Nobody Should Believe Me - S06 E07: Cleaning Out the Basement
Episode Date: July 31, 2025Mishelle recounts how she and her sister, Angellyn, stumbled upon their past medical and court records while helping Lisa and Carey move. This discovery prompted the sisters to reach out to people who... could offer a perspective unfiltered by their mother’s influence: Judy, the PICU nurse who once treated Angellyn, and Bea Yorker, the Munchausen by proxy expert who testified against Lisa more than twenty years ago. *** Justice for Collin: Contact Birmingham PD https://docs.google.com/document/d/1tEg2mpbrwNJnuVMNdbHANCofEFYvH9_bO5MULHUxqLs/edit Order Andrea's new 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. *** This season covers sensitive subject matter involving allegations of child abuse, medical child abuse (also known as Munchausen by proxy), and the death of a minor. All information presented is based on court records, first-person interviews, contemporaneous documentation, and publicly available sources. The podcast includes personal statements and perspectives from individuals directly involved in or affected by these events. These accounts represent their experiences and interpretations, and some statements reflect opinions that may be emotionally charged. Where appropriate, the reporting team has verified claims through official records or corroborating sources. Nothing in this podcast should be interpreted as a legal conclusion or diagnosis. All subjects are presumed innocent unless convicted in a court of law. This podcast is intended for informational and public interest purposes. This podcast contains audio excerpts from two phone conversations recorded in the states of Georgia and Alabama, respectively. Both recordings were obtained by a third-party source, who acted in accordance with the relevant one-party consent laws of those states, which allow for the lawful recording of a conversation with the consent of one participant. These recordings were subsequently shared with the producers of this podcast after the fact, and were not made by or at the direction of the podcast team or its parent organization. The podcast producers have made good-faith efforts to confirm the legal compliance of the original recordings, and are presenting these materials in the context of public interest reporting. The inclusion of this audio is intended for journalistic, educational, and documentary purposes in alignment with the principles of fair use and First Amendment protections. Listeners are advised that the views expressed in the recordings are those of the individuals speaking and do not necessarily reflect the views of the producers or affiliated entities. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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True Story Media
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 munchausensupport.com to connect with professionals who can help.
Once Michelle told Lisa about the podcast, Lisa tried everything she could to stop Michelle from digging.
She made empty offers to go to therapy and tried guilt-tripping Michelle about how Lisa would lose everything,
about how it would hurt not only her and Carrie, but Michelle's sister Angelin as well.
But Michelle kept looking for answers, which led her to call Dr. Jane Ness, who, after making the series of stunning disclosures we heard in the last episode,
told Michelle she would do anything she could
to help her get to the bottom
of what really happened to Colin.
And after Michelle hung up with Ness, she called me.
To say I'm on the edge of my seat is like,
I'm off my seat, I'm off my chair, I'm out the door.
Well, I mean, she started out being very as vague as what she could,
but then it dawned on me very quickly.
I'm sitting there and I'm looking at Brent
and I'm just like, am I losing my mom?
Because this sounds like she's telling me point-blank, she knew.
She kept bringing up the line infection.
She kept saying the line infection didn't make it.
any sense. She brought up sepsis, his gut problems. She said, I couldn't make sense of the gut
problems he kept having. Oh my God. Both Michelle and I were stunned by What Ness told her,
because neither of us thought we'd get these kind of answers from someone who'd been right
at the center of Collins' care. And while What Ness told her gave Michelle a sense of validation
and relief, it also brought into sharp focus the scope of how the medical system
had failed her brother. He'd seen dozens of doctors during his treatment, and none of them
intervened. And the sense of gratitude, Michelle felt for Dr. Ness's frank disclosures, quickly curdled.
Because as a doctor, you'd take it us to protect kids, and she didn't, she didn't protect kids,
she didn't protect my brother, she didn't do her job to the fullest extent, she didn't report.
There are probably hundreds of things she could have done to intervene to save my brother's life.
and she should have, and she did not.
But at the end of the day, she was a doctor.
And not just her, but like multiple doctors.
There were so many people involved in this
that should have done their damn jobs, and they didn't.
I had all the empathy in the world for her
and just how difficult it is,
because it's rare that you encounter somebody in this world
that is willing to take responsibility to that degree
and willing to admit, like, I should have done more.
my mother tortured my brother and these doctors and this hospital went along with it and they co-sunded on it and they helped her torture him
and the longer it sits with me and the more i think about all these things that that doctor said the more i am so pissed off
because he shouldn't have died he shouldn't have died he wasn't supposed to die
there was intervention in my sister's case and it did save her fucking life but nobody did that for
my brother and honestly fuck the judges who gave us back fuck the judge who decided it was okay for
this woman to walk around and have another child in her house fuck the people who didn't follow up
fuck the people who didn't bother to listen to outcries and please for somebody to intervene
Doctor Ness got a phone call from another doctor
and it still wasn't enough for her?
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.
Many of you know that I have a new book out this year called The Mother Next Door,
Medicine, Deception, and Munchausen by proxy, which I co-authored with friend of the show, Detective Mike Weber.
Did you know that it's also an audiobook, that I narrated?
All true.
You can find the Mother Next Door, Ears Edition, anywhere you find audiobooks.
Now, here's a sample.
Unlike with Hope, there was no carefully crafted facade of a loving mother doing her best.
Brittany's abuse was in plain sight, observable by all who interacted with her.
But no one knew what to do.
It seemed impossible to prove that Alyssa didn't have these medical issues.
And after all, why weren't the doctors doing something?
But even if people in Brittany's life suspected she was mistreating Alyssa,
they had no idea what she was truly capable of,
and the darkness in Brittany would shock them all.
In the 70s, four young women were found dead.
For nearly 50 years, their cases went cold.
I'm Nancy Hixed, a senior crime reporter for global news.
In the season finale of Crime Beat, I share how investigators uncovered shocking evidence of a serial killer.
And hear exclusive interviews with the killer's family.
Search for and listen to the full season of Crime Beat on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music,
or wherever you find your favorite podcasts.
As I've said in previous episodes, this story has been in the making for years.
I met Michelle before I even launched this podcast, way back in 2021.
This was not long after Michelle had moved back to Georgia and her parents had followed close behind.
Michelle remembers Carrie and Lisa claiming that because they had financially assisted with her divorce,
they were no longer able to afford their home in Alabama, which, if you'll remember, they were given for free.
Michelle, her husband Brent, and a now grown-up
Angeline, went to their parents to help them clear out for the move
and it was during all of this that they made an alarming discovery.
We were over there, like, helping them clean out the house
and get ready to get all their stuff out, really.
And it was me and my sister and Brent, I think, we're down there.
And I think my sister found them.
Like, she came across all these court records
and she was like, what is this?
And I knew immediately.
Like, I'll walk over and there's this.
It's like huge, like 1,500 page, if not more, stacker.
It was the same stack of records that actually Allie and her mom helped me.
Three thousand, three to five thousand pages, not 15.
This is Michelle, her husband Brent, and her friend Ali.
Yeah, they helped me put all of that into a computer to read digitally.
But they were just paper records that we found that my mom had just held on to for all these years.
And, I mean, this is like, I think the most recent one of those records were,
like 2003 and this would have been in like like it's 2018 that she just kind of
held on to them and like move states with them like all of this also happened in
Georgia this was a house in Alabama and so my sister's like holy crap what is this
and I'm like okay these are all the records these are all like your medical
records are in here the stuff where they took like DHR or Dfax or whatever CPS had
intervened like this is all these records and my sister had been asking for like
information because she also like had a lot of gaps in her memory. And so she had been like
questioning mom about like wanting to have a conversation with her about what happened to her
and like why it happened and all these things. And my mom just refused to do it. So when she found
these records, she's like, I'm keeping these. Like and so the first thing on her mind was like
getting these out of the house because I really felt like she deserved and like my own records
were in there. Like some of my like my psychological evaluation was in there. And I was like, we have
a right to look at these. And so we
grabbed them and stuffed them in the back
of her trunk. This discovery
was crucial to Michelle and Angelin
uncovering the truth about their own past
because memory, for all of us,
is an unreliable narrator.
But Lisa had worked so
hard to bury her past.
Why keep all of this?
Michelle's husband Brent has
thoughts. You've ever been to like a thrift
store? It was
several years of accumulated stuff.
Some of ours was down there, so a lot of theirs was down there,
our grandparent stuff was down there.
All of Colin's stuff.
I mean, we're talking down to the wreath that was at his funeral was still down there.
So, you know, every time we go downstairs to try and find a, I don't know, like a controller for a remote control car, here's this giant reminder.
Yeah, no, there was two of, and that's right.
There's just two giant reminders of like this very, very awesome moment.
His whole race car bed was still down there, I believe.
Yeah, all of his clothes.
Yeah, I mean, it was, it was, yeah.
full of stuff.
And she had decided at that point
she was getting rid of everything
that they couldn't take
and there was still a lot of things
that you wanted.
So that was really the background
for how we ended up down there
with them not there
and found the documents.
Looking back on it,
a little bit of context,
I wonder if that wasn't
entirely Lisa's intention
for us to find them.
And what do you think
are some reasons
that Lisa might have wanted
the girls to find us?
So to avoid the, what I'm sure is, it's a commonplace mistake that people make.
I'm by no means a psychologist or a psychotherapist and I'm not qualified to psychoanalyze anybody.
However, the folks who are qualified, what do they do?
They go to school and they train and they learn these, these behaviors, these habits.
They see a practical example of what they might encounter in the field.
I've spent over 10 years now analyzing that woman.
So I will give you my genuine thought.
Lisa is very, very concerned with her ability to control the narrative.
That's important to her.
And then if it was intentional, or even if it was subconsciously intentional, that was why.
It was very much about her controlling the narrative in some way.
It was a little bit more information because Angeline was looking.
were conversations had prior to this where Angela had asked questions and they were
being kind of froggy on the answer not really wanting to be 100% accurate or kind
of giving her just in general answers and then all of a sudden she finds a treasure
or other information yeah it's hard to it's hard to imagine I mean even into
your point like I think what I'm what's right you know the story is like the
moving with box like that's not a small amount of yeah things to move and
with like the physical copies it's kind of it's kind of really
And why would you take that with you?
I mean, you know, legitimately, the worst moment of your life,
why would you have such a visceral, physical manifestation of that in your home?
Munchausen by proxy abuse is characterized by intentional deception.
Perpetrators know what they're doing and they know it's wrong.
But they are also, as I've learned from my psychologist colleagues,
extremely adept at compartmentalization.
The museum of horrors that Lisa kept in her own basement is an almost too perfect metaphor for this.
Lisa had adeptly buried her past, rebranding herself not as a convicted abuser, but as a heroic advocate.
But ultimately, she knows the truth. She's just been keeping it in a literal box.
There's also the fact that Munchausen by proxy perpetrators get a thrill from deceiving people.
And I've never seen someone pull off quite the coup that Lisa has here.
Her horrific abuse didn't stop her from getting her kids back.
It didn't stop her from having another child
and then using his death to rebrand herself as a hero
and to cozy up to rich and powerful people like Victoria Jackson.
Maybe these reminders of her past were a point of pride,
evidence of just how much she could get away with.
But Lisa is also the architect of her own downfall,
to whatever extent that happens in the wake of this podcast.
Getting public records in Georgia is notoriously difficult.
They have some of the most onerous record laws in the country,
and there is no whisper of this case on the internet, at least not that I found.
Lisa kept this vast archive right in her own home for her daughters to find,
and one of those daughters couldn't let it lie.
And while there's no digital record of her previous crime,
Lisa left an extensive history of her potential abuse of Colin
in her endless interviews, blogs, and social media.
posts about him. My guess is she assumed no one would ever read all of this, but she guessed
wrong. And without these two pieces, this puzzle would not have been solvable. I always believed
what Michelle was saying, but without corroboration, I couldn't have reported on it. And as for the call
with Dr. Ness that help us put the remaining pieces of the puzzle together, well, Michelle didn't
call her at her office. She called her on her cell phone. And why did she have that number? Because years
ago, Lisa gave it to Brent in case their son happened to need a good neurologist.
Brent, by the way, wanted to make sure that you knew that, that Lisa knew that.
Lisa is a master at finding ways to blame other people for not only her misfortune, but her
own misdeeds.
But if she'd like to blame someone for all of this becoming public, she can, at long last,
take a look in the mirror.
Being a true crime podcaster is a weird job.
We've covered some cases on this show where things worked as they should,
but mostly we're a last resort when the system has failed miserably
when sunlight is the only tool left.
Lisa had a million chances to face the truth before it ended up here.
She didn't take them, and at some point it's too late for empty promises and guilt trips,
not that that stopped her from trying one last time when Michelle told her about the podcast.
just please ask, really think about that podcast, at least putting a pin in it for now
so we can get through some therapy because it is going to make a big difference in all of our lives.
Yours too, even though you may not see how much of the difference is going to be.
Mine, Angel is yours, it's going to affect.
Angel is future, it's going to affect your future, it's going to affect our future,
and your kids' future.
And we can all be in a better place to face it then if we wanted to.
That's all I ask at this point is just to really think about that.
But Michelle did really think about going public with this story.
She thought about it for years as she was putting the pieces of her own fractured past together.
Her mother wouldn't answer her questions, so she found other people to ask.
Such as Judy, the NICU nurse who had cared for Angeline,
whose name Michelle came across in the records from her parents' basement.
Michelle found me on Facebook and reached out to me and asked if I remembered and I was like,
oh my gosh. I ended up calling them and talking to them and I said, I have never forgotten
you, y'all, I've never forgotten you ever. They were stunned and very touched to hear that.
And so we corresponded back and forth through Facebook and through emails for a little bit,
probably like a year and a half maybe. And then, of course, I put her in touch with some of the
other nurses that really loved her and took care of her, which ultimately led to Angela and her
boyfriend coming to visit us. And we set up a tour for her at the hospital. We started a neonatal
and she got to meet some of her neonatal nurses because neonatal nurses at my hospital say there
forever. So they all remembered her. She got to meet all of the doctors that took care of her
personally. Got to hug them and shake their hand. And then she got a tour of the pick you. And then we all
met a few days later and sat around a table and took her to lunch. Now, at that particular time,
we had never told her what her mother had done. And apparently the way that they found me was
the mother was moving and they found a box in the basement. And it had a whole bunch of the
papers from that particular time. So they didn't really have any idea about all of that. And I
didn't feel like it was my place to tell
Angeline either. So that's
when I reached out to Dr.
B.
And put her in touch. And then
they started having conversations.
And I think that's how she got involved with the
support group. So at long
last, Michelle and Angeline met
the woman who'd been the villain in their house,
B. Yorker.
B. at this time, had just joined the board
of a brand new nonprofit called Munchausen Support,
and was heading up the pilot support group for the
organization, along with its founder, me.
The three of us recalled this fateful trajectory earlier this year at the American Professional
Society on the Abuse of Children's Annual Colloquium in San Diego.
Yes, that's how I first even learned that your sister was still alive, that you were okay,
and I gave the NICU nurse my email information, and I said, I would love to hear you.
from both of the girls.
So who did you hear from initially?
I remember hearing from Angel the first.
She emailed me, so we scheduled a FaceTime,
and it was very emotional.
It was just, oh my gosh, my biggest worry
because whenever you work in the field of child protection
and you make placement recommendations,
you just agonized, did I do the right thing?
and I had made that home visit.
So the last time I saw Angel and you
was when she was maybe 18 months old
at your grandparents.
See, I never realized you did a home visit on us.
Like, I somehow missed that.
Like, I never knew, and I guess that's it, right?
Like, I never knew for sure what your involvement was in reality
versus what I was told your involvement was, right?
Part of the emotion is that the last time that I had seen Angel
was she was 18 months old.
She had a hole for her trache.
She had to close her hole up to breathe in
and to be able to talk,
just like when you see people on television
who have a trache.
She had her beautiful little red ringlets.
She had a little walker that she used
because, to your grandparents' credit,
they took a medically fragile child
after she'd been in a medical foster home.
Then the grandparents said, we'll step up, we can do this.
I think B is the reason why my sister's here, absolutely.
I think, unfortunately, there was not a B. Yorker around when my brother was sick.
And I think that could have greatly impacted how things went with him.
And so I feel incredibly fortunate and so lucky.
And just I have so much gratitude for you to be here.
and a little bit of grief
because I wish my sister should be here too
she should be on that path of healing
and I hope in some world
she can hear me where I'm at now
and understand that there are people who care
there are people who really deeply care
in a way that she's never known
and they're here
and they will always be here for her
This summer went by so fast.
2025, it's both flying by and has already been 100 years long.
Don't ask me how.
I'm not an astrophysicist.
That's just my truth.
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I met Angeline at the same time I met Michelle. I would have loved to have her on this journey with us.
But for reasons we'll get to in a moment, this wasn't possible. After Angeline grew up and moved out of her parents' house, her life got complicated.
B has been in touch with Angela all these years as well, and she remembers seeing her in person for the
time as an adult.
I was in Georgia for a child abuse conference, and so we were emailing and I said, can
we meet?
I'll drive down to Macon and you said, yeah, I'll drive us up to Macon.
So we had a lovely lunch together.
Angel was pregnant and that was before we had made decisions and sort of pressured her to make
decisions about putting her unborn baby in a safe place. And then I saw Angel again at the home
in Savannah, and that was lovely. She gave me a tour. I got to cuddle with her. Got to give her gifts,
and she showed me around, and she seemed in such a good place. I really agonized over whether or not
to include the details of Angela's story, and importantly, use her real name. I've known
Angelin for years, and I really care about her. When she got pregnant, B, Michelle, Judy, and I
coordinated to try to help her break free from her parents, finding her a safe place in a maternity
home in Savannah to spend her postpartum months. But despite our efforts, Angelin ended up right
back with Lisa and Carrie. You may have noticed a child's voice in some of the audio of Michelle's
confrontation with her parents. That's
Angeline's two-year-old son. He has flaming red hair and is the
spitting image of Colin. For Michelle, going
public was a last resort, and her nephew was a huge
motivator in this decision. No one intervened with her brother,
and now he's gone. And the people who failed him have been
able to keep their unforgivable negligence a secret.
Until now.
We've named Angeline here because as much as what happened to her,
should be her story to tell, it's a necessary piece of understanding what happened to Colin
and what could happen to her own children under Lisa and Carrie's roof.
Allowing Lisa to bury what she did to Angeline, to rebrand it as a little mental health
crisis that she has, in her words, worked so hard to overcome, has allowed her to continue
on in this world unchecked. Telling this story here is Michelle's attempt and mine to see
that history doesn't repeat itself. And hopefully, if Angeline does live,
listen, she too will know that there are so many people who care about her and people who fought for her.
One of the confusing things when we all met and we were seeing each other in a support group
is that I had not known about Colin until that group, until that group.
And I also realized when you guys saw the medical records that you felt like we had a
abandoned you after they moved with Colin.
And let me just tell you,
NICU nurse, she went up to the state level in Georgia
to try and protect Colin.
I have a letter that I will share
that shows how fiercely
cared about Colin being born
and your parents taking you across state lines.
Did you know that before?
No, I knew
I knew my
she always followed my sister
but I had no idea that she
tried to intervene
with her brother that way.
Like that is just
I do know how to process that
because it just brings the question, right?
Like there were people, there were, I mean, she was a NICU nurse.
She saw who my mother was
and things she did.
Why was her opinion on enough?
You know what I mean?
Like it just, it makes me grateful
there was always somebody who truly looking out
even when we didn't know it, but at the same time, it makes me furious because there was no
follow-up, there was no follow-through, and, like, there was somebody telling them to do this
follow-through, and still nobody, you know, cared enough to do anything about it, and that
just, wow. And to me, it speaks of how devious parents can be when they cross state lines.
They know, they know that they cannot be followed.
We see so many perpetrators cross state lines in these cases, and because of these massive holes in the system, their pass, especially with child protective services, often simply evaporate the moment they move. It's maddening.
In this period of discovery, both girls got to see and reconnect with Judy and fill her in on what else had happened.
And when they came to visit, after we all went out to lunch, we walked in the park. They told me a lot of
stuff Angela did, and then Michelle did on the phone about lots of things that had happened over
those years, and that they also thought that their mother had been doing some things to their
brother.
And the implications of Lisa's career trajectory after Colin's death were deeply unnerving.
But the fact that how she got to that place by what she did to her children is just, I mean,
if I knew someone was having lecturing.
me in a big hall with a whole bunch of other nurses or doctors, and then after the lecture
was over, you know, by the way, and then after I heard that, I would think everything that that
person just talked to me about is gone. They have no credibility, none. I think it's terrifying.
What Judy is referring to here is Lisa's position as the Director of Patient Advocacy for the
Guthy Jackson, which was established by Bill Guthey and Victoria Jackson, two extremely successful
marketing entrepreneurs, whose daughter, Ali, was diagnosed with neuromyelitis optica in
February of 2008, just a month before Colin. By August of that year, the foundation had been
established and was up and running. Many families launched nonprofits dedicated to a cause that
has personally impacted them, but this is no small-scale effort. Since its inception, Guthey Jackson
has invested more than $70 million into NMO research, funded more than 90 research studies
at universities and clinics worldwide, and formed an international panel to revise the diagnostic
criteria for NMO, designed and recruited patients for clinical trials, and helped to develop three
NMO therapies that were approved by the FDA in 2019 and 2020.
Patients and caretakers have always played a big role in Guthey Jackson's work.
They hosted their first patient day in Los Angeles in November 2009, where they brought patients
and families to meet with a panel of world-class doctors and experts that they'd rallied to help
find better treatments, and hopefully a cure, for the rare disease that their daughter was
diagnosed with. Lisa writes about attending this and many subsequent patient days with Guthie
Jackson, and she's even featured in video footage of the event.
My name is Lisa McDaniel. I think I know most of you. My project right now is called
Lunch and Learn, and what I do is I go out and I talk to doctors and hospitals,
really anybody who wants to listen to me in my southern charm, right? So,
The way I started was with my son's pediatrician.
I asked her, told her what I was going to do,
I asked her about coming into her office
and just tell them a little bit more about NMO.
Because as you guys know, sometimes our doctors don't know.
And as patients and advocates,
we have the responsibility to teach our doctors.
In its early years, the Guthey Jackson Foundation
was mostly funded by Victoria and Bill's massive personal wealth.
Both members of the couple are very successful entrepreneurs.
She and cosmetics and Bill as one half of the direct-to-consumer giant Guthy Rancor.
My fellow millennials will almost certainly remember the ubiquitous, proactive infomercials of the 1990s and early 2000s.
That's Guthy Ranker.
Though both parents funded the Guthy Jackson Foundation, it's Victoria who's become the face of the organization, writing two books about the foundation and its origins, and giving dozens of interviews on the topic.
Victoria is easily the most prominent voice on the topic of MMO.
Lisa appears to have attached herself to this foundation from the moment it existed,
and it's easy to see why Victoria made such a compelling target,
and Lisa wasted no time in cozying up to her.
In a post not long after the first patient day, she writes,
I was able to talk to Victoria Jackson after Dr. Greenberg.
She assured me she is willing to do whatever needs to be done
to make sure Colin gets what he needs and goes where he needs to go.
She is an amazing woman, and she is on a mission to find a cure.
So lovely, so caring, so compassionate, and a mom to a 16-year-old daughter with NMO.
She understands.
Here's Victoria herself, giving Lisa a shout-out during their 2018 patient day.
Lisa McDaniel, who has been with us from the beginning, Lisa.
She obviously the most painful.
of losses, her son, Colin, and she has been extraordinary and there for so many patients
and we're so grateful.
This couple is not only wealthy and powerful, but extremely celebrity adjacent.
Guthey launched the career of controversial self-help guru Tony Robbins in the 1990s and helped
Cindy Crawford launch her wildly successful makeup line.
Victoria counts Ellen DeGeneres and Megan Markle, pardon me, Megan Sussex, as close friends.
Degeneres has also shown support for her work with Guthy Jackson, as have Reese Witherspoon, Monica Lewinsky, and Dustin Hoffman, who is also an early donor to the foundation. You get the picture.
The celebrity connection wasn't lost on Lisa, who shared Guthy Jackson's video testimonials with Witherspoon and Hoffman, and there'd already been some celebrity cameos in her story, with the NASCAR trip that was gifted to the family where they got to meet several famous drivers.
This, too, is a part of the Munchausen by proxy pattern.
There are frequent celebrity cameos in these stories, often in the context of visiting with sick
children, but also in admiring their heroic mothers.
My sister has beloved ex-Seahawk Richard Sherman, Megan and Jen Beery, who were featured
in the excellent podcast Believe in Magic, had one direction.
Kathy Bush, who positioned herself as an advocate for health care reform and was later convicted
for abusing her daughter, got a meeting with no less than Hillary Clinton while she was
First Lady. It was through Guthey Jackson that Lisa also got access to two of the most high-profile
doctors in the field who had pioneered the research around NMO, Dr. Dean Wingerchuk and Dr. Benjamin
Greenberg, who is seen talking to Lisa in a video from one of the patient days and who later
consulted with Dr. Jane Ness about Colin. And Guthey Jackson gave Lisa a platform to tell Colin's story,
or at least her version of it, to tens of thousands of people. His name and his likeness have
been used in their fundraising.
How did this ever happen?
Because my work does not know about all this shit.
My work does not know about my past.
I've tried to tell them before, but they are like it is not relevant at this point,
but they don't know what it is either.
If they knew what it was, they may not feel that way.
I don't understand.
I mean, I just, I get that.
It's really irrelevant, my opinion.
I don't think, I don't understand why they wouldn't.
No, I mean, I'm not saying what you're saying.
I'm saying, I don't understand why they wouldn't have done a background
taking me in the first place and then have it cleaned it before hiring you,
but we're past that point.
But it really doesn't matter.
I mean, I get, they never asked her about that.
I get it, they didn't, but I just feel like that's such an oversight.
I just can't comprehend that.
Lisa's fears that she would lose her job when this went public appeared to have been well-founded.
Within 24 hours of my contacting them, Lisa and Colin had mostly disappeared from
the Guthey Jackson website. And according to Michelle, Lisa had been fired. And we received a statement
almost immediately from Victoria Jackson, which I'll quote here. First and foremost, I appreciate
you reaching out and informing us of this shocking information. We had absolutely no knowledge of this.
As a result of receiving this troubling information, we are taking all appropriate action
effective immediately. Our mission to find a cure remains our focus for all patients affected by NMO.
In a follow-up email about Lisa's claims that they did not run a background check on her, they said this.
While we follow all applicable local state and federal laws in terms of background checks in our hiring process,
clearly her being able to join the Guthy Jackson Charitable Foundation is something that should never have been able to happen,
especially given the incredibly sensitive world in which we operate.
They also reiterated that they're taking steps to make sure nothing like this ever happens again.
There's no legal requirement to do a background check, but there are plenty of other very good reasons to do one, especially for someone who's in a highly sensitive and very public-facing role as Lisa was.
Guthey Jackson did not directly respond to Lisa's statement that she had tried to tell them, but this is rather moot.
If Lisa mentioned anything about her past to anyone at Guthey Jackson, it was almost certainly the sanitized and minimized version of the story that she's been telling other people for years.
because as she said herself, if they had known what she'd really done,
it seems wildly unlikely that they would have been willing to overlook it.
Hiring Lisa was a bad mistake, but I also see how it happened.
The information about Lisa's previous conviction was not very accessible,
and it didn't come up on a basic background check.
And the people at Guthey Jackson had known Lisa as a parent
and then as a volunteer for the organization for years before they hired her.
I cannot say that I would have done things differently in their position.
I mean, okay, I would have after years of making this show.
But in the absence of that, what would ever make them think that she was capable of what she'd done?
According to Guthey Jackson, they never received any complaints about her, which I completely believe.
Nothing about Lisa would hint at what she's capable of.
It's exactly why she's so terrifying.
The reality is that it likely never occurred to Victoria or anyone else to question Lisa.
Lisa. But unfortunately, charitable foundations and support groups dedicated to rare diseases
are a magnet for perpetrators. Make a Wish has shown up in many of the cases we've covered.
Then there were the AHC groups in Season 5 that provided support to Sophie Hartman.
And there are the even more disturbing groups such as Mito Action that provide specific advice
on dealing with, quote, false allegations of medical child abuse.
These groups provide funding, they provide legitimacy, and in the worst case scenario,
they provide ways for perpetrators to get information about how to pull off their charade to begin with,
and even to communicate with fellow perpetrators and find doctors who won't ask too many questions
or will just give them a specific diagnosis, as we saw with Biotta Kowalski getting her CRPS diagnosis from Dr. Kirkpatrick.
So then, it's especially chilling that Lisa had such a prominent role in this foundation for over 12 years,
where she was one of only a handful of staff. Lisa was entrusted with a lot,
including running support groups and networking with patients, caregivers, and in her words,
local advocates on behalf of the foundation. The damage Lisa has done to this organization and to this
entire community feels incalculable. The swath of destruction these perpetrators leave in their
wake is always massive, but I can't say I've ever seen anything like this case.
I genuinely feel for Victoria and for all of the people at Guthey Jackson who are now
learning this information, particularly the many caregivers and patients who have relied on Lisa over
the years for information and support. No one understands better than me how Lisa pulled this off.
She is a master manipulator. Even her younger daughter, who she likely would have killed if she
hadn't been stopped, got sucked back in as Judy reflects on. And then the other thing,
if you think about it, so in terms of Angela now grown up, where several years after that meeting,
We had another, you know, reached out to me and told me that she was expecting a baby, and I got, you know, very involved in that part.
But thinking about that part, too, where during that six-month period where I would come to visit her at the maternity home, and, you know, I'm sitting in the rocking chair.
She's on the bed, nurse and her baby, and we're just having these pretty intimate talks about lots of different things.
I just have a real problem with a lot of the things that we talked about
where her mother was desperately trying to get her to move back home
and using the same exact tactics just in a different way
because now she's dealing with a grown-up daughter,
not a vulnerable baby in a crib.
It was the same stuff.
It was just tailored to an adult daughter instead of a baby daughter.
A lot of the work around Munchausen by proxy
is rightfully focused on protecting children,
but the reality is that the psychological abuse
doesn't stop when someone turns 18.
Children are groomed by their abuser to remain under their control,
as we saw in the Gypsy Rose Blanchard case,
and as my colleagues and I have seen with countless other adult survivors.
Breaking free from an abusive dynamic with a parent
is often a lifelong endeavor for survivors.
And over the past few years,
Angeline just keeps slipping deeper back under her mother's spell.
And as I am recording this,
Angeline has just given birth to her second child, another son.
Neither of the fathers are involved.
Angelin is entirely isolated with Carrie and Lisa,
who was in the operating room during the birth.
This situation is terrifying.
Liz Sino, she has a lot of eyes on her,
although that didn't stop her before in the hospital.
But I'm mostly concerned because this new baby
at least she had left and he was six months old before she moved back home and then once
you know the defax report was made Lisa did not live in that home for a couple months
until she was allowed to come back and I guess DeFax felt like everything was fine
but that new baby is coming straight home to that house brand new baby and angeline will have
two children it's not like she can just worry about one kid so she's going to be split between the two
of them.
She's going to be able to watch as carefully as she thinks she will.
I did also, after the original defects report was made,
I reached out to the Office of the Child Advocate in Atlanta
and spoke to their senior investigator who put me in touch with the supervisor
in the county that they are living in,
and I had a long conversation with her about a lot of things
and never received any kind of response back after that.
But I put it out there, so she knows about it.
And the Office of the Child Advocate, that's a whole different story.
She's a wonderful person, and I've worked with her on a number of cases when I was working at the hospital.
And so it's on her radar.
Angelin is, by all accounts, a loving mother.
But living in the house with Lisa is like moving in with a grizzly bear
and hoping the baby gate that you put up will protect your children.
Lisa almost killed Angeline, and she should never have been allowed to be with children again.
The lack of eyes on Colin almost certainly led to his death.
To be honest, reporting on a story with stakes this high has been stressful,
but to my great relief, I am not alone this time,
as another journalist is covering this story as well.
Way back in the fall of 2023, I got a very nice email from a decorated television journalist in Augusta.
Meredith Anderson has won an Edward R. Murm.
Award, an Emmy Award, and too many others to list here.
In her email, she told me that she had recently found the podcast and binged it on a long
car ride.
She said that she knew I was feeling pretty disenchanted with the media.
I was covering the Kowalski case at the time, so yes, but that she found my work really compelling
and that I should let her know if I ever had a case in Georgia.
I called her up the next day and told her, boy, do I ever have a case in Georgia.
communities like Augusta can count themselves lucky that they have journalists like Meredith looking out for them.
Local journalism, which has all but disappeared from too many places, is one of the most effective ways to hold power to account.
Meredith has covered everything from hurricanes to the defrauding of military families, and, crucially for this story,
a number of cases where systemic failures led to the deaths of abused children.
So, in May, several months after our initial trip to Georgia, we headed to.
back to film with Meredith and her team.
Meredith and I sat down with Michelle for two and a half hours.
Do you think she caused his death?
Yeah.
How long did it take you to come to that conclusion?
I don't know that I...
I don't know that I said it out loud until the last five years.
You know, I wondered and I questioned.
He died in March 2012.
My daughter was born in August 2011.
So I was very postpartum and I was very, like, very young mom.
And didn't have the best relationship with my child's father at the time.
And, like, just was really questioned everything about myself.
And so it was like, I guess my mind was so twisted up and just so gaslit my whole life that, I mean, one day I would think there had to have been something to it.
Like, there's no way that he just died from this with no, without her doing something.
And then the next day it would be like, how could I ever think my way about my own mother?
I mean, it was just back and forth and this, like, deep internal struggle.
and there were parts of me that like legitimately
held a lot of guilt for even feeling that way about her
you know and just really I mean when you don't have that information
and you don't know what to call it and you don't have words for it
and all you know is like and there was a while where I started dig it
like I turned 18 and I got out and I moved out
and I started digging I mean and I was like
Googling everything I could and looking people up on Facebook
and went to like Telfare County
and dug up the old newspaper article of it just to like I was looking for any answer I could
because I knew at least at that point that my mom was a liar you know I knew that like her version
of events weren't exactly true but I didn't really know what the truth was either and I couldn't
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We returned to Hazelhurst, this time camera ready, and spent a long day filming with Meredith and her crew.
Shout out to her producer Estelle and her cameraman Hector.
And once again to the fine folks of Village Pizza.
Our PA for the day, Michelle's husband Brent, made an emergency run and brought back approximately 100 pies.
Michelle has come a long way since I first met her.
And even in the months since we first begin recording this podcast,
So it was such a beautiful full-circle moment
to hear her tell Meredith about this journey.
I'm very thankful for the support group and the therapy
and, like, I think it's of utmost importance.
Like, I really don't believe I would have been able to, like, move on with my life
and not be, like, stuck in that, just searching for answers
because, I mean, that's what...
How can you not?
How can you not look at all of this?
chaos and not want some sort of answer as to like how this happened or what happened or could
we have done more and like just to have to sit in that support group and watch all of these people
just not along and get it and not have to like explain in a hundred different ways and like again
like you're saying like there are people who are not going to understand like why I had any
relationship with my mom ever you know but like to hear all these other people
that just get it, that just understand like what that does to your brain and how
that makes you like doubt everything about yourself and everybody around you.
Is that why you're speaking out? Like are you wanting to give that to somebody else?
I think that's a huge reason why I'm doing it. There's two reasons. So that's like a big
one is I know what that was like for me.
And I know how just like everything in my life felt like it fell into place during those support groups and like just hearing it.
And like how it just started to fall into place and click and it was like I could breathe.
It was like literally for the first, it was like taking a deep breath for the first time because it all made sense now.
And it was horrible.
Like the reality of it is horrible and awful.
But at least it made sense.
At least there was like other people on the side of this instead of just being this lost girl and this.
town where nobody understands anything and the rumors and like everybody has their own opinion.
But another really big reason is because my brother should still be here.
My brother should be here and I'm fully convinced that there are other children that are still
slipping through the cracks that are still being harmed and that are still dying at the hands
of perpetrators, at the hands of doctors who don't report.
And if I can save even one kid, even one kid, it's worth it.
I know what it is to grieve someone who's still living,
to go through the years-long process of fully understanding the horror of what they've done.
Every interaction I've had with Michelle since we picked up the mics for this season
has told me that she's doing this for the right reasons,
and it certainly hasn't made her life easy.
But she lives down the street from you, right?
like how do you coexist um since i told her i was doing the podcast very little communication
um a lot of it there's a lot of like nuance that i i won't get into just for the sake of my kids um
But I'll just say she has a very keen way of getting inside your head
and threatening you without threatening you, if that makes sense.
It does.
But the other piece of how hard it's been is like
realizing that my brother could have been saved,
but he should have been saved and like realizing that.
There could be some pretty heavy consequences to speaking out.
Oh, yeah.
Andrea and I have talked, what if somebody opens an investigation into Collins' death?
I mean, we've kind of, have you thought of all the possible scenarios of what happens when this is released into the world?
I don't think there's a scenario I haven't thought about.
I think Andrea and I have talked about the podcast part of it.
it for years now.
I've taught
my therapists about it for well over a year.
I mean, there were sessions where I would literally
just say, okay, I just
need to talk about all the possibilities.
And I have examined it
every way I know how to.
And ultimately,
I'm not doing this to hurt her.
I'm not doing this to ruin her life.
I'm not doing this to go after her.
her because I'm capable of feeling more empathy for her than she's capable of feeling for me.
But at this point, I think it's about saving kids, and that may sound really dramatic,
but like, my brother should literally be here. And he's not. And there were so many people
who could have stepped in, who should have stepped in. And it was their literal job to step in
and they didn't.
And I, there's a lot of, like, talk about much of my products in the media.
There's a lot.
And I think it's really, really important to show people what happens.
You don't step up and you don't report.
And this goes unnoticed.
And it's looked over and it's given a million justifications and reasons why you shouldn't.
This is what happens.
There's talk about it, but there's not a lot.
There's a lot of talk about the other side of it, about medical kidnapping.
The landscape for that right now is, I mean, just Georgia.
Yeah.
There's been laws passed that kind of give parents more leeway, parents more rights, parents.
They're believing, I guess, when it comes down to investigations, you believe the parents sometimes more.
than the kids or the child abuse physicians.
And so do you think now is an important time to speak up,
especially since I mean, here we are in Georgia,
where it's almost like things are getting harder now
for these cases.
They're already hard enough to be prosecuted,
but it's getting even harder.
And I don't think enough people see real people talking
about the real consequences.
Then I know a lot of people who work as frontline,
you know, in child protection or who are child abuse
pediatricians or have, you know, those positions,
they understand that it's really traumatic
to take a child away from their parents.
And they understand that that alone causes harm.
But there are times when it has to be done.
And I think overall, we're totally losing sight of that.
And we're being asked to sympathize
with the parents' experience of being accused
of child abuse, of having to go
through a court battle of potentially losing their children, we're asked to be sympathized
with that, without presenting what that child is actually in dirt.
I am guessing that many of you are feeling pretty angry about the failures of the child
protection apparatus in Georgia after hearing this story. But as we allude to here, things are
unfortunately headed in the direction of making it harder to intervene in cases of suspected
child abuse, thanks in part to the high-profile Hernandez case. This is a complex story that
I may cover in a future episode, but the thing to know about it for right now is that this case
and the fervor over it has led to passing what's known as Ridge's law, which grants parents
the legal right to obtain a second medical opinion when suspected of child abuse. This law
might sound benign and sensible, but in practice, laws like this prioritize parental rights over
child safety and create additional bearers to emergency protective orders by slowing down the
process. In the hands of an abuser, it gives them an opportunity to shop for a favorable
opinion, a more thriving industry than you might imagine. And it further erodes trust in child abuse
pediatricians, despite their lower error rates in diagnosing child abuse. And so I think what Michelle's
doing is so important because Colin isn't here to say what he went to.
through. But Michelle watched it, other family members watched it. We have so much
information about what he endured. And right now the only person telling his
story is Lisa, the person who did it to him. And so it's a, it's an exact
parallel, right? Like we're letting his abuser own his story. And that's not right.
No, I just own it, but live a life because of it.
I mean, Lisa's entire career is based off of her experience as a caregiver for her son.
And she has built an entire brand and career off of that.
Well, if I didn't know anything about her, and I went to her Facebook page, her, one of the top pictures is Colin and
almost like a memorial to Colin.
So even as someone who doesn't know anything about her,
it's right there as like part of her identity,
what she presents to the world,
what she publicly puts to the world attached to her name
on her personal page is a memorial to Colin.
When she's done interviews about it,
she presents through her work to doctors about this.
She's had this job for 12 years.
The number of people who have talked to her, and that's been their point of contact,
and now they're going to find out that, I mean, this, like, she has done quite aside from all of her other misdeeds,
I mean, she has done irreparable damage to this community that has coalesced around this disease.
Because the betrayal of finding out, I mean, can you imagine?
that person that you leaned on for support
and that person who gave you the information
and that person maybe referred you to the doctor
that helped her do it.
After a long day of filming in Hazlehurst,
we turned in for the night
before heading out for our second day of filming in Valdosta.
For the duration of this season,
I'd been wondering when and how to reach out to Lisa.
I'd spent so many hours reading her words,
listening to her voice and interviews,
and talking to some of the people who'd known her best.
I felt like I knew her better than I wanted to.
But much as it is for the detectives who investigate these cases,
I knew I had to get the timing right.
I needed to know everything I possibly could before I spoke to Lisa.
Trying to get the truth out of a pathological liar is complicated.
But by May, when we took our second trip to Georgia,
we were coming up on our deadlines.
So it was now or never.
Speaking of Lisa, we're about to go knock on her door.
Do you think she's going to answer?
I mean, do you think she's going to be receptive?
I truly don't know.
I'm not sure.
I'm not sure I would be surprised by either outcome.
I think I could absolutely see her being saying, you know, I'm not going to talk to you
because your coverage is going to be so biased.
She knows the podcast is coming.
I suspect she'll kind of connect the dots that they're related,
but I think it will be interesting because the other thing about Lisa is
she likes attention and she likes the opportunity to bend the narrative in her direction.
So I don't know how that equation will play out kind of in real time when she's faced with that decision.
That's next time on the season finale of Nobody Should Believe Me.
Nobody Should Believe Me is written, hosted, and executive produced by me, Andrea Dunlop.
Our senior and executive producer is Mariah Gossett. Our producer is Taj Easton.
Assistant editor and associate producer is Greta Stromquist. Research and fact-checking by Aaron Ajai.
Engineering and mixing by Robin Edgar. And administrative producing by Nola Karmouche.
Music provided by Blue Dot Sessions, SoundSnap, and Slipstream Media.
I don't know.