can't understand her reason for finding a group that was parents trying to break cycles
of abuse and take advantage of them and like make them doubt themselves. People who are
in this incredibly vulnerable spot of trying to be better for their children
and trying to be better for themselves. If I were evil, I would leave that one alone.
You know, I just, that seems like a line.
Becky's deception changed the group,
but for Sarah, it brought her closer
to the other real parents out there
who really wanted to connect and support each other.
A lot of people did actually just disappear,
just quit Facebook, quit online stuff.
I'd not blame them at all.
But the thing that I found so kind of heartwarming,
like it almost feels like a Hallmark movie
is this like pack of moms that in hindsight
saw somebody messing with other moms and their kids and were
like absolutely not and we were there for each other and we've gotten really
close a lot of us have the way that we were able to show up for each other that
kind of undid a lot of the distrust that was immediately planted by this.
That was the initial function of the group.
We first heard about this story through someone else, another mom, who wrote into our email,
BetrayalPod at gmail.com.
On Betrayal, we share stories about how one person couldn't see the deception right in
front of them.
But in this case, it was a group of thousands of people, a whole community.
So we asked members to send in voice notes about how Becky impacted them.
This is what they said.
I got to know her family.
She presented herself as this perfect parent.
She posted prolifically.
And also judging other people's parenting like she was just this kind of professional.
She would center herself in these conversations as almost an authority figure.
She always made it seem like it was this effortless, seamless thing and she just has it all together.
I saw my spouse becoming self-conscious. It's really aggravating that anybody is comparing
themselves to somebody who is like measurably impossible. I truly felt like I wasn't good enough.
I was not a good enough parent.
When the community found out that Becky was a fraud, that deception felt personal.
Becky was talking to children, pretending to be children.
Her father's not dead.
He's living still and is a physician.
I've seen several friends of mine
severely impacted by this and how
they just can't trust anybody. So many of us are really trying our best and our
great parents. We just are not the perfect parent because the perfect
parent does not exist. Sarah doesn't like the framing of looking on the bright
side or the silver lining, but
she did learn something from all of this.
Here's Sarah again.
This was one of the situations in my life that pushed me to begin questioning, like
who put you in charge?
That's a simple question, but it has been incredibly difficult for me to ask because
I was taught under no circumstances
should you ever ask that. And now I do. Today, Sarah has big news.
Well, I'm almost eight months pregnant. We are having a little girl.
And this time around, she's feeling more confident in herself.
I don't feel the sense of dread that I thought I would because I've put a lot of effort into
building a super strong community online and in real life with people that I know and people that I trust. I'm really excited to start out with the confidence in my role
as the Jewish mom. I'm feeling really confident and excited in my abilities, in Paul's abilities,
and in my son's abilities to be a big brother. I mean, there are challenges always,
and I have no idea what they're gonna be yet,
but I think that we can handle it.
We end all of our weekly episodes with the same question.
Why did you wanna tell your story?
The reason that I want to talk about it
is because I do think that she can't stop.
I do think that she's doing it again.
And I think that there are people, other people in the world who do stuff like this, of course.
And so I want to be there for another person to just say like, you're not crazy.
On the next episode of Betrayal. He eventually told me the whole story.
And I said, why me?
He said, as my uncle would say,
why not you?
If you would like to reach out to the Betrayal team
or want to tell us your Betrayal story,
email us at Betrayalpod at gmail.com. That's Betrayal, P-O-D, at gmail.com.
We're grateful for your support. One way to show support is by subscribing to our show on Apple
podcasts. And don't forget to rate and review Betrayal. Five-star reviews go a long way.
A big thank you to all of our listeners.
Betrayal is a production of Glass Podcasts, a division of Glass Entertainment Group in
partnership with iHeart Podcasts. The show is executive produced by Nancy Glass and Jennifer
Faison. Hosted and produced by me, Andrea Gunning. Written and produced by Monique Laborde.
Also produced by Ben Federman. Associate producers are Kristen Malkuri and Caitlin Golden.
Our iHeart team is Allie Perry and Jessica Kreincheck.
Audio editing and mixing by Matt Dalvecchio.
Additional editing support from Tanner Robbins.
Betrayal's theme composed by Oliver Baines.
Music library provided by MIBE Music.
And for more podcasts from iHeart,
visit the iHeart radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever
you get your podcasts.
Sometimes where a crime took place leads you to answer why the crime happened in the first
place.
Hi, I'm Sloane Glass, host of the new true crime podcast, American Homicide.
In this series, we'll examine some of the country's most infamous and mysterious murders
and learn how the location of the crime becomes a character in the story.
Listen to American Homicide on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
From audio up, the creators of Stephen King's
Strawberry Spring comes The Unborn,
a shocking true story.
My babies, please, my babies.
One woman, two lives, and a secret
she would kill to protect.
She went crazy, shot and killed all her farm animals.
Slaughtered them in front of the kids.
Tried to burn their house down.
Listen to The Unborn on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Had enough of this country?
Ever dreamt about starting your own?
I planted the flag.
This is mine. I
own this. It's surprisingly easy. There are 55 gallons of water, 500 pounds of
concrete. Or maybe not. No country willingly gives up their territory. Oh my
god. What is that? Bullets. Listen to Escape from Zakistan. That's Escape from
Z-A-Q-istan on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your