Nobody Should Believe Me - Case Files 25: Olivia Gant Part 1
Episode Date: October 23, 2025The disturbing parallels between Collin McDaniel and Olivia Gant's cases led Andrea to speak with Melissa Kalish, the lead detective in the investigation of Kelly Turner, for season 6. Now we’re div...ing deeper into Olivia’s story in a two part series where Detective Kalish walks listeners through her investigation into this case of medical child abuse. *** Justice for Collin: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1tEg2mpbrwNJnuVMNdbHANCofEFYvH9_bO5MULHUxqLs/edit Order Andrea’s book The Mother Next Door: Medicine, Deception, and Munchausen by Proxy. Click here to view our sponsors. Remember that using our codes helps advertisers know you’re listening and helps us keep making the show! Subscribe on YouTube where we have full episodes and lots of bonus content. Follow Andrea on Instagram: @andreadunlop Buy Andrea's books here. For more information and resources on Munchausen by Proxy, please visit MunchausenSupport.com The American Professional Society on the Abuse of Children’s MBP Practice Guidelines can be downloaded here. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
True Story Media
These are harrowing times in America,
especially for our friends and neighbors in immigrant communities.
So if you're looking for resources or ways to help,
we wanted to let you know about a wonderful organization that we're partnering with this month.
The National Immigrant Justice Center has worked for more than 40 years to defend the rights of immigrants.
NIHC blends direct legal services, impact litigation, and policy advocacy to fight for
due process for all and to hold the U.S. government accountable to uphold human rights.
NIGC's experienced legal staff collaborate with a broad network of volunteer lawyers to provide
legal counsel to more than 11,000 people each year, including people seeking asylum,
people in ICE detention, LGBTQ immigrants, victims of human trafficking, unaccompanied immigrant
children, and community members who are applying for citizenship and permanent residents.
NIHC continues to fight and win federal court cases that hold the U.S.
government accountable to follow U.S. law and the Constitution. In recent months,
NIHC's litigation has challenged ICE's unlawful practice of arresting people without warrants
and has successfully blocked President Trump's proclamation to shut down access to asylum at the
border. As ICE continues to abduct people from our communities and the U.S. government
deports thousands of people without a chance to have a judge consider their cases, it is more
important than ever that we come together to defend due process. All people in the United States have
rights, regardless of immigration status. You can donate and learn more about NIHC's work by visiting
immigrantjustice.org. That's immigrant justice.org. You can find that link and more information at our
website. This ad was provided pro bono. Hey, it's Andrea. It's come to my attention that some of you
have been served programmatic ads for ICE on my show. Now, podcasters don't get a lot of control over
which individual ads play and for whom on our shows, but please know that we are trying everything we
can to get rid of these by tightening our filters. And if you do continue to hear them, please
do let us know. In the meantime, I want it to be known that I do not support ICE. I am the daughter of an
immigrant. I stand with immigrants. Immigrants make this country great. In our last season, we shared
the tragic story of Colin McDaniel, whose suspicious death at nine years old has raised urgent questions about
his mother, Lisa, a convicted child abuse perpetrator who claimed that Colin perished from a
vanishingly rare illness. But as shocking as this case is, it struck me immediately upon digging into it
that it had many parallels with another case, that of Olivia Gant. This is a haunting story
that's been on my radar for years. And while we shared a few details about this case in our last
season, today we're going to expand that coverage and our conversation with the lead detective in the
case. Because not only does this case provide a roadmap for a possible investigation into Lisa
McDaniel, it should raise alarms about what can happen when doctors don't report suspicions of
abuse. Thanks to the momentum created by the Maya Kowalski case and a number of other similar
ongoing lawsuits, along with new or proposed legislation around the country, it's getting
harder than ever for doctors to report suspected child abuse. And as we'll see in our upcoming
season, the anti-science pushback around child abuse medicine isn't limited to doubts over
muchhousin by proxy, but extends into other more common forms of child abuse. And yes, by the way,
I have listened to the new series from Serial. More on that soon. It's really hard to hear about
cases where a child dies, where there is no brave doctor who steps in to prevent the worst possible
outcome. But it's important that we bear witness to what happened to children like Colin and
Olivia, that we know their names, so that we can understand the true cost of making it harder
for doctors to protect children. People believe their eyes. That's something that is so central
to this topic because we do believe the people that we love when they're telling us something.
If we didn't, you could never make it through your day. I'm Andrea Dunlop, and this is
Nobody Should Believe Me.
So here is my conversation with Detective Melissa Kalish, who recounts the investigation based on
her memory of the events. A note here that we've bleeped the names of Olivia Gant's surviving
siblings to protect their privacy. So I'm Melissa Kalish. I was Melissa Williamson. I was one of
the lead detectives on the Kelly Turner, Olivia Gant case in Colorado. So if you could start
with just giving us an introduction to this story.
and how you came to be involved?
So just basic, this was like a child homicide case.
We initially got the call.
I can't recall the date.
I don't have it, but we got it from like a Department of Human Services
or DHS is what we call them in Colorado from Jefferson County,
which is a neighboring county to the county I worked for in Douglas County
for some possible child abuse going on with Gant and her mother, Kelly Turner.
So they had reported that mom had taken to the hospital about nine times in the month of September.
So now that's refreshing.
We got this in October.
So had taken her to the ER nine times in September complaining of bone pain, extreme pain,
and that something else is going on.
So, and then the child abuse team stepped in and they said that nothing's going on.
That's fine.
But we think that this is possible child abuse.
on. So they needed to have a team look at it, DHS and law enforcement. So at the time that this report came in, Kelly Turner was living in Jefferson County prior to that when Olivia Gant was alive. But when she started taking to the hospital, they had moved to Highlands Ranch, which was in Douglas County's jurisdiction. So then we met with Jeffco, DHS. My sergeant, who is now retired Sergeant Attila Dennis and I met with retired or with Jeffcoe.
Jefferson DHS, Jefferson County investigations, and also our Douglas County DHS team to
kind of get more information what was going on. And then we got this information. We ended up doing
a forensic interview with mom, which led to more information, did another interview with
grandfather, who they were living with, gave us more information. And then I remember looking at my
DA and sergeant saying, this just turned into a child homicide case. And they were like, yes, it did.
So you were brought in initially to do a child abuse investigation regarding Gantt, who was
Olivia Gant's older sibling. And then it sounds like that suspicion of abuse in that case
then cast Olivia Gant's death, which had previously not been investigated as a possible homicide.
Yes. And one of the doctors on that child abuse team with Children's Hospital had said,
well, we can't really say because Olivia's not here, but looking at her records, we've probably
diagnose her with child abuse as well. So when we did the forensic interview, we kind of asked
about Olivia. Same thing when a detective interviewed mom for two hours. Olivia stuff came up. And then
stuff with grandpa, we asked him about some stuff with Olivia. And then it just kind of turned into
like, okay, so I've got a child abuse case going with and now I've got a child homicide case going
with Olivia. So dual stuff going on in the same case. So your role at this time, you were in the
crimes against children unit? Yes. I was an SVU detective, yes. Had you ever done a medical
child abuse or Munchausen by proxy investigation before? To this extent, no. We would get reports of
them, but a lot of them, they're really hard to, you know, investigate or prosecute or bring to
justice like this one. It's usually, you know, we get DHS involved with us and it's, it doesn't
rise to the level of abuse, the ones that we got, or we couldn't prove it. Or if we did try and file
charges, the DA was like, I don't have enough, but we would let DHS handle it from there with
the family check-ins. We got to separate families. They would take a lot of that. If we couldn't
get the criminal part of it, DHS would help us. So the extent of this case, no, I have never
worked a case like that. After the forensic interview with Olivia's older sibling, another detective
interviewed Kelly Turner for two hours, and Melissa recounts what she saw on that tape.
And I watched that and it was just kind of
how this whole thing unfolded was
is just a story and telling lies and telling stuff
for everyone to hear and feel sorry for her
and after two hours Detective Allen
started saying well we know I didn't have cancer
you made that up and she goes
you're right I did make that up you know and then she goes
but I swear hand of God I didn't make up anything with Olivia
so we didn't say anything about Olivia
and so she just kind of brought
it up initially like I didn't do anything I wasn't faking but then it kind of evolved so I'm like
well okay let's start looking into this and so then grandpa came in we did another your grandpa which
set more information about Olivia and how she passed and what she was suffering with and this was
this is Lonnie Gattro Gattro so what perspective did he offer well he's the grandparent you know so
he does whatever he can and he was just you know told that she's
sick, super sick and have all this stuff and that it's a terminal disease that she was diagnosed
with, Olivia was diagnosed with, and they're originally from Texas, all the family's originally
from Texas. So then Kelly moved her and the children up to Colorado, and then eventually
Lonnie and Kelly's mother moved up to be closer to the grandchildren because they learned
Olivia had this rare terminal disease and wasn't going to be around long, so they wanted to be with
them as much as they could. So just...
So Lonnie, Lonnie is, Lonnie is Kelly's stepfather?
Yes.
Okay.
So, yeah, so once you realize, okay, now we're investigating for the abuse of, and now we've
realized that sounds like partly because Kelly sort of offered up this explanation that no one
had asked her about, about Olivia, now we need to sort of dig into this.
So where does your investigation go from there?
Well, it started going into one, looking at medical records.
records and stuff, but during the interview with Grandpa, the one thing that just stuck with
me was that Olivia was so-called diagnosed with this disease, and I haven't said it for five
years, but I believe it's neuro-gastroencephalopomyopathy. So looking into that, it's some rare
genetic disease that is very rare to happen into, you know, less children, less than 18-year-olds,
and it happens to all children in a family. So start to looking at that. So in researching that,
it shows that they're not supposed to have basically the brain and the stomach aren't talking or the and the intestines aren't talking so they don't feel hunger they don't know when to eat you know they're not really working so and grandpa said like the day before olivia died he she was holding his hand and said papa i'm hungry
can i have some food and of course she was in a hospital at that point and so then he said the next day she passed so that always stuck with me and sorry
I've talked about this case a couple of times, and every time I get to that, that moment of Lonnie that he recounts.
Yes, it just, I haven't said it for over five years, or thought about it, but it just kind of stuck with me that, you know, that she said that and that I'm like, well, this isn't, she's not supposed to.
And my DA was like, according to this disease, she's not supposed to be hungry and she's not supposed to care or want food.
So I was like, all right.
So then we started looking into Olivia and I started pulling medical records and I went and interviewed the child abuse team at children's hospital, you know, to kind of get their intake and their perspective of what they saw.
The stakes in this investigation couldn't have been higher because if Kelly Turner was medically abusing one child, it seemed plausible that the mysterious death of her other daughter had been by her hand.
They had to get this right.
So law enforcement said about the complicated task of unraveling the two girls' extensive medical histories.
During the time in Colorado when Olivia was alive, each of the girls was seeing a different pediatrician.
So when Kelly started bringing two children's hospital, the old pediatrician had retired, so they were seeing another one.
So then Kelly was going through some medical history, like she had non-Hodgkins lymphoma, she had all these, you know, masses removed.
She had a big one removed from the back of her skull near the mass.
mastoid behind the ear. And so this pediatrician starts looking at and says, I'm not seeing a
big scar behind the ear. She's like, I'm not seeing a port scar where chemo would go for non-Hodgkin's
lymphoma. And then it was like, well, non-Hodgkins lymphoma in my research as well is also
rare in children. They get Hodgkins lymphoma. Non-Hodgkins is more for adults.
The detectives tried to find records of Kelly's older daughter's treatment in Texas. But the hospital there
said the girl had only ever been treated for minor ailments.
It became clear during the course of the investigation
that Kelly was medically abusing her daughter,
which put Olivia's death in a new light.
If Olivia had been victimized by her mother,
it was too late to save her,
but it wasn't too late for justice to be served
and to protect the child still under Kelly Turner's roof.
So like literally that day after we decided that this is a child homicide case,
I found out where Olivia was buried.
And we went to the cemetery, me and Sergeant Attila Dennis, and we found out that she was buried in an unmarked grave for over a year and a half.
We talked to the cemetery owner, a very nice lady, said that Kelly hadn't paid her bill, you know, and that they don't give a tombstone unless the bill is paid and then they put a deposit on the tombstone.
That's usually how it is, which I totally understand.
and then we also talked to the funeral home who helped with Olivia's final embalming and everything
like that. And she hadn't paid that bill either. And I remember talking to the funeral director
and the owner at the funeral home and he said, I thought this was a weird case because she didn't
look like she was a sick kid. He goes, I've seen a lot of sick kids and she didn't look like she was
a sick child to me. We start in the background. We start pulling medical records. I learn that there
is a go-fund-me aspect. There's a Medicaid or Medicare aspect to this, which is financial.
So I asked for help because I wasn't a financial crimes detective. So they gave me, they brought in
Dan, Detective Dan Seaman. And so he was my co-lead on this because we were working it together.
I was working the child abuse aspects and he was working the financial part of it for us.
And so we start to look at that. And then we find out that Kelly is still in Colorado. We find
some contacts that who you know our previous ex-girlfriend we get we do an interview with her we do
some interviews with people who had been in kelly's life and like from there and we backtracked all the
way back to even when kelly was growing up in our investigation to kind of get an understanding of
how she was how the kids were all that stuff how so we can get a picture so we can move it forward
to see how it came to be today as what we're looking at so yeah and what did you find out
about Kelly Turner's past, even maybe like previous to when she had had her girls?
So part of this investigation, we learned that they lived in Houston, Texas.
So Detective Day, my captain is like, you guys are going to Texas.
And we took DHS rep with us, and he's like, you're going to Texas.
And you guys are going to undig everything you can undig down there.
And if I can just say this, I believe that there was a lot of divine intervention helping me with this case.
because things just happened and things just happened well and we were able to do what we needed
to do without any struggle or anything like that. So we go to that.
What you're describing is just an extraordinarily complex case. Everything just worked out.
Everyone we wanted to talk to just happened to be there and happened to be available and they
were talking to us. So the first thing we do when we land and use is we find this church that
Kelly went to and her family went to and we walk in and the pastor and four people who knew
Kelly Gann and knew the girls and Olivia were in the building and so we explained what we were
there for and they all sat down with us and we did I think a two or three hour interview with
them like they knew was you know she had cancer at one point and then she had a bunch of tumors you
know so all of this stuff that Kelly was saying they knew this and so they would have bake sales
and they would have other kind of, I'm trying to think, bake sales,
something fundraising to help the family out.
Because then when Olivia was born, they said that Kelly was,
that she was kind of sickly, and so she needed help too.
So they were doing whatever they could to help this family out
because his mom has three children and two of them are wrought with illness, you know.
So there's a third child as well as that child older?
Yes, she's the oldest one.
At the time I got this, I believe she was 19.
And she did not have any medical things or she was fine.
So then we reach out and I find Kelly's husband, Jeff Gant, who is the father of Olivia.
So he's down there working.
He's a physical therapist down there and he agrees to meet with us.
And so we did a two-hour interview with him at the Harris County Sheriff's Office.
And are they still married at this point?
Yes.
Though Kelly and Jeff were still married, they'd been living in separate
states for years at that point, with him in their home state of Texas and Kelly in Colorado,
where she claimed she needed to be for the girl's medical care. All this time. And when we talked to
him, he said he was one of those dads who he learns that he has two kids that are kind of,
they have some illnesses and they need help. And he's like, well, I can work. I've got really good
benefits and I can work to support my family. My wife can take him to doctor's appointments,
do what they need to do, but I can support my family how I can. And,
Kelly kept him at bay at purpose, you know, like kept him. He would be home on the weekends
and she would give him the information, feed him what he wanted to know. But, you know, all the
doctor's appointments and everything happened during the week when he was at work or if he had
to travel work. So we talked to him for two hours and that was the hardest interview I've
ever had to do because I basically tore his reality up. So did he have any idea or suspicions that
abuse was happening. No. So his understanding had been that his daughter, Olivia, had had a terminal
illness and had died. Yes. And that also had cancer and fought it and everything. And I said, well,
what makes you think that? And he said, well, I saw that her hair was thinning. And he said she was
taking medicine pill form in chemo. And he's like, I could see her hair was thinning. And I could see,
like, she was getting skinny. And, you know, she just didn't look like her healthy self before this.
So he was like, now that I see it, I've seen signs, but it just was the hardest thing to rip his reality into shreds, what he knew of what was going on and that what his wife was doing to their children in reality.
And how did he react?
I mean, did he accept that evidence for what it was?
Or did he defend his wife?
What was his reaction?
No, he was completely.
like shocked and I'm going to say traumatized we did traumatize him but as he said he's sitting there
thinking of stuff he's like he's starting to see signs and he's like I can't believe I didn't
see this I can't believe you know kind of self-blame like I wish I had stepped in and I said well
you didn't know anymore I said Kelly is a very convincing very manipulative person so you didn't
know any better and you were doing what you could to support your family and two
sick children that you knew. So he was shocked and it took him a couple days to and he was like,
whatever you need, I'm here. You know, if you need to talk to my mom, whatever, yes, I want to go
through with this. We are, and I told him, I said, we're looking at homicide charges against Kelly.
And he's like, okay, whatever you need from me, I'm here to help you guys. So that was an interview.
That was another hard one. But he, you know, he didn't defend her. He was just in a two hours thing.
to know that his whole reality and that his daughter didn't have to die if she didn't need to.
You know, I mean, imagine anyone having that information and just kind of sitting there.
But I was with him every step of the way, you know, and I kept in contact with him and making sure he was
doing okay and that he didn't need any, you know, mental health help or need to talk to someone
that night as well. And if he did, please reach out to us because we want to make sure that we're
here for him as well. So we had a really good rapport by the end of that.
that interview with him. And then we end up finding Kelly's father down there. So Kelly's kind of
taken between mom and dad and doesn't really have anyone, you know, not a lot of friends. So we learned
that Kelly worked at Kmart, you know, when she was a teenager, and that we had learned that she
started lying that she lost her job, but was still going to work, would still get dressed and go to
work and get a ride, but then would go walk off after she was dropped off at the front door. So we found
out that kind of the lies and the manipulation kind of worked back to her teenage years to the
lies and manipulation we learned in her at her present time when we were investigating her.
So yeah, history of being deceptive and manipulating folks.
Yes.
And then her dad also told us that, so she got married, she ended up going to jail for some
crimes prior to that.
and prior to going to jail
or prison in Texas
was a baby but he was wearing leg braces
and so he said what were the leg braces for
and he goes I don't know what that is
but I don't think she needed him
we talk a lot on this show
about how strong the parallels are
from offender to offender
and the parallels between Kelly Turner
and Lisa McDaniel are astounding
Not least of which is that by the time Colorado law enforcement was looking into Turner for the abuse of her daughters, she'd already done jail time for a previous conviction.
So she went to prison, so her original charge was, I believe it was sex assault on a child, and it got pled down to, I can't remember what was pled down to, but she violated probation.
So she had a previous child abuse conviction?
Yes, yes.
sexual assault on a child conviction.
It stemmed from a sexual assault charge,
but they pled it down, I believe it was probably child abuse.
And it was on her own child?
No.
No.
A kid that they used to babysit.
That had been in her care.
Yes.
So, and she didn't follow probation, didn't follow what she was doing,
so she ended up going to prison for three years.
And this is after she already has a child at this point?
She already has her older daughter.
Okay.
Yes, with Jeff Gant.
And they weren't married at the time.
They were just kind of together.
So, and he kind of wasn't in the picture very much at the beginning,
but he came around.
And so he was there when Kelly got out of prison, and they ended up getting married.
So possible that this pattern sounds like very plausible that this pattern started with,
but was interrupted by Kelly being out of the picture for three years.
So fast forward, Jeff and Kelly get married.
They have, um, I think Jeff was working a lot, you know, taking care of.
And then that's when,
Kelly made up that has cancer, non-Hodgkins lymphoma,
and she starts doing like a blog post,
I think it's called Pray for the Begant Girls for that.
And so started talking about the journey.
Still up amazingly.
Yeah, I believe that.
Yeah.
And, you know, started talking about the shit journey with her cancer
and that, you know, she beat it after three years.
And dad showed me a picture of saying, I beat cancer.
You know, after three years, I beat cancer.
And so then Olivia comes into the picture and talks,
to family, Kelly didn't want Olivia at first.
She wasn't very happy that Olivia was, that she was pregnant with Olivia.
So that got our thoughts going like, okay, so Olivia was an unwanted pregnancy.
So that's kind of how it was able to be.
Olivia became the next target.
She was born premature and that, you know, had some issues going on and that she was having
some head issues.
So due to she had this head condition, she made Olivia wear a helmet, you know, for all
this stuff and that she had a flat head back.
there and something was going on. So mom started the whole thing with she has seizures. So mom would
start the blog post and then she did Facebook and then she did GoFundMe. So we were able to take
Olivia's medical records from Texas Children's Hospital where it all started. She would say,
I think she has seizures. And of course, the doctor would say she doesn't have seizures. She's perfectly
normal. All of her, you know, up to a year, Olivia was great, growing great, doing everything good
like children should, you know, and then having some intestinal stuff like children do, you know,
normal stuff. Olivia was on track. She was on track for the right growth. I think about a year
and a half, maybe two moms started saying, well, Olivia's having seizures. Olivia's going catatonic, I think,
is what I read. But then, you know, we'd start talking as a doctor and then we'd look at the medical
records and doctors like, well, we're doing a seizure test and she's fine, you know. And so we would
start to see patterns in the medical history and the blogs because mom would say, well,
she's been diagnosed with seizures now and got this. But the medical records show that she did not
have seizure and was never diagnosed with seizures. And another thing in these posts is like,
it's like over-dramatization, you know, like, oh my gosh, she's having all this stuff. It goes
into what the child is experiencing, but it's like you didn't tell that to the doctor. It's not
showing what was reported to the doctor. And so we move along. And then she started saying,
Olivia was having, she wasn't eating and not getting nourishment. That way, if I remember correctly,
because I remember going down to Texas Children's Hospital and there being an entire building
dedicated to nutrition and nourishment for children. You know, and I'm like, this campus is huge
and they have an entire building for nutrition. There's no way they would have let Olivia,
you know, go to Colorado because they couldn't handle it. Um, so she starts reporting, you know,
seizures that no one else is witnessing and then this gastrointestinal issues. And so at this time,
they're in Texas. And then talk us through what you know about the reasoning behind the move to
Colorado. So my guess is because she got to the point with her doctor saying, Olivia's fine.
So she wasn't getting anywhere with these doctors and future procedures with Olivia. You know,
they're like, yeah, she's got some intestinal issues, but all kids do. You know, they hold, you know,
if they have to go to the bathroom or if they have to poo, you know, they hold it.
And most kids do.
So it's just like, we just got to give them some stuff to move it through their intestines.
But she's like, her intestines aren't working.
So then fast forward, she's like, oh, Children's Hospital in Colorado, I'm going to move
the kids and I up there and start that because they can treat Olivia.
And then we started looking at the Gypsy Rose case, you know, had just come out and like,
you know, that was still there.
So I reached out to the, I believe it's Greenville Police Department or Sheriff's Office that
investigated that case.
And her mother did the same thing.
Her mother wasn't getting the treatment she wanted.
So she found another hospital and moved her and Gypsy there to get the treatment and the
attention that she wanted.
So we were like, okay, well, this kind of, it's a pattern thing apparently.
So that's what she did.
She moved him to Colorado.
And so told Dad, just stay down there and work because he figured he would,
move up there, but he would make less money in Colorado. So he and Kelly decided, no, let's keep you
down here. You have really good benefits. You have really good pay. And then you can when you can
and eventually we'll move you up or we'll move you back. And Jeff honestly thought that it was just
a temporary thing. He didn't expect them to be living up there as long as they did. She started
bringing Olivia to Children's Hospital in Colorado for eczema and skin issues and having these
problems and that she's also not eating. So when we talk to the abuse team at the Colorado Children's
Hospital, they said another thing was that there was a lot of disagreement with the medical team
that served Olivia. Half of them thought that there was something going on and that mom needs to
be looked at or something needs to be reported. And then half of them were like, no, mom has the child's
best interest. Let's just keep going. You know, that kind of thing. We have a seriously ill girl
here. This is what we're doing. So that also stuck in the back of our mind to when we were talking to
this that that was going on. So I'm like, well, I want to talk to these doctors. I want to talk to these
teams. So and also while this is going on, we also decided to, since Olivia was buried, is we
wanted to exhume her body and have a pathologist do an autopsy because an autopsy wasn't done
originally. And so we wanted that to happen because usually in these cases, if there is a child
that pass or something like that, the person is usually cremated. So there's no evidence. But
in the scheme of things and how Kelly wanted all this attention, she had Olivia buried. So one of the
things I learned was that Olivia was buried, what's called a green burial, which was no vault
lining in the ground in a pine box buried four feet instead of six feet. So that when she
started to decompose break down, she would start to become part of the earth and go back.
And this was that kind of cemetery is people can buried under trees, you know, you can put ashes
under a tree and, you know, that kind of stuff. So it's a pretty cool cemetery, if you think
about cemeteries being cool. And it was just an interesting way. So we learned that she had been
at a green burial. So, and also talking to the funeral or the cemetery owner, we thought
this was interesting as well and why I also believed that divine intervention was there
was she said usually after a year with our green burials the coffin collapses and so then the dirt
collapses so then they have to go in and refill the dirt because you get this big hole where the
headstone would be or where their grave is she said in the year and a half we never had to do that
with Olivia never had to do that with Olivia luckily despite the time that had passed they were
able to do additional forensic testing on Olivia's body.
And so we did that autopsy.
We hired a private pathologist, did it.
The doc's like, I don't, you know, we're waiting for the results, but ultimately that came.
And she's like, it says intestinal failure, but I don't see any issues.
I'm also not seeing any of these conditions that Kelly listed on her GoFundMe or blog post
that Olivia suffered from.
So that was another interesting thing for us.
and then, you know, we buried her again, but we, and he kept Olivia until we were ready to
re-barry her. So we paid for this. So, and my boss, my captain was like, we're, this is a case
that we can't, you need to do it. We're doing it. He's like, I'm going to find the money somewhere.
So just do what you need to do. I'm signing off on it. It took over a year for us to and get
investigate, because we also decided to grand jury, open a grand jury on this case. Because we knew we needed
to talk to doctors. In Colorado, I know other states, they automatically do grand juries,
but in Colorado, you can choose when you want to do a grand jury, and they select jury members,
and they serve pretty much the whole year. So if a grand, in that county, so our juror members
had been selected in, you know, that year, and they were serving on this jury for a year,
if a grand case, grand jury opening. So they decided to do this because, one, doctors, anyone who
comes in on a grand jury subpoena has to testify. And it is only one-sided. It is the prosecution team
and the juror members hitting the evidence, but they do have to testify. So this is it in contrast to
if you're a police officer investigating something, people have a choice about whether or not to talk
to you. Usually doctors are like, well, I'm going to talk to, you have to have my lawyer present with
me. So we wanted to talk to these doctors because we wanted to find out more information and we
knew we were going to hit roadblocks. So my DAs said, well,
let's do a grand jury. And so they're, the elected DA said, yep, let's do it. So we get it.
We start doing information. We present the case and they're like, yep, the grand jury says,
yep, we're going to accept this case. So then we go and write, you know, the DA helps me with
a legal notice to doctor saying, hey, we want to do interviews. We would rather do them without a
grand jury present. We would rather schedule a time for us to come to the campus with you
and talk to you about Olivia's case
or we'll give you a subpoena for a grand jury right now
and you have to come in when we say you do
and trying to be nice about it
because I want to get a feel for what they thought of Olivia
their impressions of Kelly and you know
they weren't suspects but I just wanted to know
but I didn't want them to clam up and be like
oh I can't talk to you and I said do I have a list of 50 doctors
and we can do it all in one or you know a whole week
and I take 50 doctors off the floors
and out of practice for a week for this grand jury,
or I can come in and talk to them.
You know, you can be present.
I don't care, but we just want to come in and have a conversation.
So that's kind of how we put it to them, and they're like,
okay, you can come in and have a conversation.
We did a couple of them with grand jury that way,
but most of them were like, okay, we'll let you come in and have a conversation.
And so we just scheduled doctor interviews, you know, with the whole team.
So along with looking at the records and the blog,
blog posts and the GoFundMe. So she posted on Facebook and GoFund me. Like Olivia was having seizures.
You know, we talked to the neurologist and was like, well, I didn't see any seizures and I took her
off. It's like, well, they've increased her dosage. And the doc's like, well, actually, I took off
that medicine because I wasn't seen any signs of it. And then doctors are like, well, in this
country, no child is going to starve. So he's like, we're going to give her a feeding tube.
you know we're going to get nutrients in them and a feeding tube so that's how it started was they're
like we're not going to let children starve and so it starts with just a feeding tube and she's like
well that's not working so then they escalate it to you know um I can't remember what it is
my guess would be NG tube through the nose first G tube GJ and then the GJ thank you GJ tube in the
abdomen where they would feed her that way so and it went the ostomy you know she had an
ostomy and if she had a bag it would you know that kind of thing but so that's how they would feed her
and she's like this isn't working this isn't working and she's not you know our intestines aren't
working and so everyone you know even the team is like well all kids they have impact so it's normal
we just got to force feed her to get those intestines waking up and then it'll start to work because
we're not seeing anything that's going on and then she also said Olivia was an extreme pain with
everything. So she was also, you know, getting on narcotics. And so they're progressively doing more
and more invasive surgeries with her. Also, her last surgery was some was a surgery with a bladder. So Kelly
convinced this doctor that let's do this, and I cannot remember that surgery's name, but let's do
this surgery, which was really invasive. I just, that was the end. And that's when, you know,
she's like, I don't want to do this anymore. And so my mom's got all this going on. She's saying that
this is, you know, she's not eating. And so she goes on O.T. therapies. She goes on physical therapy.
She has O.T. therapy. Like, eating therapy. Like, let's try different foods because they weren't
sure if Olivia was, she wasn't formally diagnosed with any kind of autism. So they're like, we're not
sure if she has any texture, you know, things or food things that she doesn't like, but let's find
something she does like. And we learned that through talking like, she ate chips. She ate popcorn.
She ate stuff like that. That's all she wanted to eat. And so mom was like, well, she's not
getting her nutrition and so then they're like okay well she kept saying that the jg tube was failing and
not working it would pop out all the time or olivia was pulling it out so she wasn't getting nutrition
in that way so they decided to put in a total parietal nutrition tube which a line is basically or
tpn if you've heard it so basically all of the nutrients carbs proteins everything like that is so
concentrated it goes through the heart so it can be distributed through her body so that way she's at least
getting nutrients and she's not starving to death.
So until they can figure out how to get her to eat or how to get her to do these things,
they put her on TPN.
And then she had that bladder surgery, and that was one of the last surgeries that Olivia had.
Like Lisa McDaniel and many of the other offenders we've covered,
part of how Kelly Turner masked the abuse for so long was by doctor shopping and crossing
state lines.
I just remembered is that mom took Olivia to Boston to go meet with another doctor.
Because in following her blog posts or her GoFundMe's, she says, we're going to meet with this doctor in Boston for treatment.
And he diagnosed her with that gastrointestinal encephalomyopathy disease.
And now she's on all these medicines and he's treating her from Boston.
But as with nearly everything else in this story, once the detective spoke to the doctor who treated Olivia in Boston, they realized the truth was starkly different.
I was able to contact the office and we got records and I reviewed them.
Basically, he said, yeah, I had a consult with him.
And he believed that Olivia could get off the TPN and the G-G tube.
And he's like, yeah, let's get her working and let's get her feeding and eating.
That way we can wake stuff up, but he believed he could cure it with this.
So then she never saw him.
And he said, but I don't treat out of state, so you have to move to Boston.
But of course, Kelly Turner wasn't looking for a cure for her daughter.
She was looking for doctors who would do what she wanted.
and unfortunately, back in Colorado, she found some.
The doctor who saw Olivia in Boston believed he could help her,
that she was capable of eating on her own.
But Kelly never communicated this opinion to the doctors in Colorado.
And despite a number of doctors having concerns about Olivia,
Kelly continued to push the child towards the end.
So she was originally put on palliative care, which is can be home hospice.
They can get better.
But she kept going back to the hospital.
And so she kept saying, Kelly told the doctors that Olivia said, no more owies.
I don't want to do this anymore, mommy.
And so she, Kelly told the doctors, I don't want to do this anymore.
I want to pull TPN.
I want to pull JG tube.
And they're like, you know, if she needs this to live or she'll die.
If she doesn't have TPN, she's not going to make it much longer.
she's like I know but I know and I just want to you know my daughter's not there's nothing they can do
because I did say that we've reached the point of what we can do because TPN is not a forever thing
it will start to break down her body it will start to cause problems with her liver and it'll
start to cause issues which at the time Olivia had no liver issues we talked to the liver doctor who
was monitoring her because she was on TPN no concerns with her liver being overdone or this
TPN affecting her whatsoever, but she said, nope, I don't want my daughter to live like this,
so I'm going to withdraw all care. So eventually the doctors pull out the TPN, pull out her
JG tube, and then Kelly admits her into an adult hospice facility where she sat for days until
she starved to death. Not at home with Kelly. She started at palliative care, which is kind of home
hospice care, but then, and they said that, hey, what if we do this? Let's go back to
drawing board let's go back and say let's try this with Olivia let's try this with
Olivia and she's like nope I don't want to do it I don't want to do any of that I just want to
withdraw care for my daughter and bring her home you know and let her die in peace where there's no
more owies so the team did try and convince mom to do this but and there were even some nurses
who we talked to and they wanted to report mom but they were told they could not you know and
they knew that Olivia was on this TPN and that's not sustaining her liver her intestines aren't
working. They're like, Olivia's not going to make it long because we're not eating. So they were just
like, well, mom knows what she knows best for her kids. So we'll let mom make this decision. And
Colorado, you can do that. You don't have to have a team saying, no, I can't do this. They did have
risk management meetings. And they're like, all right, we're going to side with mom and let mom
withdraw care and pull Olivia off everything and just, you know, let nature take its course,
basically. And there was another doctor I talked to who was coming in and Olivia was in so much
pain according to Kelly and so, you know, drugged up and groggy and she can't get her to wake up
and she's catatonic and he goes in and Olivia's like jumping on the bed and watching an iPad
and he remember saying, I remember him going, I looked at her and I said, this doesn't look like
a sick child. It's like this isn't what mom is reporting. I'm not seeing what mom is reporting to me
right now. So just there was, half the team was like, nope, let's report mom. Let's get, let's just
at least make a report and see what we can do separation test. And then half the team was like,
no, mom's doing what's best for her child. We're going to go with mom and we're going to let her do
it. And it ultimately, that's what the risk management team meetings led to is, nope, we're going to
let mom withdraw care. We talked to a lot of nurses and they're like, we wanted to make a report.
We were told we could not. And, and management.
reporters, they should be able to.
So that was kind of an issue
we were running into too, is
why were they being told no?
And so, again, it's whole
the legal risk management.
Yeah, because we did a separation
test with and Kelly.
Because Kelly was not allowed to live with
and was fine and there was nothing going on
with her but growing pains. And she was an active
kid doing, you know, Brazilian jiu-jitsu
and soccer and stuff like this.
So, you know, it was just growing,
knowing normal things. And if she's, you know,
getting beat up on the field or whatever or in practice.
I mean, that's just part of what she was active in.
Yeah.
No one doubts that separating a child from their parent can be a traumatic event.
And no child abuse professional I've ever spoken to takes this decision lightly.
But in Munchausen by proxy cases, this intervention can be life-saving as it was for Kelly's older daughter.
And had it happened with Olivia, she'd still be here.
Kelly's children.
were her primary victims, but they weren't her only victims.
Because in the years leading up to her daughter's death,
Kelly Turner scammed a lot of people.
Kelly was ultimately charged with fraudulent fundraising
to the tune of $22,270 via GoFundMe
and over half a million dollars of Medicaid fraud.
And how we found that out was,
so Jeff had him on insurance.
Kelly said, hey, children's hospital
will totally cover the children's expenses.
up here. You just have to take them off your insurance and then everything will be taken care of
by the hospital up here. So him, he's like, okay, I'll take him off. So then she fraudulently fills out
two applications, one as a single mom with these kids that needs Medicare, Medicaid, or, and then
she's divorced, I believe, and needs Medicare, Medicaid, but doesn't have any insurance to cover
her kids when in fact dad was covering him until she told him don't don't do that anymore we can get
free care up here in colorado the hot children's hospital will cover everything so i think kelly just
didn't want any fewer eyes on the situation yes just just wanted to keep it you know as it was
so then we were looking at that we have theft and then when i was looking at the murder charges
one of the ones in colorado's first degree murder is you know the premeditated thought out one
and then it's also causing the death of any child under the age of 12.
So I charge her with two counts of first-degree murder
plus the GoFundMe, the Medicaid fraud, the theft, all of those other charges.
So we put together this grand jury presentation
and presented it to the grand jury to see if they would accept,
give us a bill, a true bill, for a warrant for Kelly's arrest.
And we did it.
And the DA was like, okay, they take a while.
you know expect maybe like 30 40 minutes deliberation maybe it was less than five minutes that we had
left that room and he's like they have a true bill already they're like we're ready so they came
back with a true bill like that and what is what is a true bill mean meaning that they believe that
there is enough to go for charges and they're going and that we can issue a warrant for her arrest
under these charges so is that like an indictment or it's yes an indictment okay yes so we go forth
we find her at a hospital near Children's,
and Kelly's always been tied to Children's Hospital for whatever reason.
She's always told everyone she's been a nurse, she's been a flight nurse,
and, you know, all of these things.
So then we get to the hotel, we find out that they're still there,
and supposedly she's there with a woman and says that it's her wife.
Because you don't know how these things are going to go,
so I've got a couple tactical guys with me, they make entrance.
Dan and I go place cuffs on Kelly and say you're under arrest,
you know, these are the charges. We would like to talk to you. Do you want to talk to us?
And she's like, yes, absolutely. So Sergeant Attila Dennis and I transport her to the sheriff's
office. And then Dan and I do an interview. And she talks to us, Olivia, like, you know,
all of Olivia's happenings. And we kind of start to say, well, we found this out.
Nowhere was she ever diagnosed with this gastro. Nowhere in her medical records was that
neurogastrointestinal's encephalomyopathy. I think that's what it is. But, and she's like,
like, well, she had that, you know, and then starts to go into this thing. And so then I start
doing the whole, all right, here's what I think happened. I don't think you're a monster. I don't
think you really wanted to hurt your kid, but I think you felt, you know, I started the,
I think this was her family. I think she was getting the attention through the hospital,
through the nurses, and that this kind of became her family that she never had because
dad was a pastor, mom left her to go live her life. So she was kind of left alone. But
when her kids were sick, community would rally around her.
So I think she really loved that and craved that attention.
So that's how I kind of approached her and said,
this is what I think is going on.
I think because you didn't want to lose that.
You had it with Olivia.
And then you started again with so you didn't want to lose that sense of belonging,
that sense of family that you've had since your girls have been born, basically.
And then she was like, well, I want to talk to your lawyer now.
So then we go through, we get her arrested and formally charged, and she ended up pleading guilty to, oh, child abuse resulting in death.
That's what she pled guilty to, and she got sentenced to 16 years.
It's hard to know what justice looks like in a case like this, because there's no bringing Olivia back.
But this investigation ensured that Kelly's living daughter was kept safe from her.
And unlike her sister, she will live to adulthood.
As far as I know, she's still in prison, she has to do at least.
at least, if I remember correct, 75%, half to 75%.
So that's at least eight years.
And I think she pled guilty in 2001.
So she's got a couple more years before she can come up for parole.
I just hope it doesn't happen.
Because we need to keep her in there.
We need to keep her in there.
And just so you know, we ended up reburying.
We had a funeral service for Olivia, the sheriff's office did.
And the funeral home donated a headstone to her.
So she's no longer in an unmarked grave.
the chaplain who because she did the you know make a wish thing and like you were saying the photos of
you know running she i have a photo from dad where she was going to do her make a wish and she's jumping
up and down and excited and yelling and she's got her pee bag on her backpack and she's got her g-tube
you know right there and i'm like this is not that sick kid you know and the chaplain that had
worked for her because she became a Denver cop for a day she became a south metro firefighter for a day
and the chaplain came up to me and he said one of the items
on Olivia's bucket list, and this gives me chills every time,
was that she wanted to help catch a bad guy.
So that's why I think I had divine intervention,
because I think I had Olivia on the other side helping me out
because she wanted to catch a bad guy.
I still remember it, like it happened yesterday.
Like I was able to go, all that was through,
I didn't need to look at a report,
and you never forget a case like that,
and especially when it comes to children, I never did.
I always took pride in being an SVU.
in being an SVU detective because children need a voice. They need someone who will stand up for
him when the people who are supposed to be in their lives doing it for them won't do it. So I would
never forget a case like Olivia again. It took me a while to end some therapy, you know, because
this whole thing was, it was a lot. And like there's even more I could probably go on for another
hour or two talking about the details of this case. But it just was a lot and, you know, having to
talk about it, but it still resonates because this point.
poor child didn't need to die.
And I wish we had gotten to her sooner.
I wish that, you know, before she was put in hospice care,
I wish that something had been done that we could have saved Olivia's life.
But knowing that we were able to bring charges, get the bad guy for her,
and we were able to save her daughter, her sister's life,
that to me was a win for me in that book.
The detectives in this case deserve a lot of credit
for bringing Kelly Turner to justice and ensuring her older daughter would be safe.
But this story is a horrible and entirely preventable tragedy.
And in the time since this case, it's only gotten harder to intervene in cases like Olivia's.
Doctors now have to worry about getting sued, having their reputations trashed,
and being the subject of threats and harassment for upholding their duty
and speaking up when they see a child being harmed.
Despite our attempts and the calls and emails of listeners from around the country and even
internationally, law enforcement in Alabama is, at least as far as we know, not investigating
the highly suspicious death of Colin McDaniel. And Lisa McDaniel remains in a home with her two
vulnerable grandchildren. Because, as I've unfortunately come to learn, detectives like Melissa
are all too rare. And I truly believe, like, I was meant to have this case because it just
kind of fell that way. And I was thinking, you know, I thought I'm like, well, I'm glad that
you know, there are detectives that are like me that, you know, but there are also detectives
that just do what they need to, just do the basics. And I think Kelly would have gotten off
probably with, you know, a misdemeanor child abuse charge. And that would have been it. And because
they don't want to do the work, right? They don't want to do the paperwork. They don't want to
know anymore. They just want to do what's in front of them. And that's it. And it's not a dog.
I get that, you know, sometimes you get burnt out. But this case, I was like, nope, this is something.
We got to run with it and go.
Next week on Nobody Should Believe Me.
I had to tell the wife that she's legally married to a man.
Nobody Should Believe Me is produced and hosted by me, Andrea Dunlop.
Our editor is Greta Stromquist, and our senior producer is Mariah Gossett.
Research and fact-checking by Aaron Ajay, administrative support from Nola Karmouche.
Thank you.
