Betrayal - Tornado | EP 5 | Saskia's Story
Episode Date: February 26, 2026The trial of Mike Levengood looms. But at the eleventh hour, the prosecutor gets a call. Content Warning for tech-enabled sexual abuse, nonconsensual intimate image distribution..., mental health struggles, chronic illness, and rape. If you would like to reach out to the Betrayal Team, email us at betrayalpod@gmail.com. Follow us on Instagram @betrayalpod and @glasspodcasts. Follow our newsletter and join the Betrayal community at betrayal.substack.com. For resources on sexual violence, visit rainn.org/betrayal. You can also get free, confidential, 24/7 support through RAINN’s National Sexual Assault Hotline. Text HOPE to 64673 or call 1-800-656-HOPE. Every state has a domestic violence coalition, and many counties also have resources available. If you’re looking for help, go onto your county’s website to see what resources are available locally, or search the web for your state’s domestic violence coalition. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Guaranteed Human.
You know Roald Dahl.
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10, 10 shots five in City Hall building.
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On December 18th, 2018,
Mike Levingood was charged with rape.
The prosecutors spent the next year
building the case against him.
They were going to a jury trial,
and the state wanted a conviction.
So they ran toxicology,
consulted with experts.
combed through online chats and analyzed every moment of the dozens of videos they were able to track down.
In the end, they gathered over 30 videos Mike had filmed without Saskia's consent.
In many of them, she was completely unconscious, and her husband was violating her.
Mike was charged with 31 counts of illegal surveillance, and even though prosecutors had video evidence of what Mike did,
In the end, they were only able to bring four counts of rape.
Under Maryland law, it was legal to rape your unconscious spouse,
just so long as it was done without force.
If he was found guilty of every charge,
he could spend the rest of his life in prison.
That was Saskia's hope.
I wanted him to be in jail.
And I felt like testifying against him
and holding him accountable would give me back some of
my power. But if the jury questioned Saskia's story, Mike could walk free. For Ashley Inderferth,
the lead prosecutor on the case, it was nerve-wracking. This isn't a scenario where it's a 50-50,
and we got to get it to 51%. The jury has to believe it beyond a reasonable doubt.
In the final lead-up to the trial, Ashley had to pass the case off to another colleague. I had to go
on maternity leave.
She was pregnant with twins, and they came early.
In the months after they were born,
she practically lived in the NICU.
And I was sort of, you know,
really not thinking about work,
but this case was an exception.
The day before Mike's trial was set to begin,
Ashley was in the hospital.
She was at her baby's bedside when her phone rang.
It was Rebecca McFiddy,
the prosecutor who took over Saskia's case.
Ashley answered right away.
She knew how much I cared about it, and she called me to make sure I was okay with what she was going to do.
I'm Andre Gunning, and this is Betrayal, Season 5, Episode 5.
Tornado
Saskia had just started working again after taking a year off to manage her trauma.
That morning, she was sitting in a conference room, talking with her fellow social workers.
But the only thing on her mind was tomorrow's day.
trial. She was expecting a call from the prosecutor to let her know what time to be there the next day.
Instead, she got a message, saying there was news.
I said I had to excuse myself, and I went into the psychiatrist's office because it was a bigger
room, and I went and sat on the chair and was kind of shaking and just waiting to hear what
happened, how we were proceeding. The minutes crept by. Then, after what felt like an eternity,
I got the call saying that he made this plea deal, and they wanted to accept it.
Mike was pleading guilty.
He would serve time and be on the sex offender registry for life.
But...
He only had to plead guilty for one count of rape.
And it kind of felt like it discounted all of the times.
All of the deceit, all of the manipulation.
It was like it came down to one incident.
For a year, Saskia had been preparing to take the stand
to make Mike answer for what he'd done to her in video after video.
Now she learned there would be only one charge,
and there would be no trial.
I felt that my chance to speak my truth was gone
and my emotions, all the lead up to that,
just kind of drained out of me in tears.
The decision to go to trial wasn't hers to make
because the prosecutors don't represent Saskia,
like attorneys would in a civil case.
They represent the state of Maryland
and its citizens as a whole,
and they had to be realistic.
With the instructions given to the jury,
would they convict?
Remember, the law wasn't on,
on Saskia's side.
Force was required to prosecute spouses for rape.
But the force was minimal because she was completely incapacitated.
That's Debbie Feinstein, head of the special victims division at the state's attorney's office in Montgomery County.
She supervised the case.
We could see on the videos that he had moved parts of her body, and we plan to argue that was force.
Would we have been successful?
I don't know, because it's not conventionally.
what someone thinks of when they think of force.
The burden of proof was incredibly high.
Any doubt as to whether Mike's actions constituted forcible rape
could throw the whole case out the window.
He could walk free.
The state's attorneys also had to think about Saskia.
They were aware of Saskia's alcohol use,
her dependence on prescription medications,
her mental health history,
and her dad's mental health history.
These were all things that a defense attorney would use to turn a jury against her.
Here's Ashley, the original prosecutor.
They're going to be throwing out these things about this person to try to undermine their credibility.
And that is a really hard thing for victims to deal with.
And it makes it harder for us to prove our case beyond a reasonable doubt.
Everyone at the state's attorney's office believed sides.
Saskia. They'd seen the evidence. This woman had been raped. But their belief in Saskia and their
certainty that this was a crime wasn't enough to ensure a conviction. As Debbie told us,
Unfortunately, mental health still has stigma around it that can impact a juror. It shouldn't,
but it does. With all of this in mind, when Mike said he was ready to take a plea, the prosecutors
said yes. With a plea deal, they'd avoid the risk of a jury acquitting Mike. They'd get a guaranteed
guilty. When Ashley, the original prosecutor, got the news, I was really glad to hear it.
Given all of the complexities with this case, I thought that him pleading guilty was the very
best thing that could happen. I told my colleague that I was very pleased with what she had been able to
work out. So, the decision was made. There would be no trial. But Saskia would still get her day in court
because after Mike took the plea, he had a sentencing hearing. At this hearing, Judge Jill Cummins
would determine exactly how long Mike would spend behind bars. Saskia walked down the center aisle
into the courtroom with her sister, brothers, and friends by her side. We were just all so excited for
at least this piece of this terrible process to be behind me and behind us and for him to at least
be taken away in shackles for doing what he did.
The courtroom was emptier than she'd imagined it.
It was just a handful of spectators, some attorneys, some clerks, and the judge, sitting at
the front of the room, where the jury would have been, were 12 vacant chairs.
Saskia, her friends and family,
took their seats in the gallery.
We're just pretty dead silent waiting for the case to be called
and waiting for Mike to be brought in.
And then the doors opened.
In walked Mike.
Saskia's friend Bridget recall seeing him that day.
He was wearing a suit and brand new white sneakers.
At a glance, he was put together.
But the outfit didn't fool her.
He looked gaunt and he had lost a lot of weight from stress
and that's only because he knew he got caught.
You would think that you would put your head down
or just have some level of remorse or shame
and he didn't.
He looked straight at me and then looked straight ahead.
It gave me chills.
Mike took his seat next to his two attorneys.
The sentencing hearing was ready to begin.
What we're about to play for you
are real excerpts from that day.
Phone phone face 135-0-630.
Stand around.
There's Michael Paul Levin.
Good morning.
I'm Lori Siegel, a long-time tech journalist.
And consider my new podcast, mostly human, your bridge to the future.
Anyone can now be an entrepreneur.
Anyone can build an app.
And it's very empowering.
Each week, I'll speak to the people building that future.
And we're going to break down what all of this innovation actually means for you.
What I come to realize is that when,
people think that they're dating these AI companion, they're actually dating the companies that
create this.
We're experiencing one of the greatest tech accelerations in human history.
And let's be honest, that can be messy.
There's no playbook for what to do when an AI model hallucinates a story about you.
But it's my belief that we should all benefit from this moment.
Mostly human will show you how.
My goal is to give you the playbook, so you can benefit.
The reason I say agency is because if we can give power back to people,
then I think that's probably the best thing we can do for your mental health.
Listen to mostly human on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
In 2023, former bachelor star Clayton Eckerd found himself at the center of a paternity scandal.
The family court hearings that followed revealed glaring inconsistencies in her story.
This began a years-long court battle to prove the truth.
You doctored this particular test twice in so-ins, correct?
I doctored the test once.
It took an army of internet detectives to crack the case.
I wanted people to be able to see what their tax dollars were being used for.
Sunlight's the greatest disinfected.
They would uncover a disturbing pattern.
Two more men who'd been through the same thing.
Greg, a lesbian, Michael Marantini.
My mind was blown.
I'm Stephanie Young.
This is Love Trap.
Laura, Scottsdale Police.
As the season continues, Laura Owens finally faces consequences.
Ladies and gentlemen, breaking news at Americopa County as Laura Owens has been indicted on fraud charges.
This isn't over until justice is served in Arizona.
Listen to Love Trapped podcast on the Iheart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
You know, Roaldol, the writer who thought up Willie Wonka, Matilda, and the BFG.
But did you know he was also a spy?
Was this before he wrote his stories?
It must have been.
Our new podcast series,
The Secret World of Roll Doll,
is a wild journey through the hidden chapters
of his extraordinary, controversial life.
His job was literally to seduce the wives
of powerful Americans.
What?
And he was really good at it.
You probably won't believe it either.
Okay, I don't think that's true.
I'm telling you.
I was a spy.
Did you know Doll got cozy with the Roosevelt's?
Played poker with Harry Truman
and had a long affair with a congresswoman.
And then he took his talents to Hollywood.
where he worked alongside Walt Disney and Alfred Hitchcock
before writing a hit James Bond film.
How did this secret agent wind up as the most successful children's author ever?
And what darkness from his covert past
seeped into the stories we read as kids.
The true story is stranger than anything he ever wrote.
Listen to the secret world of Roll Dahl
on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Why hasn't a woman formally participated in a Formula One race weekend in over a decade?
Think about how many skills they have to develop at such a young age.
What can we learn from all of the new F1 romance novels suddenly popping up every year?
He still smelled of podium champagne and expensive friction.
And how did a 2023 event called Wagageddon change the paddock forever?
That day is just seared into my memory.
I'm culture writer and F1 expert Lily Herman,
and these are just a few of the questions I'm tackling on no grip.
a Formula One culture podcast that dives into the under-explored pockets of the sport.
In each episode, a different guest and I will go deeper into the wacky mishap, scandals, and sagas,
both on the track and far away from it, that have made F1 a delightful, decadent dumpster fire for more than 75 years.
Listen to no grip on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
The hearing began with a statement by one of Mike's defense attorneys.
He was determined to get the minimum possible penalty for his client.
And he pulled out every stop to make that happen.
Every saint has a past and every sinner has a future.
And Mike, the great parts of him will continue and dominate for the rest of his life.
In this particular case regarding the conduct here, Mr. Levingood understands that it is unacceptable.
And I'm very confident as I stand here today that he has internalized that.
The attorney had witnesses prepared to testify to Mike's strong character, and he had letters
from Mike's family, friends, and coworkers, all saying the same thing.
Mike was a good man.
He has been kind to others.
He has been empathetic to others.
He has been non-self-centered.
He's been a giving person and an excellent dad and an excellent employee and friend to dozens
throughout his life.
On top of that, Mike had been given a psych evaluation.
It's commonly done in criminal cases to help inform sentencing decisions.
Mike's evaluator said he was a low risk to society.
He wasn't a danger to other women.
As Mike's attorney argued, this crime was a misstep in an otherwise perfect life.
When you get in the mix of the tornado and whirlwind of pornography addiction or pornography fixation,
however you want to characterize it, it kind of twirls you out of control at certain moments.
And again, there's nothing that takes away in anything that I'm saying from his own responsibility,
and his own agency, and his own free will.
But I do think that this was part of this kind of hailstorm or tornado is the best thing
I could think of him being kind of twirled into these, we would say, unacceptable criminal series of conduct.
Mike's other attorney also made remarks.
And of course, he brought up the marital exemption.
Much of the most offensive behavior in this case was actually, it's legal under the law, right?
Which has no bearing on whether or not it's moral, appropriate, desired, or right.
But as it was, this case was difficult because incapacitation is not a grounds of sexual assault with your spouse in Maryland.
And the hours of footage that were presented by the state were largely of somebody incapacitated.
And then he snuck in another argument.
There were also hours and hours of footage of mutual, completely different conduct that was sexual in nature and was pornographic.
It was completely within their marriage and completely within the two of them and purely for their own private enjoyment.
I want to underscore what's happening here.
Mike was pleading guilty.
According to his lawyers, he took full responsibility for what he did to Saskia.
He was sorry.
But in the same breath, Mike's defense team was trying to discredit Saskia.
They were trying to convince the judge that Saskia did consent in hopes of getting Mike less time.
This was all one big misunderstanding.
You'll hear the judge's take on that later in the episode.
But for now,
Back to Mike's attorney.
Mr. Levingood was in a committed marriage.
He did not ever cheat on her, did not in any way stray from loving her.
His commitment to her was real.
And the things that he shared with her were real, however perverse and wrong and misguided
and based on so many codependent and bad things, they were real.
He has accepted responsibility for this position, and he will accept the punishment,
and he will go to jail today.
Someone who's never been in jail, who was successful,
who was while this was going on,
making $200, $250,000 a year
and living a life for him
that was in many ways perfect,
that was on paper everything that you would want.
His life will be ruined by this.
He will be a lifetime registrant
on the sex offender registry.
He will be instantly judged by anyone who meets him.
He will be restricted on where he can live
and so many other things.
and he has gotten a lot of perspective himself
from what is important from this whole thing.
Losing everything can help you see the material matters
that really matter to being happy and being safe and secure.
With that, he asked the judge to give Mike the lowest possible sentence.
And then it was the state's turn.
The prosecutor, Rebecca McViddy, stood up before the judge.
This is a familiar situation for the court
in the sense that we have a defendant that during the light of day in all regards is looked at as a
contributing member of society, somebody who is lovable and likable. And that is exactly the
aspect of the defendant's personality that allowed Ms. Inwood to fall for him, to love him, and to
trust him. But these types of crimes, as the court seen over and over again, are not committed,
committed in the light of day.
They are committed in darkness after that trust has been established.
That is the reason that this betrayal is so intense for Ms. Inwood.
As defense counsel mentioned, this resolution is a compromise under the current state of Maryland
law.
If the state was not precluded from going forward on rape charges under the incapacitation
theory, the state would be looking at the state would be looking at the state.
at hours and hours of more footage, countless more counts of second-degree rape, as the defendant
himself admits repeatedly engaging in sexual acts while Ms. Inwood was completely unconscious.
Defense counsel referenced that this is a tornado of pornography addiction, but a tornado comes
and goes in moments. From October 20, 2017, until October 25th, 2018,
about a year, the defendant that we know of videotapist in Wood while she was unconscious or
inebriated over 30 times. That is not a tornado. That is a year of perpetuating
discontinual betrayal of trust over and over again with the person he was supposed to protect
the most. Rebecca then described the contents of one of the videos Mike took, because the
charges on paper could never capture what was in those videos.
It feels important to Saskia and to us for people to know the extent of Mike's crimes.
But if you'd like to skip hearing these details, you can fast forward one minute.
In one of the videos that the state provided to the court, Ms. Inwood is asleep unconscious, however you'd like to say it, about 14 minutes into her band.
unconscious, she pushes the defendant away. And it looks like she mouths the words, stop.
After that happened, the defendant continues to perform sexual acts with her, including digital
penetration of her vagina, inserting sex toys in her vagina. And at the end, you see that
he just leaves the camera on while she's unconscious in that bed.
There is no doubt that over the course of the year, the defendant waited until she was unconscious to get online and chat and exchange pornographic videos for tokens or coins or payment of some sort.
He perpetrated every woman's fear by taking away her voice, her choice in the matter, and he left her powerless to protect herself.
Finally, Rebecca brought up the psych evaluation, the one given to Mike where the psychologist concluded that he was a low risk to society.
She said there was one thing missing from that assessment.
Dr. Deem and his sex offender evaluation was actually never given a copy of these videos.
He was given descriptions by the defense as to what these videos entail.
It is a dramatic difference from reading the words on the same.
statement of charges to watching that betrayal, that abuse, and the disturbing act that the defendant
chose to record.
And with that, the prosecutor concluded her argument.
She asked the judge for the maximum possible sentence under the plea agreement.
For Saskia, the speech was validating.
It was like, yes, we've had to go through this painful process, but we didn't doubt
that he was guilty.
The prosecutor sat back at her desk.
But before Judge Cummins could make her sentencing decision,
there were still two people left to hear from.
Her sister would like to speak in them and would like to be heard from.
Saskia and her sister, Marisa,
had prepared victim impact statements.
It would be Saskia's one chance to address Mike on the record.
And it would be her only opportunity to show the judge
who Mike Leavengood really was.
Marisa stood up and addressed the court.
Michael Levingood, you have no shame.
You sit here and you deny your wrongdoing
in the face of your futile evidence that you're a rapist.
We, her family and friends, we know what you did.
See the truth clearly.
I know when it all started,
even before the date was shared today
because she was deteriorating mentally and physically right,
before our eyes and we had no explanation as to why. I wait with her, with you sometimes,
to multiple doctors and hospitals, trying to find out what was wrong with her. No one could answer
how she could get well. I recall vividly one night shortly after her mother died, which
all shared that that date was September 30th, 2017, right before the videos began, when despite
drinking no more than anyone else, she was suddenly and surprisingly so incredibly so,
incapacitated that she could not walk.
Everyone was so concerned what had happened.
She was fine one minute and then not the next.
We thought about taking her to hospital,
but he was so calm, always in charge, always in control,
less concerned than others,
and reassured me personally that she would be fine
that he was there to take care of her.
And now I have to wonder, based on that date,
did you drug her that night?
Or did you just encourage her to drink?
Did you set up her cameras and fondle and manipulate her body while she was not aware and could not physically resist you?
I know on my bones that you did.
What it sucks me most is your cockiness in those videos.
How cool you felt. How powerful.
To be able to do this without anyone knowing.
To be able to pull it off time after time and then put on your good husband mask during the day
and reap the rewards of a beautiful home and a loving wife.
Your Honor, even now, I feel my words are probably lost on him.
He has only been concerned about himself and his consequences and his future life.
Don't let him, displace blame onto his victim.
Don't let other husbands or wives think they can do whatever they want to their spouses.
And sure that all people know that having sex with an unconscious person is called rape,
even when you're married to that.
Thank you, Your Honor.
Thank you, ma'am.
Then after Marisa, it was finally Saskia's turn.
With her paper shaking in her hand,
she walked up to a table between the prosecution and the defense.
Her body was angled towards the judge.
But really, she wanted to deliver the speech to Mike.
I knew not to expect any empathy or remorse,
and I think that drove me even more.
The only thing that I can get is for him to have to sit with
what he did to me.
Let me start by saying
there's not enough jail time
for you
that will make me feel safe
or give me back
what I had before you victimized me.
You deserve the maximum
possible sentence.
You pretended to be a loving husband
and yet you were my attacker.
I posted pictures and videos
of your crimes against my body
on the internet for people to watch.
I suffered embarrassment
and ashamed that I don't
deserve. I never deserve it.
It makes me sick to my
stomach to think about the hours and hours
of those images being watched
by strangers.
Maybe the worst part was when I woke
up to catch you filming me
and then to finally see evil in your eyes
and that's exactly what I saw.
No remorse,
no caring, no sympathy,
a cold and empty man.
And at that point I knew
no amount of money and personal discomfort
would stop me from pursuing justice so that you were not able to prey on other vulnerable women.
You pretended to support me through my ups and downs, never once letting on that you were using me.
I had no idea that the cause of my misbeer was lying in the bed next to me.
You deserve to go to jail with the people who are real dangerous to society.
You're a dangerous person who prays on vulnerable and trusting people.
You're a sexual predator, Michael Levin Good.
You took away my ability to feel safe.
and to trust anybody wholeheartedly.
You took away for me my happiness,
and I'll never be the same because of you.
Thank you, Ms. Inwood.
After Saskia,
Mike was offered the last word.
This would have been the moment to take accountability
or to apologize.
He chose to say nothing.
At last, it came time for Judge Jill Cummins
to deliver Mike's sentence.
I was very familiar with the state.
statement of charges.
Knew what you were accused of.
I'm very familiar with the facts of the case.
But intellectually, knowing the facts of the case is very different from watching
those videos.
I'm Lori Siegel, a longtime tech journalist.
And consider my new podcast, mostly human, your bridge to the future.
Anyone can now be an entrepreneur.
Anyone can build an app.
And it's very empowering.
Each week, I'll speak to the people building that future.
And we're going to break down what.
all of this innovation actually means for you.
What I come to realize is that when people think that they're dating these AI companion,
they're actually dating the companies that create this.
We're experiencing one of the greatest tech accelerations in human history.
And let's be honest, that can be messy.
There's no playbook for what to do when an AI model hallucinates a story about you.
But it's my belief that we should all benefit from this moment.
Mostly human will show you how.
My goal is to give you the playbook, so you can benefit.
The reason I say agency is because, like, if we can give power back to people,
then I think that's probably the best thing we can do for your mental health.
Listen to mostly human on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
In 2023, former bachelor star Clayton Eckerd found himself at the center of a paternity scandal.
The family court hearings that followed revealed glaring inconsistencies in her story.
This began a years-long court battle to prove the truth.
You doctored this particular test twice in so-ins, correct?
I doctored the test ones.
It took an army of internet detectives to crack the case.
I wanted people to be able to see what their tax dollars were being used for.
Sunlight's the greatest disinfected.
They would uncover a disturbing pattern.
Two more men who'd been through the same thing.
Greg, a lesbian, Michael Marantini.
My mind was blown.
I'm Stephanie Young.
This is Love Trap.
Laura, Scottsdale Police.
As the season continues, Laura Owens finally faces consequences.
Ladies and gentlemen, breaking news at Americopa County as Laura Owens has been indicted on fraud charges.
This isn't over until justice is served in Arizona.
Listen to Love Trapped podcast on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
You know, Roaldol, the writer who thought up Willie Wonka, Matilda, and the BFG.
Did you know he was also a spy?
Was this before he wrote his stories?
It must have been.
Our new podcast series,
The Secret World of Roll Doll,
is a wild journey through the hidden chapters
of his extraordinary, controversial life.
His job was literally to seduce the wives
of powerful Americans.
What?
And he was really good at it.
You probably won't believe it either.
Okay, I don't think that's true.
I'm telling you.
I was a spy.
Did you know Doll got cozy with the Roosevelt's?
Played poker with Harry Truman
and had a long affair with a congress
woman. And then he took his talents to Hollywood, where he worked alongside Walt Disney and Alfred
Hitchcock, before writing a hit James Bond film. How did this secret agent wind up as the most
successful children's author ever? And what darkness from his covert past seeped into the stories
we read as kids. The true story is stranger than anything he ever wrote. Listen to the secret world of
Roll Dahl on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Why hasn't a woman formally participated in a Formula One race weekend in over a decade?
Think about how many skills they have to develop at such a young age?
What can we learn from all of the new F1 romance novels suddenly popping up every year?
He still smelled of podium champagne and expensive friction.
And how did a 2023 event called Wag A Geddon change the paddock forever?
That day is just seared into my memory.
I'm culture writer and F1 expert Lily Herman, and these are just a few of the questions I'm tackling on No Grip,
a Formula One culture podcast that dives into the under-explored pockets of the sport.
In each episode, a different guest and I will go deeper into the wacky mishap, scandals, and sagas,
both on the track and far away from it, that have made F1 a delightful, decadent dumpster fire for more than 75 years.
Listen to No Grip on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Judge Jill Cummins had been prepared for a full criminal trial.
She'd presided over the case for months, hearing all kinds of motions and pretrial arguments.
At this point, she knew the case well.
Much of the time at sentencing hearings, judges give brief explanations of their decision.
Some judges give no speech at all.
Judge Jill Cummins was no such judge.
Mr. Levin Good, what I will tell you is I've read every letter that everyone has submitted on your behalf, your letters, your co-workers, your friends, your ex-wife, and everyone has the same impression of you as a fine, upstanding person.
But interestingly, with the exception, I'd say, of your ex-wife, your friends, your co-workers, they don't know what happens behind bedroom doors and what people do in the privacy of their own home.
As you know, I've lived with this case for almost the last year now.
And what I will say is, I was very familiar with the statement of charges.
I knew what you were accused of, had read it several times, every time you had appeared before me for pretrial statuses,
a motion to everything.
I'm very familiar with the facts of the case.
But intellectually, knowing the facts of the case is very different from watching those videos.
Not easy to watch those videos at all.
The judge had only just seen those videos in preparation for the sentencing.
They shifted her entire understanding of the case.
It was clear to me that force was exercised in those videos.
It was clear to me that Ms. Inwood was comatose, not asleep, but comatose.
unconscious,
absolutely.
It was clear to me
that you were
enjoying yourself,
that you weren't just
taping this on the laptop.
It looked like you had to have on some
I couldn't describe anything
that was like a GoPro video
thing, taping
as you were maneuvering
yourself and her.
You added some extra
cameras there
for camera angles.
So reading the statement of charges and knowing the statement of charges was one thing.
Watching those videos was something completely, completely different.
What was clear to me was that was not consensual behavior.
It was disturbing.
And the life that you have led, I do not diminish that.
Your education, your success,
that you've had in the business arena,
but you have victimized Ms. Inwood.
The damage done to her is probably irreparable,
knowing that those videos are out there for the world to see.
Then, the judge addressed the psych evaluation.
After watching those videos,
the very first question in my mind was,
did Dr. Dean watch those videos
when he rendered his evaluation?
And Ms. McVitty answered that question for me this morning, and it was no.
He didn't watch those videos.
So I now definitely take Dr. Dean's evaluation with the grant assault, knowing that he didn't see the videos,
to understand the conduct that makes up these charges.
And I did have some concern when I read the evaluation
that there did seem to be some lack of acceptance or responsibility on your part,
on your part for the crime that you pled guilty to.
And as I read this evaluation, I didn't take this as you were saying that I was wrong, I shouldn't have done this.
It was we started down this path, and she told me that when she passed out, I could do whatever I wanted to her.
That's not someone who's saying, I know what I did was wrong.
that's someone saying well she said I could do whatever I want to her when she was comatose
after watching those videos I don't believe that that's what she said so I'm in the
position of finding that you were not truly accepting of your guilt or responsibility in
this case Mr. Levin Good you are a predator to Ms. Inwood Mr. Levingood you have received the
benefit of a plea agreement.
Your guidelines are four to nine years.
She's referring to the sentencing guidelines for second-degree rape.
If the case had gone to trial, these are the instructions the judge would have used to
ensure fair sentencing.
Your attorneys in the state have negotiated a very good range for you based upon those
guidelines.
So as to count one, second-degree rape, I'm going to sentence you to three-firm.
15 years, suspend all but 18 months.
Suspend all but 18 months.
The judge believed Mike's crimes warranted a 15-year sentence.
But his defense team had struck a deal with the state.
As part of the plea agreement, they decided on a maximum amount of time,
Mike would spend behind bars.
18 months.
18 months is a magic number in Montgomery County.
It meant that Mike would go to county jail
instead of state prison.
Saskia first heard that number on her call with Rebecca, the prosecutor.
It was the same call where she learned there would be no trial.
When she heard that Mike would only serve a maximum of 18 months, she was devastated.
I can't tell you how wrong that felt.
Her sister, Marisa, tried to help her see the positives of the plea.
We try to focus on the guilty plea, you know.
He's a sex offender for life.
These are big deals.
But it didn't feel equivalent to, like, what he'd taken from her.
He deserves more time.
And it was a slap in the face that he didn't get more time.
The prosecutors knew Saskia wanted Mike in prison for life.
But victims' perspectives are only one element that they weigh in making plea agreements.
We're constantly balancing.
How are we going to hold the offender accountable for what they did?
How are we going to try to help the victim get some closure on the criminal case?
And then public safety.
What are we doing in terms of protecting the public from this offender?
To the prosecutors, 18 months plus a guarantee that Mike would be on the sex offender registry for life was a win.
On that day in court, when the judge handed down the sentence, Marisa was moved.
Oh, God, that was just an amazing.
That was amazing.
I feel like the judge just saw, you know, the judge saw everything.
Even though we knew he was going to get 18 months, we knew that was going to be the outcome.
We knew we were going to have a chance to speak and to tell him, you did this, and we know you did this.
I didn't realize that there was going to be that huge validation.
Here's Saskia.
I remember the attorneys and him whispering something to each other, and he got up and the bailiff went to me.
meet him. Mike was handcuffed and led out the front doors. And my friend Bridget tried to snap a photo.
Before Mike could get away, Saskia's friend Bridget pulled out her phone. I just wanted to record him
getting handcuffed and walking off so that I could show Saskia. He is where he needs to be. And I wanted
her to be able to see that so that she could have that replay in her head and not have all these
terrible memories replaying her head.
I had pulled my phone up and I thought I was being inconspicuous, but he looked over at me
and was like, Your Honor!
You're not supposed to take photos or videos in the courtroom.
Saskia's other friend, Colleen, remembers Mike's reaction well.
He looked around frantically for the judge to help him.
His dismay at everyone watching him and recording him in the violation that he expressed was
very ironic.
Saskia wishes this moment of seeing her perpetrator taken to jail would have fixed everything.
I thought it would heal a part of me.
I thought it would heal me feeling like a helpless victim.
She thought she'd be relieved.
Instead, I just had anger and hatred.
I had sadness and loss for the person that I thought he was, but that person died.
Saskia had a lot of healing to do, but that healing had to happen beyond the courtroom.
For perpetrators, jail or prison can be a final destination.
But for victims, that jail sentence is just the beginning.
It's something Ashley, the prosecutor, often tells victims.
The result of the criminal case can't be the be-all and end-all.
Even if we win and get every single count,
somebody that you loved and cared about and married is going to,
going to prison for a long time.
That's hard too.
Or there's an acquittal.
You internalize that a jury didn't believe you.
So the criminal justice system can be a part of your healing,
but it can't be all of it because it's not going to do it.
Finally, Mike was in jail.
But having him behind bars didn't mean he was out of Saskia's life.
He was smart enough to know that this was going to now be a family law case.
The criminal matter was finalized, but the legal battle wasn't over.
Not by a long shot.
On the next episode of betrayal.
She was very depressed.
There was don't use on her part more than mine.
When she starts drinking, she doesn't stop.
I felt like goes on the Twilight Zone.
The fact that the judges were even listening to these things was blowing my mind.
For resources on sexual violence, visit rain.org slash betrayal.
That's r-a-in-n-n.org slash betrayal.
You can also get free confidential 24-7 support through Rain's National Sexual Assault hotline.
Just text Hope to 64673 or call 1-800-656-5-6-Hope.
not alone. If you would like to reach out to the betrayal team or want to tell us your story,
email us at Betrayalpod at gmail.com. That is Betrayal P-O-D at Gmail.com or follow us on
Instagram at Betrayal Pod. To access additional content and to connect with the betrayal community,
join our Substack at Betrayal.substack.com. We're grateful for your support. One way to show support is by
subscribing to our show on Apple Podcasts.
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 Fasen.
Hosted and produced by me, Andrea Gunning.
Written and produced by Caitlin Golden.
Our supervising producer is Carrie Hartman.
Our story editor is Monique Laborde, also produced by Ben Federman.
Associate producers are Olivia Hewitt and Leah Jablo.
Production management by Kristen Melchuri.
Additional support by Curry Richmond.
Our I-Heart team is Ali Perry and Jessica Kreinschek.
Audio editing by Tanner Robbins with additional editing and mixing by Matt Dalvecchio.
Special thanks to Saskia, her friends, and family.
And special thanks to Will Pearson and Carrie Lieberman.
The trial's theme is composed by Oliver Baines, music library provided by Mib Music.
And for more podcasts from IHeart, visit the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
You know Roll Doll. He thought up Willie Wonka and the BFG. But did you know he was a spy?
In the new podcast, The Secret World of Roll Doll, I'll tell you that story, and much, much more.
What?
You probably won't believe it either.
Was this before he wrote his stories?
It must have been.
Okay, I don't think that's true.
I'm telling you.
I was a spy.
Listen to the secret world of Roll Dahl
on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Ready for a different take on Formula One?
Look no further than No Grip, a new podcast tackling the culture of motor racing's most coveted series.
Join me, Lily Herman, as we dive into the under-explored pockets of F1,
including the story of the woman who last participated in a Formula One race weekend,
the recent uptick in F-1 romance novels,
and plenty of mishap scandals and sagas
that have made Formula One a delightful,
decadent dumpster fire for more than 75 years.
Listen to no grip on the IHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Lori Siegel, and on my new podcast, mostly human,
I'll take you to some wild corners of the tech world.
I'm about to go on a date with an AI companion
at a real world cafe right here in New York City.
There's no playbook for what to do when an AI
model hallucinates a story about you.
Mostly Human is your playbook for how tech can work for you.
Anyone can now be an entrepreneur.
Anyone can build an app.
And it's very empowering.
Listen to Mostly Human on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
What's happened in City Hall?
Somebody tell me that.
A shocking public murder.
This is one of the most dramatic events that really ever happened in New York City politics.
I scream.
Get down.
Get down.
Those are shots.
A tragedy that's now forgotten and a mystery
That may or may not have been political
That may have been about sex
Listen to Roershack, murder at City Hall
On the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts
Or wherever you get your podcasts
This is an IHeart podcast
Guaranteed Human
