Crime Stories with Nancy Grace - Convicted Child Killer Susan Smith's Nonchalant Apology
Episode Date: March 1, 2025Susan Smith's ex-husband has revealed what she said to him after she killed their young boys. David Smith tells Dateline his ex-wife casually, said, ‘I’m sorry,' and that was about as far ...as it went." After high school, Susan Leigh Vaughan married David Smith. They had two sons, but the marriage faltered despite the children. The couple separated multiple times. During one separation, Susan began dating Tom Findlay, the single son of a wealthy mill owner. Smith imagined a future with Findlay until she received a "Dear John" letter from him, stating he did not want an instant family. On the night of October 25, Susan Smith knocked on the door of a house near John D. Long Lake. Hysterical, she told the man who answered to call the police. She claimed an armed Black man had carjacked her at a red light, with her two boys—3-year-old Michael and 14-month-old Alex—still in the car. For days, Susan repeated increasingly inconsistent versions of the carjacking story. Eventually, Smith confessed. There had been no carjacker. Feeling desperate, alone, and suicidal, she had taken her sons for a drive. At John D. Long Lake, she put the car in neutral, jumped out, and watched as the car sank. Scuba divers later found the vehicle with the boys still strapped in their seats. Since her conviction and incarceration, tabloid reports have alleged that Smith told prison investigators about four sexual encounters with Lieutenant Houston Cagle, a supervisor at South Carolina’s Women’s Correctional Institution. C Cagle admitted to having sex with Smith and another inmate. In August 2000, he was charged with the offenses, pleaded guilty, and served three months in jail. Captain Alfred Rowe also pleaded guilty to having sex with Smith and received five years of probation. Thirty years after Susan Smith drove her car into a lake with her two sons strapped in their car seats, she sought parole. A parole board denied her request. Joining Nancy Grace Today: Tara Malek – Boise, ID, Attorney & Co-owner of Smith + Malek; Former State and Federal Prosecutor; Twitter: @smith_malek Dr. Bethany Marshall – Psychoanalyst (Beverly Hills, CA); Instagram & TikTok: drbethanymarshall; Twitter: @DrBethanyLive Chris McDonough – Director At the Cold Case Foundation, Former Homicide Detective; Host of YouTube channel: “The Interview Room” Joseph Morgan – Professor of Forensics: Jacksonville State University; Author, “Blood Beneath My Feet;” Host: “Body Bags with Joseph Scott Morgan;" Twitter: @JoScottForensic Dave Mack - CrimeOnline Investigative Reporter See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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This is an iHeart Podcast.
Crime Stories with Nancy Grace.
Does it never end with this woman in the last days?
More from Susan Smith.
As you recall, Susan Smith pretended a black male carjacked her and then rolled her two children
in their car, strapped
in his seat belts into a lake.
Mm-hmm.
Will this woman not go away?
I'm Nancy Grace.
This is Crime Stories.
Thank you for being with us.
Yes, it's the same Susan Smith that drowned her two sons in a South Carolina lake back
in October 1994.
Recall she's been throwing a fit behind bars when she didn't
get parole for the double murders. Well, in the last days, another bombshell. She casually
apologized to her husband after murdering their children. Yes, the ex-husband of Susan Smith,
who drowned her two boys in a lake, reveals what his ex-wife said just after she killed the
boys. Now, the case just got a ton of national attention after Smith was denied pardon and parole,
and then she threw a fit and began misbehaving behind bars again. This is what the former
husband, David, said, quote, she just casually, like you and I sitting here, said, I'm sorry.
And that was it.
Yes.
Sorry.
He recalled asking Susan why she killed their two baby boys.
And she said, I don't know why, but sorry.
Let me refresh your recollection.
Yes, ma'am. Let me refresh your recollection. I love that degree of detail.
You know, I don't even know where to go first because I've got such awesome experts,
but I'm going to go first with Chris McDonough.
He is the director of Cold Case Foundation, former homicide detective.
He has his own YouTube channel, The Interview Room, where I found him.
You can find him at coldcasefoundation.org or on The Interview Room.
Former homicide detective, 300-ish homicide scenes under his belt.
Chris McDonough, don't you love the degree of detail?
Hey, you know what, Cindy?
Sometimes you got to hear the best stuff.
Can you play that one more time?
Listen.
Yes, ma'am.
There's a lady who come up that door,
and some guy jumped into a red light with her car
with her two kids in it,
and he took off, and she got out of the car here at our house.
And he's got the kids?
Yes, ma'am, in her car.
I don't, she's real hysterical, and I just decided I need to get them down here.
Where the car is?
We need to know something.
What are you trying to ask her now?
A Mazda Protege.
What color was it?
A burgundy Mazda Protege. Get them going it? A burgundy Mazda protege.
Get him going, Pam.
I got two keys.
Okay.
All the detail, Chris McDonough.
She's, quote, real hysterical.
And you need to call the law
and get him down here right now.
And you hear her
feeding details in the background.
Nancy, wasn't that the narrative that captivated America?
How can you be so calm?
You know, we just get used to it, unfortunately, right?
It's when somebody...
I still get very angry, very angry.
And I know the end of this story.
But the detail.
Have you ever seen perps and they will spin you a yarn
with such incredibly rich detail? Yeah. And typically that detail, if it's that minutia
and that amount, it's typically a sign of deception. And she, she kicked it off right
from that 911 call. From the beginning, the beginning, running up to somebody's house, talking about some guy jumps out.
And, you know, this occurs in rural Union County, South Carolina, near the John D. Long Lake.
And, you know, hold on, Chris McDonough, where where do you live, Chris?
Well, right now I'm in Arizona, but I lived in South Carolina right there in Mount Pleasant.
You're very familiar with this area.
Let me go to another country boy like this country girl right here.
Joe Scott Morgan joining me, although he's gotten pretty highfalutin.
Professor of Forensics, Jacksonville State University.
Author of Blood Beneath My Feet.
Still waiting on another book to come out. host of Body Bags, a hit podcast.
This area, Chris McDonough has lived in South Carolina.
I've gone to this scene before.
It's extremely rural, and I'm supposed to believe a guy jumps out of what, from behind
a stop sign and hijacks her car and takes off with the children clearly
in the back seat. Two little boys. Yeah. What are the odds that you're going to have somebody
that wants to do this kind of harm, whether or not they had an awareness that, you know,
these poor little angels were buckled down in those back seats. The fact that you would have this kind of aggressive behavior in that location where
she was specifically targeted as an investigator, I'm certainly going to raise an eyebrow.
I'm going to take a long look at what she has to say, because as you and I both know,
Nancy, the lion's share, the lion's share of homicides that we talk about have some
kind of familial connection that
means that you're around intimates those individuals that are most important so you're
going to tell me that a random stranger just came up and kidnapped these babies and run off with
them and left her standing on the side of the road weeping now did you hear what he just did
chris mcdonough i i'm going along with everything he says, but he's a wily one. You got to really
watch what Joe Scott says. I agree with the whole rural aspect, but did you hear him say,
if the unknown male assailant noticed the children in the back seat. I'm looking right now at a 94 Mazda Protege. You can see straight into
the back seat from every angle of the car. It's not like, you know, you see those black SUVs with
tinted windows. You can't see what's going on in there. No, you can see exactly what's going on in
the back seat. And I'm looking at a shot from the distance. I can see through the back window, through the back dash, and through the other side of the car.
Whoever took the car could definitely see that children were strapped into car seats in the back
seat. 100%. I mean, okay, you know what? Let's take a listen to the 911 call. Listen. Union 105.
105, go ahead.
Said it was a black male driving a burgundy protege.
Affirmative, 105.
He had two juveniles with him.
105, from what I understood, these were small children.
These are her children, and she jumped out of the car,
and he took the car with the children, and he's headed toward Chester.
Union, 100.
100, go ahead.
Are the victim and the suspect in this call the same family?
100, from what I gathered by the call, they are not.
This is a stranger that had jumped in the lady's car at a red light,
and she jumped out.
I mean, really?
Tara, and I'm leading up to what Susan Smith is doing right now.
And let me tell you, it involves six different men.
That said, Tara Malik joining me out of Boise, Idaho,
co-owner Smith and Malik, former state and federal prosecutor.
Tara, once again, blame the black man.
I remember when this happened, I was trying a case and I looked over at my friend, my colleague,
who went on to be a judge, I might add. And I went, Herman, have you seen the composite of the guy that Susan Smith described? And he went, yeah, I know what you're going to say. I'm like, yeah,
it looks just like you. It looked just like Herman Sloan, my trial partner, who had come
into court to bail me out of some sling I got in with the judge
with some appellate law trying to suggest that I was right in whatever I did.
But he went, yeah, I've heard.
I look just like the Susan Smith perk.
And he did.
I mean, think about it, Tara.
An innocent person could have been arrested and probably tried and convicted
based on her fake composite and all of her lies. Like my Herman, one of my best friends in the
DA's office. Yeah, absolutely. I mean, the crime itself was atrocious and horrific and terrible.
And then, and then, you know, to give this false profile of someone else who may have done it,
wasting resources, law enforcement resources, wasting everybody's time, but also, like you said,
putting somebody else potentially in jeopardy of being picked up for it. And it's just mind-boggling
that she would go down this road. You know, I've dealt with the sod defense many times. I named it that. Some other dude did it.
S-O-D-D.
Here she goes.
Some other dude did it.
And listen to her.
Listen. I would like to say to whoever has my children that they please, I mean, please bring them home to us where they belong.
Crime Stories with Nancy Grace.
In the last days, Susan Smith makes headlines again.
Look, lady, you murdered your two boys. Go away.
After one fiasco, after the next behind bars.
Now this, her ex-husband, David, describes after the murders, she plunks down and just says, sorry, that's it.
That's the whole thing.
Susan Smith tried to pin the murders on an unknown, unidentified black male.
Dr. Bethany Marshall joining us.
She's a renowned psychoanalyst at DrBethanyMarshall.com.
As a matter of fact, she now has a recurring role in Paris in Love season two.
That said, Dr. Bethany, I don't get it.
We've got men
sexting and texting
and writing and sending
money and love letters
to Susan Smith
when she is a bald-faced liar
that killed her children
in the worst way.
Letting her car, her burgundy protege, go down a ramp with the two little boys alive, strapped in the back seat.
Why?
I don't get it.
Why would men want to be with this woman, send her money and sex text with her?
But did you hear her lie?
Do you remember when that happened?
Crying and the snotting and the all that happening.
And I want to say whoever has my children, they please, please bring them home to us
where they belong, knowing full well they drowned strapped in their car seats.
Well, it shows how immature she is at the most basic level that she thinks.
Okay, wait, wait, wait.
The most you can say she's immature?
She murdered two little boys.
We know she's a sociopath.
But what beyond the fact that she's a sociopath?
What additional factors are there that would
lead to this and one is an over attachment to men she loves that feeling of falling in love
the feeling you have the first how are you linking this to double murder why this woman did not get
the death penalty i do not know and now there's six guys trying to have sex with her? Really? Ew.
But it's really a pathological attachment to men.
It's like being in a barrel with a rattlesnake.
Who was that?
Well, apparently they do.
And, you know, women who commit fantasies who kill their children often have some really, first of all, they're usually what we call cluster B.
You better not say really has some sexy mojo going on because I'm totally cutting your
mic.
Okay.
So they're cluster B, which means they have three different disorders, sociopathy, bipolar
and borderline.
Often they have a very pathological attachment to men.
Either they kill the children to get back at the love
object, like I'm going to kill our children because I'm mad at you. It's hard to describe
this without really sounding like it's trite, but these are the underpinnings of what these women do.
So it's either I'm going to kill the children to get back at you or i'm going to kill the
children because i found a new guy and i don't want the children to be in the way interesting
that you said that interesting but i also want you to hear the level of detail that she weaves
into her big fat lie about her two murdered little boys i can't even imagine a more excruciating death
than being strapped in a car, can't get out. The car goes underwater on a muddy lake,
and you're in the car screaming for mommy as that car fills up with water till you drown.
Listen to our cut for Crime Online. On the night of October 25th, fills up with water till you drown.
Listen to our cut for Crime Online.
On the night of October 25th,
Susan Smith knocks on the door of a house near John D. Long Lake.
She's hysterical when the man answers the door and tells him to call the police.
A black man just carjacked her at a red light.
He had a gun and she jumped out of the car.
But her two boys, three-year-old Michael and 14-month-old Alex, are still in the car.
Police begin searching immediately, and the nation's media converges on Union, South Carolina.
For eight days, Susan Smith tells an ever-changing story of the carjacking, and friends get irritated when she keeps asking if Tom Finley has reached out to see her.
Friends wonder why she would care about Finley when her two children are missing.
On day nine of intense media pressure, Susan Smith meets with Union County Sheriff Howard Wells.
And Wells meets with the press.
Okay, note to self who is Tom Finley.
But there's more. There's more. Listen.
Susan Smith has carried the lie as far as she can when she finally admits what she's done.
There never was a black man with a gun that stole her car with her kids in the back.
She now says she went out for a drive with her sons buckled into their car seats in the back, feeling desperate, alone and suicidal.
She now says she drove to John D. Long Lake and planned to roll the car into the lake.
Smith puts the car in neutral, but instead of going into the lake with the car and the boys, she jumps out and watches the car sink. Based on her directions for where the car should
be, scuba divers locate the vehicle with the boys in the back, still buckled into their seats.
Just let that soak in for just one moment. Claiming, you know, why is it, Chris McDonough,
that all these people that want to commit suicide end up killing their children or their family or somebody else?
They miraculously live.
I mean, just a horrific thought in and of itself, right, Nancy?
I mean, I actually drove the entire route that Susan Smith took that day.
There were ample opportunities for her to change her mind and turn around.
I mean, there were stop signs.
They were, you know, through residential neighborhoods.
And to think that she was saying to the public, you know,
or to the police when she initially confessed,
well, you know, I thought about committing suicide,
but I couldn't do it, et cetera, so I jumped out.
You know, when you go to that boat ramp
where these poor little babies
are strapped in those back seats
and as that car is going down that ramp,
I would submit to you,
she had gotten out of that car almost immediately
and let that car go to your point
a couple of minutes ago.
And as that water started to fill that vehicle,
can you imagine the horror that these
children were experiencing and the mother standing there as that vehicle started to sink? It took
about six, I think between six to 15 seconds for that vehicle to hit the water. And within a minute,
it was submerged. Nancy, it just shows how cold-blooded she is.
She could stand on the shore, look at the car, submerged, and knowing that her babies were drowning.
It really gives you insight into how detached and just cold-blooded she is.
Yeah, who is this woman?
Take a listen to our cut three from CrimeOnline.com.
After high school, she began dating David Smith.
Soon, there's a baby on the way, and the pair decide to get married.
Ultimately, they have two boys, Michael Daniel and Alexander Tyler.
But the children don't keep the marriage together.
The Smiths separate several times.
During one of these separations, Susan Smith begins dating Tom Findley,
the single son of a wealthy mill owner.
Aha. So that is who Tom Finley is.
Okay, Tara Malik, high-profile lawyer joining us from her own law firm, Smith & Malik.
Would that be motive? She wants to be with this rich guy?
Yeah, I think, you know, she's painted in different ways
during the trial itself.
And there was some conflicting testimony.
One of the theories of the case
that was put on and suspected
was that she wanted to be with Thomas Finley.
Finley didn't like the fact that,
you know, she had two kids
and in a way or in an attempt
to get back together with
Finley, who she was having an affair with, you know, she drowned her two boys. The other testimony
that was presented during the trial was that, you know, she was someone who was an abused child.
She had had a secret affair with her stepfather. She was frightened of her husband.
You know, and so I think those details this jury ended up grappling with.
And it's a case that should have been a death penalty case, but unfortunately not here.
The ex-husband of Susan Smith, the South Carolina woman who drowned her two sons in a lake back in October 1994,
reveals what the ex-wife said to him just after
she killed their sons. She plunks down and he says, quote, casually, like you and I sitting
here says, sorry. And that's about as far as it went. That's revealing the degree of remorse or lack thereof at the time.
Susan Smith, what a saga.
Isn't it true, Dave Mack joining us from CrimeOnline.com,
that Finley broke it off with her, claiming he did not want an instant family? He did. And Nancy, more to the point, or more than just saying, I don't want kids,
there were other things he stated in there about her and their relationship.
He also cited their different upbringings and that that was a big stumbling block.
Another one, the way Susan Smith acted and flirted with other men.
He didn't like that.
So he mentioned three basic things that he really didn't want an instant family.
But these other two things were mentioned as well. And one was her own behavior of hitting on other
men. But she dismisses that in her thought process, blames it all on the kids and thinks
she can get him back if she just gets rid of that. She doesn't address the fact that she hits on men
all the time. So let me understand something. Dave Mack, she met Finley, the son of the rich guy, when she and her husband were what, divorced? Separated what?
Separated. They actually, when they were married, they had several full on separations where they were not living together, were dating other people um and and yet they would then get back together and it was on
and off for i think i mean after they had the last son he was 14 months old while this happened so
it was an ongoing process in their relationship the breaking up getting back together let me go
back to dr bethany marshall what do you make of this it was always presented that Finley broke up with her because he didn't want an
instant family. But according to the letter he sent her before she murdered her two little boys,
it was a lot more than that. He's probably minimizing it because now he has the scrutiny
of the country and the court and saying, well, I didn't really want her anyway. But
there's partially, I think, a half truth in that.
Maybe he wasn't ready for a family and children and he was contemplating that.
And I think Susan Smith was the kind of woman who would just ignore the fact that he didn't
want to be with her.
She would think, oh, you know, I'll buy a new dress.
Oh, I'll go shopping.
Oh, I'll buy some lipstick.
I'll wear a low cut dress.
Oh, I'll just kill my children.
I mean, just she would just throw everything at it
to get him back.
So I think if he was ambivalent about her,
that may have even incentivized her
to kill her children.
Okay, I obviously need to reword my question.
There were other behaviors he found disturbing,
which led to his decision to break it off with her. Not only that
he did not want an instant family, but he did not like the way she acted promiscuously with other
guys. He didn't want that. I think some women relate primarily to men because they feel they
can seduce them. And I think this was probably her MO that the minute
she met a man, she would be flirtatious. She would be overly sexualized. She would try to
attract them. She probably did that all the time because this is a way of feeling important. Like
she's a real person in the real world and she doesn't really have to relate to the man. If it's
sexual in an instant, then they never become real people to her.
They're all just objects, love objects who flatter her.
That's an hour cut for.
Susan Smith is planning a future with the best catch in the county
when she gets a Dear John letter from Dear Tom.
He explains he doesn't think the relationship will work
because of the difference in their upbringing,
the way she acts towards other men, and he doesn't want an instant family. He doesn't want children right
now. Susan dismisses her upbringing or her behavior towards other men as possible deal
breakers in the relationship. And the only thing she sees is Tom Finley doesn't want children.
So she ignores everything except the children part of the complaint. And then suddenly, poof, they're gone.
In the last days, Susan Smith back in the news, apparently having a romantic relationship with at least six men behind bars.
OK, what does that mean?
Well, let's our cut 10.
A tabloid news report claiming Susan Smith had been beaten by guards at a prison in South Carolina gave birth to an investigation into the matter.
While there was no proof she had been beaten, Smith told prison investigators that she had four sexual encounters.
Lieutenant Houston Cagle, a supervisor at South Carolina's Women's Correctional Institution, WCI, where she's confined.
Cagle admitted having sex with Smith and another prisoner and was charged with the offense in August of 2000.
Smith was 28 at the time and was disciplined for having sex with the guard,
while 50-year-old Cagle pleaded guilty and spent three months in jail. In 2001, a prison captain, Alfred Rowe, also pleaded guilty to having sex with Smith and was sentenced to five years probation.
It was then discovered that Susan Smith engaged in sexual relations with Cagle after she tested positive for an STD.
OK, so she claims I was beaten and that spawns an investigation.
But it turns out she wasn't beaten.
She was sleeping with various prison
guards. Joe Scott Morgan, remind me, what is it like to drown? You're the death investigator.
One of the most horrible deaths that you can even begin to think about. And the fact is,
the thing that's always bothered me about this case, Nancy, is that with Alex and Michael,
and I think it's really important that I say their names at this moment in time
because they are the victims.
When they were strapped in those little seats in the back of that Mazda,
in that tight little confined place where maybe their mother had taken them
to McDonald's before, had taken them all over town,
and suddenly they're at the edge of a boat ramp and they're thinking,
you know, what's mama doing now? You know, she gets out of the car and as that car is left in neutral and
goes down that boat ramp and begins to slowly sink beneath those dark waters out there. You know,
they found that car about 120 feet off of the shore. The dive team had looked for it for some period of time. The car was filled with water.
Those kids were still strapped in that back seat. And our reaction as humans, if we're
trying to catch our breath, is to fight. And just imagine this, Nancy. They're strapped. We've all
got babies in our families that we've taken care of. We strapped them in car seats. And
have you ever seen a child struggle to get out of the
car seat? They're tired of being in it. Well, imagine that only water's creeping up on you.
Water's getting into your nose, your little mouth, your eyes. You're running out of oxygen. Your
brain is screaming. It's on fire because there's no oxygen. You can't catch your breath. And you have no idea.
It's panic that's setting in.
And it would not have been.
I just want to dispel any kind of fantasy somebody might be having right now
that this was a sudden and a quick death.
It wasn't.
It was torturous.
It was absolutely horrific what these babies went through at that moment, Tom, Nancy.
And I'm with you.
I'm still to this day just befuddled why she's not sitting on death row and, you know, forever and ever.
She's getting going with her life now, isn't she?
And those babies died, died at this monster's hands out there in that lake. Knowing full well what she did,
immediately running to a nearby home, claiming that an unknown male had jumped into her car,
and I guess the only red light in the county. And I feel okay saying that, because where I grew up,
we didn't even have a red light. So out of the entire county, an unknown assailant jumps into her car at the one red light, takes her car and murders her children.
OK, this is the woman these guys want to be with.
Speaking of them, there is the matter of Captain Alfred Rowe.
Now, we heard about Cagle, Cagle, a supervisor at South Carolina Women's C.I.
Correctional Institute. And what happened with him? We know that he was ultimately identified
because Susan Smith turned up with an STD behind bars. But there's more. Take a listen to our cut
11. Does she not realize there are
consequences to actions? Captain Alfred Smith was one of the guards who lost their careers after
having sex with Susan Smith behind bars. Roe says Smith is a master manipulator, telling Inside
Edition that Smith approached him at three in the morning, telling him she thought he was the nicest
officer at the prison and that she was lonely. The former guard says things just escalated from there.
Roe claims he only had sex with Smith one time, but it cost him everything.
He was fired from the job, lost his pension,
and after pleading guilty to having sex with Smith,
he was sentenced to five years probation.
Take a listen to our cut 12.
Sex isn't the only issue Susan Smith has faced in prison.
Twice in 2010 and once in 2015, Susan Smith was disciplined on drug charges, losing privileges for more than a year.
Susan Smith's drug use escalated when Smith was moved from one prison to another
that it was at that point where, quote,
she could no longer get the male attention that she used as a drug, unquote,
and instead turned to pills.
Which led to a series of drug infractions.
Crime Stories with Nancy Grace.
Just recently, Susan Smith tried to convince a partner in a parole board how sorry she was she murdered her two boys.
But according to her ex-husband, all she had to say to him was, sorry, don't know why I did it.
Sorry.
Wow.
Thanks, mom.
The narrative, her story that she projects is so different from reality.
Life has not passed her by. She committed double murder.
That's what happened. It's not anyone's fault, but her own. Absolutely. I mean, and if life passed her by, how does she characterize what she did to her son?
She took their life away.
They didn't even have the opportunity to live a life.
I mean, these were really young kids here.
And I think, you know, the pattern of behavior that she's exhibited, like the infractions that she's
picked up while she's been in prison. I mean, all of this doesn't tend to show that this is someone
who has been rehabilitated while in prison. I mean, she's still showing those signs of
manipulation that, you know, she engaged in before she was convicted and sentenced,
you know, leading on the nation for nine days,
telling lies about what actually happened,
telling lies and pointing fingers at people that didn't exist.
So this is a really deeply disturbed individual.
Chris McDonough with me, former homicide detective
and host of YouTube channel The Interview Room,
who has investigated at least 300 homicides.
You know, defendants can be very, very charming. who has investigated at least 300 homicides.
You know, defendants can be very, very charming. Think about Scott Peterson or Dr. Martin McNeil, who killed his wife, a beauty queen.
According to Susan Smith's family, they say, quote, she seems to be happy and that she, quote, always had a messy love life.
She's creating a fictional version of her life and people are buying it.
These guys, these lonely hearts are buying it and attempting to have, let me just say, romantic interludes with her, Chris McDonough.
Have you ever met a charming murder defendant?
Because I have.
Absolutely, Nancy.
And what's interesting about her is we have to always remember that all behavior has a purpose.
And that past behavior is usually an indication of future
behavior.
So she has always,
you know,
throughout her entire case and through her life here while in prison and even
before prison,
she always sometimes projected the words of day into her vocabulary.
And if you,
if we listen real carefully to the minutiae of what she said in the very beginning, whoever
they are, please bring them home.
I.e., she's talking about two suspects, but she talks about one in terms of a description.
And now if we fast forward that to today, we have six individuals, men, who quite
frankly, I can't figure that piece of the puzzle out. You know, that's for the doctors to tell us
what that's all about. But she is utilizing that behavior still to this day by talking about money, by talking about sexual, you know,
tiffs there between the two of them.
And she hasn't lost a spot from this leopard.
You know, Joe Scott Morgan, maybe we just know too much when it comes to murder.
Because when I think of Susan Smith, I immediately think of being trapped, strapped in to a car as it's going down a
ramp and going underwater and seeing the water coming up on either side and starting to pour in
through the windshields as it comes up around you and you can't get out. I mean, the children in this case were three and 14 months.
They never stood a chance within this environment.
And here's another thing that people might not be aware of.
After that car dipped beneath the surface of that water, one other element we have to consider, and again, I go back to the idea that
we all have had babies, you know, parents, that sort of thing. I've got, you know, kids and
grandkids whom I love dearly. And what is it the kids are afraid of late at night? It's darkness.
And it would, you would not have been able to have seen your hand in front of your face. So,
not only are they absent a loving mother
who normally you would hope would take care of them,
they're disoriented.
They're running out of breath and it's dark, Nancy.
It's cold and it's dark down there.
And that goes to the level of horror
that they're experiencing.
I've got a funny feeling,
as was said by Ernest T. Bass
on Andy of Mayberry.
You ain't seen the last Ernest T. Bass.
I don't think we've seen the last Susan Smith.
Goodbye, friend.
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