Nobody Should Believe Me - S05 Ep07: Who is This Bad Soul?
Episode Date: February 13, 2025We examine perhaps the most important piece of the complex puzzle of the Hartman case: what Sophie wrote about it in her journals. We’re joined by Dr. James Hamilton, an MBP expert with a PhD in ...clinical psychology, to walk us through some of Sophie’s most chilling journal entries collected in the case files. We also look at Sophie’s disturbing internet search history during the time of C’s alleged Central precocious puberty (CPP) diagnosis. After being separated from Sophie, M and C are placed with Sophie’s mom and sister. Detective Lee discusses the problems that arise when placing children with people that are most likely going to side with the perpetrator. In April of 2022, C and M are returned to Sophie and criminal charges are subsequently dropped. Andrea offers a key insight into how this might have happened by revealing a surprising member of Sophie’s legal team: her sister, Megan Carter. *** Links and Resources: Dr. James Hamilton: https://www.munchausensupport.com/who-we-are/ Check out Olivia LaVoice’s podcast, The Bakersfield Three: https://www.iheart.com/podcast/867-the-bakersfield-three-128074552/ Learn more about our featured non-profit and mutual aid organizations: https://www.nobodyshouldbelieveme.com/nsbm-supports/ Check out You Probably Think This Story's About You: https://brittaniard.com/podcast 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 for behind-the-scenes photos: @andreadunlop Buy Andrea's books here. To support the show, go to Patreon.com/NobodyShouldBelieveMe or subscribe on Apple Podcasts where you can get all episodes early and ad-free and access exclusive ethical true crime bonus content. 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)
Before we begin, a quick warning that in this show we discuss child abuse, and this content
may be difficult for some listeners.
If you or anyone you know is a victim or survivor of medical child abuse, please go to munchhousensupport.com
to connect with professionals who can help.
As medical child abuse cases play out in court, they often become fixated on a certain detail.
For example, in my sister's case,
one of the damning pieces of evidence
was video surveillance of her dumping her daughter's
anticoagulant medication onto her hospital bedsheets.
This was an event that preceded the child being admitted
to the pediatric
ICU with a life-threatening blood clot. This was not the only piece of evidence, not by
a long shot. There were 73,000 pages of medical records subpoenaed in this case, which were
reviewed by a child abuse pediatrician who found extensive evidence of abuse. And much
like Sophie Hartman's daughter, after being separated from my sister and observed by the hospital, my niece's health improved drastically in a short period of time.
But from the documentation I've seen, her lawyer Adam Shapiro seems to have somehow
really honed in on this video evidence, arguing that Megan was actually using one type of
syringe rather than a different type of syringe that the hospital said she was using, and
therefore the hospital staff and police officers didn't see in that video what they thought they saw.
If this all sounds like it doesn't make much sense, it doesn't.
No criminal charges were ever filed against my sister.
Following the family court's return of her children during the active police investigation,
detectives ultimately referred the case to the prosecuting attorney in April of 2020, and that prosecuting attorney declined to file charges.
And following that, Adam Shapiro took on another medical child abuse case, Sophie Hartman.
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.
The Mother Next Door, Medicine, Deception, and Munchausen by Proxy is now available from
St. Martin's Press wherever books are sold. This is my first foray into nonfiction, and
I co-authored the book with none other than friend of the show, Detective Mike Weber.
This true crime saga covers three of Mike's most impactful cases and follows along with
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When I cover Munchausen by proxy cases, I approach them with a central question.
If this case is not Munchausen by proxy, then what is going on here?
Now, I did reach out to Sophie to ask her if she'd like to give us her side of the story.
We never got a response, but that's a standing invitation.
Sophie, if you're listening, we would be happy to hear you out.
But just as we did get plenty from Sophie in her own words via her memoir about her
travels to Zambia, we do hear Sophie's account of the time leading up to this investigation
via her journals. And if you are inclined to believe that Sophie Hartman is innocent,
this is one of the hardest
things to explain away.
When Sophie's children were placed in protective custody in March of 2021, the officers also
served her with a residential search warrant.
In the search of her rent and home, the police picked up a number of journals, and Detective
O'Rourke's investigative summary, which is in this case an incredibly detailed narrative,
includes scans of about two dozen journal entries that the detective had found were
especially relevant to the case.
These are harrowing to read, but also fascinating.
They are some of the most direct insights I've ever gotten into the mind of someone
who engages in these behaviors.
Much of Sophie's writing in her journals
is as florid and purple as her memoir.
Many entries are written directly to God,
who sometimes writes back.
And many, though not all, of these entries are dated,
which gives us insight into what Sophie is thinking
and feeling during a particular medical event.
For example, when Sia's just under two years old,
she visits the University of Washington Center for Adoption Medicine, where Sophie reports
that she is having seizures and weakness on her right side. An MRI reveals a
slight static encephalopathy and the doctors report that this could be
indicative of mild cerebral palsy. This is long before C's diagnosis of HC, at the beginning of this
very long road. A few days later, Sophie writes in her journal, quote, I trust you, Lord,
I do. I lay it all down, the heartache, the unknown, static encephalopathy, global development
delay, epilepsy, speech and vision impairments, cerebral palsy, drug exposure, all of it.
She then lists out a number of doctors' names, and some other names as well, possibly people
on her care team, though we don't know.
And Sophie writes, all of them.
I lay down.
I need a word.
God, or Sophie as God, then responds, Sophie, quietly persist.
I see it all.
Do not waver as her advocate.
Just keep moving forward.
In another entry, Sophie lays out a laundry list of symptoms
and asks God to, quote, bring it into the light,
and to, quote, give the doctor's wisdom to see beyond,
sees cuteness and charm.
God, bring forth all that she is to light,
all the damage done to her brain,
all that isn't working properly in her body,
all that is frustrating for her,
all that is debilitating, all that is destructive.
Bring it all into the light.
She ends this entry with a lengthy list of diagnoses,
which with the exception of cerebral palsy
and static encephalopathy,
no doctor appears to have mentioned to her. Many of Sophie's journal entries read like a kind of
fever dream, but one entry in particular is utterly straightforward. This entry was on a
loose leaf page, which was undated, but from context, clearly after Sophie had adopted her
girls. In this wrenching entry, she seems to be confronting her demons head on, laying out a series of
events starting from childhood and up through her time in Zambia and as an adult.
She writes,
How can I embrace my story if I don't understand it?
How can I do this?
I am bad.
She remembers this pattern going back to when she was four years old, writing,
Something began telling me I was only worth being on the side.
I needed to have a real need to be cared for.
That my needs weren't real needs.
To need is to be bad.
Later in that entry, she writes, To care is to be good.
She recalls faking a hand injury in high school, faking a knee injury, mono and meningitis
in college.
She recalls a surgery she had on her ankle and remembers lying to friends about it becoming
infected, and then lying about some gynecological issues around the time she went to Zambia.
In light of what came next, Sophie's lies about her own health feel a bit minor, but
these details mirror my sister's story just almost beat for beat.
My sister had this knee surgery where they
didn't find anything once they went in. Sophie talks about faking a knee injury of her own.
The gynecological complications, it all just really feels like a playbook. And this journal
entry from Sophie gave me such a window into what my sister's experience of this own part
of her life might have been like. Sophie writes, quote,
"'When it comes to suffering,
I am a compulsive liar slash exaggerator.
To be cared for means to have significant need,
have to have it the hardest for it to be worthy.
I am not deserving of love just as I am.
I push people away because I am so ashamed of who I am.
I truly believe I am a bad person, too bad for grace."
And this entry seems to draw a very clear line
from lying about herself to what came next.
It ends in desperation.
She writes, quote,
"'So angry with my children, abusive even, hitting
and pinching and yelling, oh Lord, what have I become?
Who is this bad soul?
It's me, filth."
These entries were a lot to process.
So I brought in a heavy hitter to help me unpack them.
My name is Jim Hamilton,
and I have a PhD in clinical psychology.
I worked for many years as a psychology professor.
As someone who has dedicated his career to studying this abuse, Jim had also never seen
anything quite like these journals.
And we talked about Sophie's recounting of her own history with medical deception.
People who have engaged in medical child abuse, some significant percentage of perpetrators,
have a fairly clear history in their own medical records of exaggeration,
fabrication, exploitation of illness to meet their psychological needs.
As I looked over the snippets that you gave me to read, I was struck by exactly that thing,
that she made some sort of comment about having to be needy in order to be needed.
This is something we try to get courts to understand when we present cases of medical
child abuse.
And this is the part that I think is hardest for them to understand and that she articulated
it so beautifully.
I mean, I could just take the quote from the snippet you gave me
and read that in court the next time I have to,
because it's so exactly what we think
is going on in these cases.
We always talk about, once we find evidence
that abusive behavior has occurred,
yeah, we wanna think about, all right,
we're not so much interested in diagnosing something like factitious disorder imposed on another or malingering by proxy
or anything like that, but we do need to sort of articulate what the psychological need
is that's being met by this behavior.
She speaks directly to the issue of need.
Jim and I work closely together.
We're colleagues on the American Professional Society on the Abuse of Children's Munchausen by Proxy Committee and also at the non-profit Munchausen Support,
where we both serve on the board. We spend no small amount of time in this group discussing
the utility of the psychiatric diagnosis of factitious disorder imposed on another, which
again is the official name for the disorder underpinning Munchausen by Proxy. The notion
of this being primarily a mental illness often does more harm than good in
court where it tends to either create confusion about a perpetrator's culpability or just
add one more complicated diagnosis to the mix for the two sides to fight over.
But as Jim says, it's really impossible to tell the story of what's happening in these
cases, either in court or anywhere else, without explaining why someone would ever engage in this behavior that seems so ghastly to most
people.
It establishes a motive.
One of the things I thought about as I was reading all this is that I was trying to make
sense of the fact that all of that is laid out so clearly in a case of a problem, medical child abuse, where the
perpetrators are usually very fastidious about controlling information, keeping the deceptions
up, keeping their secrets.
To commit this to writing, I'm wondering what her thinking was in actually doing that.
Did she think no one was ever going to see it?
Or did she have maybe a more complex plan in mind?
So why write all this down?
Was she trying to soothe her own internal conflict?
Was she really asking God for help?
Did she really believe God was answering?
The idea that these folks try to deceive themselves, that's true.
Then you wouldn't want to put it in writing, that you sort of have yourself figured out
for while you're doing the things that you are denying to others that you're doing,
which is making up all of these fabrications and
exaggerations about your child's illness.
I don't know if you saw this.
I don't know if anybody but me saw this.
But in the snippets that you gave me to read, at some point it said capital D, capital I,
capital D.
Yes.
Which is an abbreviation for dissociative identity disorder.
And I noted that somebody mentioned that these things were in different handwritings, the
notations that she herself made were in different handwriting depending on what the topic was,
et cetera.
Two possibilities about that.
Maybe she didn't mean anything by writing DID.
That's one, I guess, that's three possibilities.
Another is that she has something like
dissociative identity disorder.
And a third is that this is,
the reason she's writing all this stuff down
in this peculiar way is she's preparing kind of a defense or an explanation for why
she's done what she's done.
This is an interesting theory that the discovery of these diaries was part of some master plan
on Sophie's part.
And frankly, I'm not going to put anything past her at this point.
But I've spent no small amount of time reading through and digesting these journals.
And they often sound like Sophie is writing herself
a very grandiose and fanciful story about what she's doing.
That this is an elaborate justification to herself
about what she's putting her daughters through.
That Sophie, actually, is the hero of this story.
What laid bare in these diaries,
the selfishness of it all, this is not about CH,
this is about Ms. Hartman.
In this case, in a lot of the documents that I've read,
the mom seems to have this sense of entitlement.
Like, they have to treat me, they have to care for me,
they have to do this, they have to do that
because that's what I want and that's what my child needs.
Very unselfconscious about how entitled and selfless she is.
And those things in the diary, I don't know that she was as self-aware about the selfishness
as she was in other parts where she was self-aware about her neediness. But of course they're related.
What we learn from these dire entries about about her dynamics with her
children and in this section where she's being very honest and
straightforward and she has this quote that I'm so angry with my children
abusive even,
hitting and pinching and yelling, oh Lord, what have I become? Who is this bad soul?
It's me, filth. It says, I want to be abused, I crave pain. And obviously this is just disturbing
to read. And I think there's a through line here actually for you know I think
one of the things that I didn't realize about this abuse when I was going in
right before I when I when I just had my end of one that was my personal
experience was and that we have learned is not the case from so many survivors
including you know Joe who is who we both know who is on our fourth season is
that this abuse
is not confined to the medical arena. There's this profound lack of empathy for the children.
And I think like that journal entry from Sophie really expresses that. And then the other
thing that really stuck out to me was these journal entries. You know, there are some
journal entries from her older daughter, M, that were just really, really heartbreaking.
The investigative summary includes many journal entries from Sophie, but also some
from Sophie's older daughter, M, as well as letters that she wrote to her mom.
And these were so sad to read.
While M wasn't the main subject of this investigation, she was also obviously
deeply affected by what was happening in the household. And while there is a lesson here about M's
medical history than C's, we do know that she'd been prescribed
antidepressants and ADHD medications. And she writes in her journals about her
brain feeling fuzzy and confused. And heartbreakingly, her journals also
include reflections on her being a freak and Zambians being freaky people.
And to the extent that M was, to borrow Jim's metaphor,
a prop in Sophie's play,
her role seems to have been gymnastic star.
You can see her straining for her mother's approval.
In one letter to Sophie,
she writes about feeling like she's just a gymnast
and that she has to be a perfect one,
a reflection we also heard about
from the moms at the gym and Sophie's neighbor. M writes that she only wants to be a perfect one, a reflection we also heard about from the moms at the gym
and Sophie's neighbor.
Em writes that she only wants to make her mom happy,
but she feels like if she makes a mistake,
her mom will be angry and yell,
and she clearly blames herself for her mom's anger.
The report also includes one of Sophie's responses,
where she writes,
quote,
I'm sorry I put all my anger on you when you make a mistake.
I'm sorry for screaming. I'm sorry for saying all my anger on you when you make a mistake. I'm sorry for screaming.
I'm sorry for saying that you were being a shit show.
The comment she makes about being emotionally abusive to her kids and being cruel to them.
I've seen that in other cases as well. I had a case down south when I lived there, the babysitter was available as a collateral informant.
And the babysitter commented on how inattentive, unrealistically demanding of like the child
when the child was too young to be expected to do this or that or the other thing, the
mob was expecting it, quick to anger, not warm, not loving. And the contrast between
the gushy, wonderful mom, loving, caring mom would do anything for their kid would make
you think that when you saw them at home and they weren't being watched by anybody, you'd
see the same amount of gushing over the child. But it really, you know, it's
all a play. And you and I recently had the opportunity to speak to some forensic psychiatrists
about this. And I sort of previewed my developing view that this is much more like a kind of exploitation abuse than it is an event related abuse.
And I talked about the idea that in this play, in this drama that these perpetrators create,
where they are both the director and the main character, the most important character,
the child is not really even a character, the child's a prop. And
so it's consistent with that formulation that, you know, at home the mother's selfish and
if it's between her needs and the kids' needs, it's going to be her needs. I'm pretty sure
Emma probably just felt ignored by this. She wasn't apparently used as a prop. She wasn't getting any of this
attention that's associated with the circumstance that Sophie created for C. And that's terribly
sad.
But the most disturbing narrative in these pages is the one about C's death.
And these reflections are not isolated.
Sophie was telling many people C would die young and the forensic
examination of her devices revealed a number of chilling searches.
The fact that the topic came up of songs associated with cancer. I thought that was interesting.
That was among the search history terms that were in the documents that you shared with me.
And that made me wonder if she was thinking through season two, or maybe it was season three at this
point, starting to put together the storyboard for the next chapter.
I forget the abbreviation for the illness that she claimed that Siem had.
As that chapter was drawing to a close, what else was she going to do?
And the idea that that could include something like cancer,
it could also include something like expecting her death or who knows. So yeah, that was a bit chilling
and it really sort of speaks to the idea that this there might be self-deception involved,
but this is often very, very planful. In the spring of 2019, the day after
Seattle Children's denies one of her requests to place a central line in her daughter and put her on TPN, which is intravenous nutrition.
Sophie writes this.
How is it that doctors who had never heard of HC before they came to work today get to make decisions regarding her care?
I will absolutely fail C if I fight for the duration of her life rather than the quality of it. The best decisions that have been made for C in the past
have been big ones that I suggested far before any member
of her team was ready to do it.
Stalling those decisions only let doctors check off
their boxes while her suffering was prolonged.
Is this what it will always be like?
Or are there doctors willing to take risks
for the sake of her quality of life?
In another entry that is undated but presumably from around this same time, Sophie writes
this,
I know, Lord, I know this fear in ever-increasing measure.
I do not want to live in fear, but fear oversees life grips me at times.
I wonder, how would I ever go on if you brought her home?" Later in this
entry, God, or again, Sophia's God, responds, saying, give see to me, Sophie.
She had been starting to talk even in his journal entries and elsewhere about quality of life over length of life.
And had sent messages to friends saying, oh, well,
I was just thinking if she dies, I'll call Cassie
and make her come lie in bed with me while I cry.
I mean, it just really, it seems like she was as I-
That's a good example of this idea
that she's storyboarding.
I sort of wanted to run that theory by you.
We can only speculate in this case or in any given case,
but I sort of wonder if there is some point
where the death of the child actually becomes more
useful to the perpetrator.
I think it's all a matter of the specific tastes
of the perpetrator, what kind of sympathy they're after.
I think you referred to, and I think we're more and more in this conversation referring
to this idea of a narrative, that this kind of abuse, again, is a prolonged abuse.
It's a storytelling abuse.
And this particular feature that you're talking about of the death of the child, in some way,
you know, it fixes the story. Like, the story can't have a surprise ending where the kid goes on the
Dr. Phil show in five years or ten years and says, I had this mom who did all these terrible things to me. I realized more than she knew and I knew that I was being medically abused.
Nothing could happen to the story if the child dies.
So there's a sense of narrative control. It's very poignant, as you say. It opens up, you know, I use the analogy of planning for
season two or season three. It opens up a whole new season, a whole new sort of chapter of Sophie's
story or the perpetrator's story, whoever it might be. Sophie as narrator in this particular case is
especially compelling because she is literally narrating this imaginary
world that she's building for herself.
And as a writer, you can see in some of these entries that she's actively planning out
her next book.
You can also see in her writing how she is tying this all in to the grandest narrative
of all, the notion that Sophie is on a divine mission.
She frequently refers to C as her quote, harvest, which is biblically loaded language
that speaks to this idea that See and her suffering, and of course Sophie's suffering
as her mother, will bring souls to God.
That there is a higher purpose for See's pain.
Sophie talks about how suffering is holy, and elsewhere asks God how he could bear to
sacrifice his only son.
Sophie is heroin and martyr all at once.
The sacrifice of her daughter is positioned as divine.
And in a very real way, when you look at the search terms from the forensic examination
of Sophie's devices, you can see her storyboarding her next season.
In the first year of the pandemic, Sophie starts weaving a new plot for C.
Now, in addition to the age C diagnosis,
she adds in the precocious puberty storyline.
So to ground us, here is what happened in reality.
Sophie brings C to an endocrinologist
at Seattle Children's in July of 2020,
reporting a bunch of symptoms that she says
have her concerned for precocious
puberty.
In this exam, there are modest clinical findings, but these are discordant with lab results
and a bone scan that shows no signs of precocious puberty.
C also has an MRI to rule out any brain mass that might be causing the symptoms Sophie
is reporting, and this comes back clear, and a follow-up examination of C shows her to be completely normal.
Sophie then continues to push for a surgical hormone implant
against doctors' recommendations, insisting that these, quote,
cycles that C is experiencing are exacerbating her AHC episodes.
And during this time, she also tells friends and providers
that C is in full-blown puberty and that the likely cause
is a brain mass.
So what do we know about what Sophie was up to on her devices
during this time?
Her search history shows numerous telling entries,
including precocious puberty, pituitary tumor symptoms,
and pituitary adenoma surgery.
She also searches supra catheter, which is a surgically placed catheter for people who
cannot urinate on their own, which is one of the symptoms that Sophie was reporting
to the endocrinologist.
Sophie also looks up a foundation that is dedicated to children with endocrine disorders.
So it's not just the next diagnosis she's pursuing.
She's also looking for the worst possible reason
for this diagnosis, a brain tumor,
which she reported to see doctors and teachers,
as well as a possible surgery for that tumor to pursue
and additional surgical interventions
for the symptoms she's reporting.
And she's looking for the next foundation
to support all of these efforts.
It's honestly diabolical.
There are also, as Jim mentions, a few searches around cancer as well as searches related to leukemia.
At first, I assumed this had to do with another possible storyline for C,
but then I saw that one of the searches was Down syndrome and leukemia. And I remembered that during the investigation,
Sophie was actively attempting to adopt a child from China
with Down syndrome.
She also looked up Infusion Center Valley Medical.
Now, infusion care can be used for a number of things,
but it's best known for chemotherapy treatments.
So again, this looks like part of a plan. And Valley Medical, by the way,
this is a brand new hospital in the area
that she can try out after ostensibly
having worn out her welcome
at Mary Bridge and Seattle Children's.
Sure seems like she has her sights set
on a whole new spinoff series.
And while her daughters are the primary victims
in all of this, they are far from the only people
who got hurt. The terrible thing about all of this really is that people who have genuinely ill children
and who are genuinely grieving and in need of support and coalescing with others around
that experience are harmed by this. Rare disease groups, rare disease advocacy groups,
researchers and parents and such are really harmed
by when a situation where somebody sort of co-ops
this rare disease, perhaps spoiling research data,
perhaps, as I said, casting suspicion upon everybody else
who says they have it, it's awful.
It's the depth of the thoughtlessness and selfishness really expressed, I think, in
some of its most depressing ways.
Groups dedicated to AHC didn't just support Sophie emotionally.
They supported her financially, helping pay to send her and see out to Duke to see Dr. McAudy. And as for the research, Sophie was reporting things way outside the norm for AHC,
like severe gastrointestinal issues and 32-day long episodes.
It's easy to see how a case like this, in such a small sample set of real cases,
could really throw off the data.
So far from Sophie's efforts with C, quote,
helping the cause, as Sophie wrote about,
or, quote, leading to a scientific breakthrough,
they're messing with that progress
and taking resources that she'd be going to children
who desperately need them.
Back in the spring of 2021,
C and M are living with Sophie's sister, Sam,
and her mother, Anne.
Sophie is charged in May of 2021, but her parents are living with Sophie's sister Sam and her mother Anne.
Sophie is charged in May of 2021, but her parents quickly secure a bond to bail her
out.
She is granted supervised visitation with the girls.
And while Sophie at first claims she is staying with a friend quite a ways away in Mercer
Island, it comes out later that she is in fact staying very close to the house where
the girls are.
This whole thing is an epic fail, just an absolute disaster from a protocol standpoint.
As we outline in our American Professional Society on the Abuse of Children guidelines
for these investigations, it is crucial that children are not placed with a family member
who does not believe the abuse is happening.
The guidelines also recommend against visitation because of the intense psychological manipulation
involved in this abuse, and certainly allowing a suspected perpetrator to bring the children food and
drink, as Sophie did, should never be allowed.
No one doubts that separating a child from their parent is very hard on everyone, but
when the safety of the child is in question, we have to take that seriously.
Detective Lee explains why it's necessary
to be vigilant around custody placements in any abuse case.
The fundamental aspect of that
that we really have to consider is,
in a case like this one,
where the only other family members that maybe could
take them just happen to be people
that you can reasonably expect
are going to align with the perpetrator and her narrative.
And they're like, well, we need to put the child
somewhere else.
Well, they're gonna start asking the family again, right?
And then maybe they go and they ask dad's mom,
like, hey, so this is paternal grandmother,
this is the mother of the accused individual.
Hey, can you watch her so that we can keep the separation
during this time?
Sure, I can do it.
She passes the home test.
Everything is good to go.
The child goes over there.
During the entire time she's there, she's being told, how could you ever say something
like that about your father?
He has done all these things for you.
You know what?
Santa Claus doesn't come around and give presents to little kids that tell lies like that.
You know, Jesus is watching.
He's not happy with you either. X, Y, and Z. So, they get told all of these things, and it creates us an additional
barrier for them. This manipulation is being applied across all forms of abuse,
but especially in these areas where, like, mom and aunt are going to have a vested interest
in controlling this narrative. And if it's not in manipulating the child to do something, it
interest in controlling this narrative. And if it's not in manipulating the child to do something, it is absolutely, it tracks that they would say, okay, we're still going to take her to the hospital.
We still believe that she has all these conditions. We still think Seattle Children's is the devil
because mom said that they are.
— Sophie's family has never given any indication now or then that they believe anything other than
that Sophie is a wrongly accused mother, meaning
they cannot be counted on to protect the girls from her.
Dr. McCotty himself, who both Sophie and her attorneys insisted was the one who really understood
Z's health, told the police that Z needed to be with an objective observer and that
if grandmother is going to be a bias observer, that is going to be a big, big problem.
Throughout the investigation, Anne and Sam
consistently reported behavioral issues in C,
which again, they appear to be interpreting
as evidence of her having H.C. episodes.
And they also report one very strange detail,
that C is trying to eat grass and paper.
The only other place a mention of such behavior shows up
is in a report that Sophie made to a representative
from the Developmental Disabilities Administration.
Now, there are several possibilities here,
the least likely being that C, out of nowhere,
started trying to eat grass.
The other two options are that Sam and Anne
knowingly lied to the police,
or that Sophie's influence on them during this time was so strong that they believed the behavioral issues they were witnessing in C were really symptoms.
Even then, this particular detail about her eating paper and grass is tough to get past.
Oh yes, and by the way, the supervision of Sophie with the girls, this was provided by a private
company.
Sophie was also allowed to bring food and drinks for the girls to these visits.
And this whole situation just sounds incredibly lax.
But these are the kinds of accommodations that money can buy you.
And that's not all it can do.
In April of 2022, a family court judge returned C&M to Sophie's care.
And the criminal charges were dismissed
the following summer. A local headline read, Renton Mother cleared in medical child abuse
case.
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which is the DCF side of the equation.
To try to make sense of these events,
we spoke to Olivia LaVoice,
the journalist who originally broke the story of this case.
— A case like this, particularly when there is
so much media attention, you know,
when the case is dismissed, it sends the message of,
okay, well, I guess the person didn't do it.
To the general person, right?
If you're hearing that the case is dismissed,
the average person is gonna say,
oh, well, there obviously wasn't evidence then.
So, knowing all that was in that search warrant,
I was really interested in trying to understand
what had happened in the last two years
to then get to that point.
Yeah, and were you able to discover anything
about why that got dismissed?
What I found was that initially the case was dropped down
from felony court to misdemeanor court.
So just thinking about it being dropped from a felony to a misdemeanor,
that in itself was really surprising.
I never was able to understand why that happened.
Prosecutor, no one from the prosecutor's office was ever able to say.
I mean, of course course they had their reasons,
but they just.
Didn't feel like sharing.
Didn't feel like sharing, I guess.
But the implication is, well, obviously,
new information must have came up
that made the case not as strong or, you know, something.
Right, I mean, to think of it going from a felony
to a misdemeanor. like an anti-smoking gun
appeared sort of type thing like yeah yeah I mean it makes it means that the crime is less
serious in the eyes of the law so what happened to make this crime less serious legally. And so yeah, I never was really able to get
a clear understanding on that, which was frustrating.
But what I thought was really interesting
about the case being dismissed was
it was a conditional thing.
It was like, okay, both sides and the judge
were all agreeing to these conditions. like, okay, both sides and the judge
were all agreeing to these conditions. And if these conditions are met,
then the case will be dismissed.
Here are those conditions.
CH shall enroll in in-person education slash school
and will notify the state of the school slash school district
upon enrollment prior to September of 2022.
The defendant shall have CH continue to participate with the same care medical team and her primary pediatrician, Dr. Nauert.
The defendant will comply with the care team's recommendations.
Specifically, the defendant shall comply with the care medical team's recommendations related to CH's ingestion of food and water
and use of her sacostomy tube. The defendant shall not have CH use a wheelchair, unless recommended
by the care team. The defendant shall not make any medical decisions for CH. Ann Hartman or Samantha
Ferris will have medical decision-making authority for CH. The defendant may attend CH's medical
appointments. And interestingly, this last one,
the defendant shall comply with an order
to surrender weapons.
Because the relevant back and forth happened
in family court, we can't say for sure
why Sophie's children were returned
or why exactly the charges got dropped.
But I can offer some insight.
This is the exact path my sister's case went down
and unfortunately the way many of them play out.
For the most part, family court judges just don't understand what this abuse is or how to handle it,
as evidenced by their truly bananas placement and supervision decisions in this case.
If family court gives the kids back, it means that DCF has failed to establish dependency
for which you only need a preponderance of evidence, not evidence beyond a reasonable doubt. Now, it's not impossible to prevail in
criminal court in such a scenario. The Danita Tuck case in Texas is one example,
but it's definitely an uphill battle, and it's not a chance that many
prosecutors want to take.
Prosecutors are not going to file charges if they don't think they have a really strong case.
That was something that I keep in mind always, but particularly with a case like this,
they knew that this case was going to be a big media story.
And they also knew that this case was complicated and not something that their prosecutors, I think,
had a ton of experience in.
And she had good lawyers.
So it's a big deal to file charges.
You're not going to do that if you don't think
that case is really strong.
But on the other hand, I also feel
that with the case that has gotten media attention,
that people care about, they know about,
to dismiss that case is also a really, really big deal.
And if I'm prosecutors, I'm not going to dismiss that
case unless I really think the case sucks and has no shot. And, you know, did they dismiss it because
they thought, well, at least we could get her to agree to these conditions? I don't know. It's a pretty crazy situation.
And I think it's also a really unpleasant scenario
for anyone to think about any case in general.
We know this happens, but it's unpleasant to think
of a case where prosecutors dismiss it,
even though they believe that the person is guilty
of the allegations, but they just can't prove it.
So this case did get media attention,
but this happened in the summer of 2021.
There was a lot going on.
So I don't know if there was much outrage left
in folks for this case getting dismissed.
I mean, I certainly found some despair,
but you know, that's me.
And I think Olivia is right,
that most people see a headline that says Mom Cleared
and assume, okay,
these accusations must have been wrong.
And Sophie's well-off parents
appear to have circled the wagons.
They reportedly spent millions of dollars on her defense.
And this didn't even go to criminal trial.
So what did they spend that money on?
Well, for one thing, hiring experts
such as Dr. Eli Neuberger,
whose name you may recognize as he pops up
in just about every high-profile Munchausen by proxy case, including the Maya Kowalski
case where he was paid $160,000 for his deposition on behalf of the Kowalskis.
Dr. Eli Neuberger, who passed away this year, was himself a fascinating character, and I
will certainly devote an episode to him at some point, but needless to say, I was not
surprised that he showed up in this case. They also likely spent a good portion
of this money on their top-shelf lawyers. Their lead attorney, Adam Shapiro, I happen
to know is very expensive because he also represented my sister Megan in both of her
investigations. And Sophie didn't just have Megan's lawyers. She had Meghan herself, who actually worked on this case,
and reportedly became quite close with the Hartmans. If you've been listening to this show for a while, you know that I have very strong feelings about what is and is not responsible true crime content.
Maybe you've heard me make some pointed comments about the producers of a certain film, or
perhaps you've heard one of my dozen or so rants about a certain journalist whose
name rhymes with Schmeich-Schmeichsenbach.
And if you've been with me for a while, you'll also know that getting Nobody Should Believe Me On The Air was quite the rollercoaster.
Podcasting is just the Wild West, y'all.
And these experiences are what led me to launch my new network, True Story Media,
where we are all about uplifting true crime creators doing the work and making thoughtful, survivor-centric shows. And I could not be more thrilled to announce
our very first creator partner, You Probably Think This Story's About You.
The first season of this enthralling show from breakout creator Brittany Ard
took podcasting by storm in 2024. Zooming to the number one spot in the charts on
Apple and Spotify, as Brittany revealed the captivating story of a romantic
deception that upended
her life and traced the roots of her own complicated personal history that led her there.
Brittany is back in 2025 with brand new episodes, this time helping others tell their own stories
of betrayal, heartache, and resilience.
If you love Nobody Should Believe Me, I think you will also love You Probably Think This
Story's About You for its themes of deception, complex family intrigue, and its raw, vulnerable The at the link in our show notes.
The evidence that I've seen in this case seems overwhelming. And even though the case was dismissed,
the court appears to know that something was wrong.
Otherwise, why tell Sophie that she needs to put her daughter in school,
comply with the doctor's feeding recommendations,
and, you know, not put her in a wheelchair?
And with all of this, why would her parents continue to support her?
What were they thinking?
We did reach out to the Hartmans, as well as Sophie's sister, Sam Ferris, but we never
heard back from any of them about doing an interview.
So I did the next best thing.
I asked my own dad, Mike Dunlop, why he hired Adam Shapiro.
I'm Andrea Dunlop why he hired Adam Shapiro. I'm Andrea Dunlop's father, been her father for a long time, in fact, ever since she was
born and so that's who I am.
I walked my dad through all of the many parallels with this case and the one in our family.
And now my parents never thought Megan was innocent, as Sophie's parents appear to, but
they did make the very same phone call to Adam Shapiro that the Hartmans did.
Well, what I told the attorney, I told Shapiro, this is what I want.
I want Megan to get treatment.
There's no doubt in my mind she's seriously ill.
And his job is to make sure that she gets treatment.
And unfortunately, he went completely against my wishes
and he sort of claimed that he is representing Megan,
even though I was paying the bills.
Right, and I think they have to do that.
I mean, I don't think you can,
but he should have, I suppose,
I mean, if he gave you the impression
in your first conversations with him that he could do that, that he could mean, if he gave you the impression in your first conversations
with him that he could do that, that he could, like, because you were paying the bills, sort
of act on your behalf, I mean, I don't think that would be legal or ethical.
Well, it's not.
It wasn't.
It was what I wanted him to create as an outcome and to first, you know, this was an incident
that we could utilize to help Megan.
And that was...
Right, sort of things have come to a head now.
Yes.
And she needs legal representation because it's in the hands of the state.
And one of the things I've compartmentalized is the horror that this man, in my opinion, could, you know, not represent her best interests,
in my opinion, but actually defend her
against something that she did.
And then has now tried to make a career out of it.
If it sounds like we were woefully naive
about all of this, we were.
We had never had any interactions with DCF If it sounds like we were woefully naive about all of this, we were.
We had never had any interactions with DCF before the first investigation into my sister
14 years ago.
And though I disagreed with my dad's decision to hire attorneys for Megan and her husband
Andy in the beginning, all these years later, now that I'm a parent myself, I understand.
He wanted to protect his child and his grandchild.
He thought he could influence the outcome. And when he realized he couldn't, he stopped paying Adam Shapiro's bills.
But Shapiro has stuck around. And he's done a lot of work on my sister's behalf. He also defended
her in the second investigation over my niece. And he sent me various cease and desist letters
over the years. I suspect it's likely that some of this work has been pro bono,
and he and Megan obviously became close,
which could explain how she got hired on the Hartman case,
despite having, to my knowledge, no legal training.
I can understand Sophie's family being in shock when this all came up,
and for doing what people with means usually do in a legal crisis,
lawyering up.
It's really difficult to accept that someone you love could be capable
of this, and I understand parents wanting to protect their daughter. So I can forgive
them for not knowing what to do right away, just as I can forgive my brother-in-law and
his parents for not seeing what we saw right from the beginning. What I can't forgive
is staying in denial and letting the children suffer while you're presented with more and
more evidence that something is wrong.
The first investigation into Megan, prompted by her push for the G-tube surgery, came to,
well, not much.
After an eight-month investigation, DCF declined to file dependency, meaning that Megan would
regain full custody of her son.
There was no criminal investigation this first time, though there should have been.
Whether it would have made a difference is another question altogether.
My parents and I had been thoroughly iced out by the end of the first investigation.
We were the enemy who'd accused Megan of abuse.
But from what the social worker was able to share with us, it sounds like the court essentially
told Megan that she needed some therapy.
Megan frames this first investigation as going nowhere because DCF found no evidence of abuse.
But a great many DCF investigations end this way,
with a parenting plan and nothing further.
And given how prevalent the idea of medical child abuse
being a matter of a mom's mental health is,
I can't say I'm surprised with this outcome.
My parents and I were bereft
when DCF didn't file for dependency.
They'd revealed to
Megan and her husband early on that my mom had told the doctors about her concerns, and this
revelation had blown up my family. And then they hadn't done anything to protect the kids.
But then, not long after this all happened, my father got a message from my sister's husband,
Andy. He'd been on his own journey of revelation with Megan, completely separate from the abuse investigation.
Megan's crippling debt, much of this from unpaid medical bills, had come to light and
there were threats, Andy told my dad, to garnish his wages.
This was bizarre because my dad had asked Megan many times to send him all of her remaining
bills and he'd pay them. But of course, then he'd see them, so maybe not such a mystery why she didn't share.
And it wasn't just the money.
In a detail that I thought was a bizarre outlier to Meghan's story, until I heard it from
multiple other fathers who'd been married to perpetrators, Andy had discovered evidence
of numerous affairs.
We were honestly relieved when this all came out, because Megan couldn't blame any of
this on us.
And now that Andy had seen how deceptive she could be with his own eyes, he'd come around,
right?
In a lengthy series of emails between him and my father, Andy tells him that he wants
to help us reconcile with Megan.
He said he knows Megan needs help, but he continues to insist that she'd never lie
about her child's health, that their son really does have all of these issues.
In that case, my dad writes to him, please send us his medical records so we can see
for ourselves and put our concerns to rest.
He refuses, telling my dad that it's quote, not appropriate to share them with
him, which is pretty rich coming from someone who is hitting up his estranged father-in-law
for money. The back and forth continues until Andy arranges a meeting with him, my father,
and Megan.
Their whole motivation was how can we sue the hospital? Yeah. I mean, were you surprised at the gall of that?
I mean, it's like they were in a...
It's not surprising in the context of Megan and her behavior, but like...
It's a sort of a shocking move in some ways, you know?
Andy saw it as a ticket out of their financial problems.
So they wanted you to fund their legal pursuit
of suing Children's Hospital for falsely accusing her.
And what did you have to say to that?
I said, no, I believe that what they said is correct.
And I have no intention of doing that.
And I think that's extortion. That's not I think that is, that's extortion.
That's not just, that's doing, that's extortion.
You're trying to get money out of them
when you have no rationale for it whatsoever.
I believe, but I mean, was that your last conversation with Megan?
Yeah, I said goodbye and I, to be honest,
I didn't expect to see her again.
To be honest, I didn't expect us here again. [♪Music playing.♪
Any family member who finds themselves in this situation faces a horrible choice.
Do the right thing to protect the children and risk your relationship with the perpetrator,
or look the other way and become an enabler of the abuse.
And if the state doesn't do anything, or if they're not successful in court,
you lose
both your family member and their children forever.
And as the children's aunt and grandparents, we don't have any rights.
So speak up or don't.
It's a hard choice, but to me, it's a clear choice.
You don't ignore it when children are being harmed.
Meghan's husband and his parents chose denial, and I will never forgive them."
But Sophie's parents were in a different position than mine. For one thing, there was no partner,
and no in-laws who could provide support if they didn't, and they were paying Sophie's legal bills.
Otherwise, she wouldn't have been able to afford Shapiro or Megan to come in and bend the system to
her will. So while I can afford them their initial shock,
they were sitting in these hearings.
They've seen everything I've presented to you in this series
and likely much more,
because nothing from the actual dependency proceedings
is in the public record.
And when you keep supporting someone long past
when you should have known better,
as I discussed with my mom, Karen,
you're no longer just enabling abuse.
You're participating in it.
You've been presented with so much evidence about the abuse,
so much evidence about her deception,
and you have chosen to disregard all of that
and give her the ability to keep doing this.
I mean, somebody, it's like, that's the thing,
and you know it's come down to the same thing with Sophie. Somebody has to keep paying the bills. Like eventually
if you run out of people who are supporting you if you get to the end of the line so it's like
the people who are like the people who are doing that like you are supporting an abuser. You're
giving them you might as well be handing them
the weapon, you know, it's sort of like that is the weapon.
I have mixed feelings about Andy's parents frequently
and sometimes I feel really sorry for them
because oh my gosh, what did they get into?
On the other hand, I'm really angry
because they were and are in a position to protect the kids and they wouldn't step up.
So, but I think for like grandparents and aunts, like even, you know, if they're listening, like,
I hope that they are telling those kids that they have attributes other than being sick, that they are capable, that they are whole people
who deserve love and recognition,
and they've failed them in so many ways,
but I hope that they are still,
because we didn't get that chance.
We didn't get that chance to love them and care for them.
And I, we were so villainized
and really watching, for me watching you and dad I... We were so villainized and like
really watching, for me watching you and dad be villainized when like I know what good parents you were
and grew up in the same house and like I know how much we would have loved
to be in those kids' lives.
Oh, we would have loved it.
And they missed out on so much.
Yeah, I feel like
we had so much love to give and didn't have the opportunity.
So when I think about how much we love your kids now and how much we enjoy spending time with them
and it's such a special relationship.
And you know, and it's just a shame that Megan's children have missed out on that, and we've missed out on that.
The son is a teenager. He has access to the internet.
Like, he could be listening and figuring things out, and like, what would you want to tell them now?
And then what do you hope for them in the future?
I hope for good health, mental and physical. I think they have to be so traumatized.
And I hope they are able to see the situation at some point for what it really is and was.
Maybe they'll listen to your podcast and realize that people did see, people did care, and
we did all we could do.
I hope that someday they realize that.
At the heart of this work that has become so central
to my life, it has always been this,
a message to my niece and nephew,
a way back if they should ever be looking for it,
and a message to those who are still in their lives
to keep eyes on them, and to reinforce
that they are whole people, not just the story their mother wrote for them.
I felt a bit conflicted about covering this season's story because I don't have the
cooperation of the family, but I ended up feeling that it was all the more important
because I believe the Hartmans have turned their back on these children.
Anne and Sam eventually went back to Michigan.
The conditions we explained earlier in this episode stayed in place for some period of time,
but were ultimately lifted and the case was officially dismissed with prejudice,
meaning it can't be brought back to court in November of 2023.
The children are back with Sophie,
more isolated now than they were before.
And Sophie didn't just follow my sister's footsteps in her battle to get her children
back.
She kept on with the Meghan Carter playbook.
Next step, sue everyone.
Next time.
So her attorneys are definitely going to, and they did in their documentation, they use very inflammatory language, they make it seem like it's a conspiracy,
they're on an absolute lack of evidence.
Nobody Should Believe Me is written, hosted, and executive produced by me, Andrea Dunlop.
Our senior producer is Mariah Gossett, story editing by Nicole Hill, research and fact
checking by Erin Njiajie, and our associate producer is Greta Stromquist.
Mixing and engineering by Robin Edgar.
Administrative support from Nola Carmouche.
Special thanks to my APSAC committee colleagues, Dr. Jim Hamilton and Detective Michael Lee.
Thank you also to Olivia LaVoice and to my mom and dad. It was very special to be able to sit
down with them for the show and we will be releasing those full conversations in a future episode.
If you or anyone you know is a victim or survivor of medical child abuse,
please go to munchausensupport.com to connect with professionals who can help.
If you've been listening to this show for a while, you know that I have very strong feelings about what is and is not responsible true crime content. Maybe you've heard me make some pointed comments
about the producers of a certain film,
or perhaps you've heard one of my dozen or so rants
about a certain journalist whose name rhymes
with Schmeich Schmeichsenbach.
And if you've been with me for a while,
you'll also know that getting Nobody Should Believe Me
on the Air was quite the roller coaster.
Podcasting is just the Wild West y'all.
And these experiences are what led me to launch my new network, True Story Media,
where we are all about uplifting true crime creators, doing the work, and making thoughtful
survivor-centric shows. And I could not be more thrilled to announce our very first creator partner,
You Probably Think This Story's About You. The first season of this
enthralling show from breakout creator Brittany Ard took podcasting by storm in 2024. Zooming to the
number one spot in the charts on Apple and Spotify as Brittany revealed the captivating story of a
romantic deception that upended her life and traced the roots of her own complicated personal history that led her there. Britney is
back in 2025 with brand new episodes, this time helping others tell their own stories of betrayal,
heartache, and resilience. If you love Nobody Should Believe Me, I think you will also love
You Probably Think This Story's About You for its themes of deception, complex family intrigue,
and its raw, vulnerable storytelling.
You can binge the full first season and listen to brand new episodes each week by following
the show on Spotify, Apple, or wherever you get your podcasts.
You can also find it at the link in our show notes.