Murder: True Crime Stories - UNSOLVED: The Chiropractor Killer 2
Episode Date: November 13, 2025After Mary Yoder’s shocking death, a poison investigation turns her family inside out. First, suspicion falls on her husband. Then her son. But when police uncover an anonymous letter, a forged emai...l trail, and a shocking confession, the truth begins to surface — and it’s darker than anyone imagined. In this gripping conclusion, detectives close in on Katie Conley, Mary’s former employee and her son’s ex-girlfriend, whose twisted motives and obsession with revenge leave a trail of devastation. A courtroom battle follows, ending with a shocking twist years later that reopens old wounds and questions justice itself. Murder: True Crime Stories is a Crime House Original Podcast, powered by PAVE Studios. Listen wherever you get your podcasts. For ad-free listening and early access to episodes, subscribe to Crime House+ on Apple Podcasts. Don’t miss out on all things Murder: True Crime Stories! Instagram: @Crimehouse TikTok: @Crimehouse Facebook: @crimehousestudios X: @crimehousemedia YouTube: @crimehousestudios To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hi, crimehouse community. It's Carter Roy, and if you love digging into the most gripping true crime stories, then you need to listen to another crime house original.
Crimes of with Sabrina DeAnna Roga and Corinne Vienne.N.
Crimes of is a weekly series that explores a new theme each season, from crimes of paranormal, unsolved murders, mysterious disappearances, and more.
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No relationship is perfect.
It doesn't matter how in love two people are.
There will always be ups and downs.
The key is working as a team through the good times and the bad,
for better or for worse, is the saying.
But there are some couples who don't have the tools
to navigate rocky or uncharted waters.
And when times get tough,
instead of using empathy and communication,
they can default to bad behaviors,
manipulation tactics, or worse, violence.
When 60-year-old Mary Yoder unexpectedly passed away in 2015,
her family assumed it was a tragic accident.
Until they learned, Mary had been poisoned.
As detectives searched for the truth,
they unraveled a web of lies that was as toxic as the poison that killed Mary.
And eventually, they started to wonder,
Was she collateral damage in another couple's argument,
one that had spiraled dangerously out of control?
People's lives are like a story.
There's a beginning, a middle, and an end,
but you don't always know which part you're on.
Sometimes the final chapter arrives far too soon,
and we don't always get to know the real end.
ending. I'm Carter Roy, and this is Murder True Crime Stories, the Crime House original
powered by Pave Studios that releases every Tuesday and Thursday. Crime House is made possible
by you. Follow Murder True Crime Stories and subscribe to Crime House Plus on Apple Podcasts
for ad-free early access to each two-part series. And if you can't get enough true crime,
go search and follow Crime House Daily. Our team's twice a day show,
bringing you breaking cases, updates, and unbelievable stories from the world of crime that are
happening right now. This is the second of two episodes on the 2015 murder of 60-year-old
Mary Yoder. The crime sparked national interest, tarnished reputations, and left the town
of Whitesboro, New York, divided. Last time, I introduced you to Mary and her family,
including her adult son, Adam, and his ex-girlfriend Katie Conley.
I also took you through the final days of Mary's life and the questions that arose after her sudden inexplicable death.
Today, we'll follow the trail of clues investigators chased and the shocking arrest that followed.
We'll peer into the courtroom for the murder trials and see two families go head to head
and learn how the person suspected of killing Mary may be walking free today.
All that and more coming up.
Mary Yoder was the son, her family orbited around, the glue that held them all together.
And nothing was more important to Mary than her role as a wife and a mother.
When she unexpectedly passed away on July 22, 2015 at 60 years old,
Her family had to learn how to live without her.
But that wasn't the end of the story, because they were convinced Mary's death wasn't an accident.
And before long, their suspicions were confirmed.
A few days after Mary's death, the medical examiner, a man named Dr. Clark, performed an autopsy.
According to him, Mary's organs were shades of green, purple and.
brown which is not normal this pointed to only one possible conclusion poison after running
several tests dr clark learned that mary had high levels of colchicine in her system it's a
medicine that's used to treat gout a type of arthritis that causes inflammation there are
a few warning signs that someone has overdosed on the drug including
vomiting and diarrhea, and like any other medication, if you take too much of it, the results
can be fatal. It appeared that's what happened to Mary, but that didn't make any sense to her
family. Mary didn't have gout, so why would she take a medicine meant to treat it? Her loved
ones had several different theories, though. One was that Mary's love of gardening had inadvertently
caused her sudden death. After all, Colchicine is derived from.
from the plant, Autumn Crocus.
Maybe Mary accidentally grew the flower in her garden,
not knowing it was toxic and somehow ingested it.
She was also extremely health conscious
and took lots of different supplements.
Some family members wondered if those had gotten contaminated.
Whatever had happened, her death certainly wasn't natural.
But at that point, no one suspected foul play.
For the next two months, Mary's family grieved her loss, but it was difficult to find closure
when there were still so many questions hanging around her death.
One of Mary's sisters, a woman named Sharon Mills, just couldn't let it go.
That fall, she contacted a detective named Mark Van Namie, who worked for the Oneida County Police Department,
where the town of Whitesboro was located.
He was determined to get to the bottom of things, and there were several people he thought were suspicious,
starting with Mary's own husband, Bill Yoder.
After Mary passed away, Bill was heartbroken.
She was the love of his life, and they'd been married for nearly four decades.
Everyone thought it would take years for him to move on.
But in September, two months after Mary died,
something changed.
Bill started seeing someone new.
Her name was Kathleen or Kathy.
She and Mary had a few notable similarities,
including the fact that they were sisters.
When Detective Van Ney learned who Bill's new girlfriend was,
alarm bells went off in his head.
He wondered if his marriage to Mary hadn't been as perfect as it seemed.
Perhaps Bill had been in love with Mary's sister and poison Mary so that he could finally be with Kathy.
It was a clear motive, but before doing anything else, Van Ney had to look for evidence.
However, on November 23, 2015, Van Ney would get his hands on a document that pointed him in a very different direction.
That day, when the criminal investigations unit in Oneida County received a shocking letter.
It was typed and anonymous.
According to the author, Mary's death wasn't an accident, and they knew who'd killed her.
It wasn't Bill.
Allegedly, it was their youngest child, Adam.
Not only that, but the author knew where to find the murder weapon.
the Colchie scene that had killed Mary.
Apparently, it was in the front seat of Adam's Jeep.
It was clear to Detective Van Namie that the author was someone close to the Yoters.
The information about the Colchie scene hadn't been made public,
so either the person who wrote the letter had been at the hospital when Mary died
or her relatives had notified them about her cause of death.
Learning the author's identity was important, but it wasn't Van Namie's priority.
He needed to know if the contents of the letter were true, which meant searching Adam's car.
To do that, Van Namie had to apply for a warrant.
Unfortunately, the court denied his request.
They ruled that anonymous information, like the letter, wasn't grounds for a warrant.
It was a disappointing setback, but Detective Van Namie wasn't ready to give up.
If he couldn't get a warrant, he'd just ask Adam if he could search his car without one.
Around two weeks after the anonymous letters surfaced, Adam agreed.
For Detective Van Namie, this casts doubt on the possibility that he was Mary's killer.
After all, if Adam was guilty, he could have simply.
refused. Not only that, but Van Ney learned that on the day of Mary's death, Adam was nowhere
near Whitesboro. He was visiting one of his sisters on Long Island, a six-hour drive from Mary's
office. The only way Adam could have poisoned Mary was if he had given her the drugs in a time-release
capsule. It seemed unlikely, but Van Naimie wasn't ruling anything out.
So he went ahead and searched Adam's car on the afternoon of December 8th.
And the vehicle was the typical messy car of a young adult.
And there was a Mountain Dew bottle in one of the cup holders
and brown fast food bags crumpled in the front seat.
Adam stood at the side, smoking a cigarette while the team got to work.
One of the forensic investigators put on a pair of gloves
and opened the door to the front passenger seat
where the letter said the poison could be found.
And to everyone's surprise, it was right there, under the seat.
A bottle of colchise scene lay on the floor.
There was a receipt right next to it with Adam's email and the delivery address
listed as Bill and Mary's chiropractic office.
It was dated January 5, 2015, six months before Mary's death.
Adam's cigarette hung limply from his lips as he looked on in shock.
At this point, Detective Van Neamy had already told him about the anonymous letter.
Adam insisted that whoever had written the letter was trying to frame him,
he swore he'd never seen the drug or the receipt in his life.
Despite the evidence, Van Ney had a hard time believing that Adam had orchestrated such
an elaborate plan.
Plus, he'd been extremely cooperative
and had a rock-solid alibi.
And something about
the letter had just seemed off.
Like the person who wrote
it was too eager to name
Adam as the killer.
In the end, Van Neamy
agreed with Adam.
Someone was trying to set him up.
But if Adam didn't do it,
then who did?
At this point, Van Neamy turned back,
to his original suspect, Bill.
The detective wasn't sure why Bill would try to frame his own son,
but his relationship with Mary's sister, Kathy, rubbed Van Namie the wrong way.
He thought there was more to the story.
So Van Namie decided to reach out to someone who interacted with Bill regularly,
not one of his children who might try to protect him,
but someone close to the family,
who'd been part of the Yoder's lives for years,
someone like Katie Conley.
On December 18th and 19th of 2015,
21-year-old Katie was interviewed at the Oneida County Sheriff's Office.
She spent hours answering questions about Mary's last day at work.
She even helped draw a floor plan of the office.
Even though Katie was at the office the day Mary was poisoned,
she wasn't a suspect.
She had no motive for wanting to kill Mary, and she'd been so helpful answering all of the detective's questions, and nothing she said implicated Bill.
So after letting Katie go, Van Amie and his team decided to try a different approach.
They wanted to know when Bill and Kathy had started seeing each other.
If it was before Mary's death, that would solidify Bill's potential motive.
When they asked Bill to look through his phone and computer, he was happy to cooperate.
It seemed like he had nothing to hide.
After searching his text messages, detectives found that the earliest communication between him and Kathy had occurred 10 days after Mary's death.
They also found no evidence of deleted messages.
Instead, the messages they did find were tame.
Kathy had also recently been widowed.
It appeared that mutual grief had bonded them together.
It was looking less and less likely that Bill was the killer,
which meant the real murderer was someone else who'd been close to the Yoders.
Someone who'd known them, gained their trust,
and then betrayed them in the worst way possible.
You may have heard of the sex cult nexium
and the famous actress who went to prison for her involvement, Alison Mack.
But she's never told her side of the story until now.
People assume that I'm like this pervert.
My name is Natalie Robamed.
And in my new podcast, I talked to Allison to try to understand how she went from TV actor to cult member.
How do you feel about having been involved in bringing sexual trauma at other people?
I don't even know how to answer that question.
Allison After Nexium from CBC's Uncover is available now on Spotify.
After ruling out 25-year-old Adam and 70-year-old Bill as suspects in Mary Yoder's death,
Detective Van Namie was at a standstill.
So in December 2015, he took another look at one of his only pieces of evidence,
the anonymous letter the police department had received.
The actual writing wouldn't be helpful.
helpful since it had been typed, but there was a postage stamp on the envelope.
Van Naimi quickly ordered a DNA test.
The results didn't reveal a specific person, but they did show that the DNA on the stamp
was female.
This made it even more unlikely that Bill had been the one to send it, which led Van Naimi
to consider other suspects, including.
Katie Conley.
Although she'd been cooperative in her previous interviews, Van Naimi knew that didn't mean she
was innocent.
She may have been behind the letter, which also meant she could have planted the poison
in Adam's car.
Van Naimie decided to evaluate the receipt they'd found.
The one that showed Adam had purchased the drug using his email address, his team traced
the IP addresses used to.
to log in to the email account, and what they stumbled on was highly suspect.
One of the logins led them to Katie's home address.
Now, this wasn't necessarily a smoking gun.
The detective reasoned that Adam could have simply purchased the drug while at Katie's house,
but Adam had testified that he and Katie weren't dating at the time,
so it would have been unlikely that he was at her place.
At this point, it was Adam's word against Katie's, so the only way to find out who to believe was to call Katie back in for another interview.
On the chilly evening of December 21st, 2015, Katie returned to police headquarters.
She slouched in her chair and picked at her fingernails as she waited for Detective Van Namie to start the interview.
When he sat down across from Katie, he didn't tell her that she was a suspect.
Instead, he asked her for help.
He said his team wanted more information about Adam.
So the detectives found it bizarre when Katie started to panic.
After all, they hadn't accused her of anything, yet she started to hyperventilate.
And Detective Van Namie knew he had to keep pushing.
He asked her point blank if she had written the anonymous letter.
Katie didn't give a straight answer.
So Detective Van Namie repeated the question.
Katie responded, you can't protect me.
Van Namie didn't know what to make of this, so he asked a third time.
And that's when Katie confessed.
Yes, she had written the letter.
Van Namie nodded, then left the room briefly to make sure that their conversation was being recorded.
When he came back, Katie spoke quietly.
He could hardly pick up what she was saying.
And throughout the rest of the interview, Katie repeated that Adam was the killer
and that she had nothing to do with it.
When Van Namie asked if the murder weapon was ordered from her house, she deflected.
When he asked whether she knew Adam's email password,
she didn't give a yes or no answer.
This put Van Namie on high alert.
It seemed like Katie had something to hide.
She told Detective Van Namie that Adam was trying to frame her.
But Detective Van Namie wasn't convinced.
He told Katie that usually guys don't hang on to the murder weapon,
meaning that if Adam were the killer,
he wouldn't have kept the bottle of Colchicine,
especially not in his car.
And that was when Katie said something truly shocking,
something that would change the entire nature of the investigation.
She looked up at Van Neamy, brown hair framing her pale face.
She said that guys didn't use poison.
When the detective asked why not, she said, quote,
Because it's a lady's weapon.
Something in Katie's tone had changed.
Her voice was no longer quiet and shy, but oddly bold.
She even smiled.
at him. Detective Van Namie's mind started to reel. What was Katie playing at? Had she just hinted that
she was the one behind the murder? That her accusation of Adam had been a lie? A Van Namie ended the
interview feeling thoroughly conflicted. But soon, even more evidence would surface that painted
Katie Conley in a very bad light. As 2015 came to a close and the Yoder fan
experienced their first holiday season without Mary. Detective Van Namie zeroed in on the receipt.
His team had been able to trace it and learned that the Colchisein had been purchased using two
prepaid credit cards. Those cards had been purchased at Hannaford Supermarket, which was
located along the route Katie likely took home from work. And they'd got more information from
Katie's iPhone, which she'd agreed to let them look through. That's where they discovered a
document scanning app called CAM scanner. The documents stored on the app revealed that Katie
had set up a shell company called Cairo Family Care. It just so happened. That was the company
that was used to purchase the Colchicine, not chiropractic family.
care, which was the actual name of Bill and Mary's business.
They also found another piece of damning evidence, a note on her phone that was all about
Colchicine poisoning.
There was no doubt that Katie looked guilty.
There were the prepaid credit cards, the confession about the letter, screenshots from
her phone, and proof she'd logged into the email account used to purchase the poison.
Armed with all the new evidence,
Detective Van Neamy had his next mission
to see if he could extract a legal confession.
On February 5, 2016,
Katie was called down to the Oneida County Sheriff's Office
to sign a deposition under oath.
When she arrived, she was led into an interrogation room.
This time, the detective didn't beat around the bush.
They told Katie that it was over.
They knew she'd done it.
Now, they just wanted to know her motive.
But Katie wasn't going down so easily.
During that interview, she gave the performance of a lifetime.
She broke down in hysterics, even dry heaving.
But the detectives weren't about to excuse her.
Instead, one of them put the garbage can by her and told her not to
throw up on him.
The interrogation continued for hours.
During questioning, Katie admitted to purchasing the prepaid credit cards that were linked
to the murder weapon.
However, she continued to insist that she had not killed Mary.
The team tried everything to get her to confess, and they told Katie they wanted to help
her, that she was smart and had a bright future.
All they wanted was the truth.
Still, Katie held firm, and in the end, they had to let her go.
But she wouldn't be free for long.
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Your favorite true crime series, 48 Hours, is back for a new season,
and so is the official after show podcast, Postmortem.
Every Monday, listen to a new episode of 48 hours,
and then join me, 48 Hours correspondent, Anne-Marie Green, on Tuesday for a new episode of post-mortem,
where we bring you a closer look at each case.
This case was eye-opening on so many different levels.
Follow and listen to 48 hours on the free Odyssey app or wherever you get your podcast.
By the spring of 2016, the investigation into the death of Mary Yoder had ramped up.
It had been less than a year since she was fatally poisoned,
and Detective Van Namie had zeroed in on a suspect,
23-year-old Katie Conley, the former girlfriend of Mary's son, Adam.
But Katie wasn't acting like she was a murder suspect.
In fact, she didn't seem worried at all.
In May of that year, she graduated college with a degree in business.
She'd even finished with a 4.0 GPA.
Now she was thinking about applying for jobs or maybe going to graduate school.
But she would have to put all that on hold because in June, a secret grand jury convened.
They were presented with a mountain of evidence against Katie.
In the last few months, forensics had been.
able to test the bottle of Colchicine for DNA.
Unsurprisingly, it was a match for Katie.
The jury was shown this information, as well as the anonymous letter and the IP address
showing Katie's multiple logins to Adam's email account.
In the end, they presented 124 exhibits, and on June 13, 2016, the grand jury came back with a decision.
Katie Conley was indicted on charges of second-degree murder.
This meant the jury either didn't think the killing was premeditated
or they simply didn't have enough evidence to prove it,
but the prosecution might be able to.
On April 25, 2017, Katie's trial began at the Oneida County Courthouse.
News vans flocked to get footage of the 24-year-old entering the historic building,
The quiet town of Whitesboro had suddenly become the focus of a media frenzy, and it seemed
like the entire country was watching. So were the Yoder and Conley families who were both
in attendance, and when it came to the Conleys, they had something very important on their side,
their reputation. They were well-respected in Whitesboro. Most people saw Katie as a well-mannered
girl who wouldn't hurt a fly. Some people had even put signs in their yards that read
free Katie Conley and wrongfully charged. And throughout the trial, Katie certainly looked like
the picture of innocence. She wore crisp lasers and kept her hair down. But none of that
changed the fact that the evidence against Katie was persuasive. The prosecution argued that
Katie had poisoned Mary by lacing her protein powder with Colchisein.
They presented item after item to the jury.
They even showed how they traced the purchase of the murder weapon back to Katie using
digital forensics, and they brought in the woman who Katie had allegedly ordered the
Colchicine from.
Well, not only that, but they offered a possible motive.
The Yoder's lawyers argued that Katie was first.
furious with Adam because he wouldn't take her back, and that's when she tried to poison him
with those alpha brain supplements. Adam gone extremely sick, but not enough to die. At that point,
Katie set her sights on her next victim, someone whose death would shake Adam to his core,
his mother, Mary. Their case was strong, but the defense wasn't going down without a fight.
They needed to cast a reasonable doubt, so they decided to target Mary's husband Bill.
They took cheap shots at his character.
They got Bill on the stand and asked if he had wanted an open marriage.
Then if he was a member of porn sites, and Bill replied no to both of those questions.
After that, they grilled him about his relationship with Mary's sister Kathy.
They asked invasive questions about the couple's history.
including when they'd first had sexual relations.
Bill shrugged his shoulders and said he couldn't remember.
He said that he wasn't keeping a journal.
While Bill was put in the hot seat, Katie had been keeping her cool.
She only cried once during the entire trial
when her ex-boyfriend Adam testified against her.
He talked about their up and down toxic relationship,
declaring that Katie was not a good girlfriend.
When the lawyers on both sides made their closing statements,
feelings in the courtroom were mixed.
It wasn't clear which way the jury would go.
The defense's skewering of Bill's character
may have turned one of their heads,
and they only needed one juror to doubt Katie's guilt.
The jury deliberated for five days.
For her part, Katie didn't seem worried.
The weekend before the verdict was announced,
she and her sisters were seen taking selfies
and giggling in front of a sports car owned by Katie's lawyer
and seemed like going to prison wasn't even on her mind.
On May 18, 2017, the jury had come to a decision.
Katie's parents sat across the aisle from the Yoters.
Bill and his two daughters held hands as the verdict was read.
Ten jurors found Katie innocent.
Just two found her guilty.
Since there was no consensus, it was declared a mistrial.
This wasn't necessarily a victory for Katie.
She hadn't been exonerated, but she would get to go home that day to her family.
Instead of heading to a cold prison cell, Katie smiled.
as she left the courtroom.
Her mother answered questions from reporters outside the courtroom.
She said she always knew Katie was innocent.
On the other hand, Bill and his children were clearly disappointed.
But the prosecution wasn't ready to throw in the towel yet.
Six months later, they would take Katie back to court.
In the meantime, she would remain under house arrest.
In the months until the second trial, the prosecution gathered.
even more evidence.
This included additional messages and notes from Katie's phone.
One screenshot they found showed a calculation that Katie had made.
She'd plugged in Mary's weight to figure out how much colchicine it would take to kill her.
Another calculated how much it would take to kill Adam.
These screenshots breathed new life into the prosecution's case,
and they were ready to make Katie pay.
On October 16th, 2017, the first day of testimony began in round two of the murder trial of Mary Yoder.
This time, the defense decided not to focus their attention on Bill.
Their new strategy?
To pin Mary's murder on Adam.
They tried to prove that Adam had tried to frame Katie.
And they referred back to Katie's sexual assault.
accusation from 2014, the one that she herself had retracted. But the prosecution fought back.
They used Adam and Katie's toxic relationship to show that Katie killed Mary out of vindictive hate.
They also fired back against the defense's claim that Adam framed Katie. The prosecution had
looked through Bill and Adam's phones. Those searches hadn't revealed anything incriminating.
while Katie's phone was full of the sinister searches about poison.
After a month of arguments, the prosecution rested their case.
They had done everything they could to convince the world that Katie was a killer.
But would the jury feel the same?
On November 6, 2017, a verdict had been reached.
Mary's daughters held hands, gripping so tightly they left bruises,
The tension in the room was palpable.
No one knew which way the jury would go.
First, the jury read their verdict for murder in the second degree.
Not guilty.
Next, the verdict for manslaughter in the first degree.
Guilty.
Katie didn't cry, but her parents broke down in tears.
On another bench, the yoters embraced each other.
the relief clear on their faces.
But their nightmare wasn't over quite yet.
They still had to get through Katie's sentencing,
and that took place two months after the verdict on January 11, 2018.
Both the Conleys and the Yoters were in attendance.
During the sentencing, the Yoters would have the chance to speak about the pain Katie had caused their family,
or to ask the judge for a lesser sentence.
Katie would also have the opportunity to ask for leniency.
When Bill got up in front of the judge, he talked about his all-consuming grief.
It had been over two years since his wife's death, but he said his life still felt empty and hollow.
His voice was shaky, and he tripped over his words.
He spoke about how much Mary's death had affected his children.
He said, a part of them.
had died that day. After Bill sat back down, it was Adam's turn to speak. He was emotional,
but his voice was clear. Adam asked for forgiveness, but not for Katie. He wanted it for himself.
He'd introduced Katie to his family. He was the reason she'd entered their lives. He was the
reason Mary was dead. Then Adam told the room full of people, including Katie's family, that he
hated her. Unlike the first trial, Katie stared straight ahead while listening to Adam. She didn't
cry, and she didn't seem regretful. And after Adam sat down, it was finally time for Katie
to learn her fate. Would she spend the next few decades in prison?
Or would a judge take pity on her?
In the end, the judge's decision came down to Mary's last 48 hours on earth.
Hours filled with suffering in the ICU.
Hours spent with tubes down her throat, unable to speak.
She never got to say goodbye to her family.
With that in mind, Katie was sentenced to 23 years in state prison.
which is at the higher end for first-degree manslaughter.
By the time she got out, she would be 47 years old.
Katie would serve her sentence at the only maximum security state prison for women in all of New York,
Bedford Hills Correctional Facility.
Her team of lawyers promised that they wouldn't take this lying down.
Over the next few years, they tried their best to appeal her conviction,
but nothing worked until seven years.
years later. It was a new year, January 2025. Katie had spent the last seven years in prison.
She was now 31 years old, and on January 31st, she would become a free woman because her conviction
had been overturned. The reason? Ineffective counsel. Katie's lawyers failed to meet the minimum
standard of competence. In this case, ineffective counsel referred to Katie's lawyer who didn't
challenge the search of her cell phone. Today, Mary Yoder's suspected killer is free, but she
might not stay that way forever. Mary's family and her lawyers aren't done fighting for justice,
and in April of 2025, the Oneida District County Attorney's Office made an announcement.
Katie's case will go back to the grand jury at some point in the near future.
It's impossible to say what the outcome will be,
and the results have been drastically different each time.
But whatever happens, one thing is certain.
Mary Yoder was so much more than a victim.
She was a wife, a mother, and a pillar of her community.
her ability to see the good in people is part of what made her so loved and that's a quality
that we should all strive to have thanks so much for listening i'm carter roy and this is murder true
crime stories come back next time for the story of a new murder
and all the people it affected.
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Looking for your next crimehouse, listen, don't miss Crimes of With Sabrina DeAnna Roga and
Corinne Vien. Crimes of is a weekly series that explores a new theme each season, from
crimes of the paranormal, unsolved murders, mysterious disappearances, and more. Their first season is
crimes of infamy, the true stories behind Hollywood's most iconic horror villains, and coming
up next is crimes of paranormal. Real-life cases where the line between the living and dead
gets seriously blurry. Listen to Crimes of Every
Tuesday on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
