SERIALously - 352: She Said it Was Self Defense: The Axe Murder That Shocked Suburbia | Candy Montgomery
Episode Date: January 1, 2026In the quiet Texas suburb of Wylie in the summer of 1980, two families were living side by side, sharing church pews, backyard conversations, and what looked like a simple, ordinary life. But beneath ...the surface, secrets were simmering. When Betty Gore was found brutally killed in her home, struck dozens of times with a wood-splitting axe, suspicion quickly turned toward someone no one expected: Candace “Candy” Montgomery, a friendly, well-liked woman from the community who had been entangled in a hidden affair with Betty’s husband. As Candy’s trial unfolded, her shocking claim of self-defense, and the details that followed, left the town divided and the nation captivated, forcing everyone to question how well we truly know the people living right next door... . If you’re new here, don’t forget to follow the show for weekly deep dives into the darkest true crime cases! To watch the video version of this episode, head over to youtube.com/@annieelise. . 🔎Join Our True Crime Club & Get Exclusive Content & Perks. . 🎧 Need More to Binge? Listen to both of my weekly true crime series 10 to Life & Serialously with Annie Elise wherever you get your podcasts on the Annie Elise Channel! 🍎 Apple Podcasts | Where you can also unlock access to 100+ and growing extra exclusive deep dives. 💚 Spotify 🔴 YouTube 🎙️ All Other Platforms . 📸 Follow Annie on Socials Instagram: @_annieelise TikTok: @_annieelise Substack: @annieelise Facebook: @10toLife . 👗 Shop Annie’s Must-Haves! ShopMY: bit.ly/AnnieElise_ShopMy Amazon: bit.ly/AnnieElise_Amazon . 🫵🏻 Get Involved or Recommend a Case About Annie: www.annieelise.com For Business Inquiries: 10toLife@WMEAgency.com •••••••••••••••••• 🚨Disclaimers 1️⃣ Some links may be affiliate links, they do not cost you anything, but I make a small percentage from the sale. Thank you so much for watching and supporting me. 2️⃣ Sources used to collect this information include various public news sites, interviews, court documents, FB groups dedicated to the case, and various news channel segments. When quoting statements made by others, they are strictly alleged until confirmed otherwise. Please remember my videos are my independent opinion and to always do your own research. 3️⃣ The views and opinions expressed in this video are personal and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of any other agency, organization, employer, or company. Assumptions made in the analysis are not reflective of the position of any entity other than the creator(s). These views are subject to change, revision, and rethinking at any time and are not to be held in perpetuity. We make no representations as to the accuracy, completeness, correctness, suitability, or validity of any information on this video and will not be liable for any errors, omissions, or delays in this information or any losses, injuries, or damages arising from its display or use. All information is provided on an as-is basis. It is the reader’s responsibility to verify their own facts
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Hey, true crime besties, welcome back to an all-new episode of Serialistly.
Hello, hello, hello, and welcome back to an all-new episode of Serialist. Hello, hello, and welcome back to an all-new episode,
of Serialessly. I hope you all had an amazing holiday season with your family,
your friends, your loved ones. We're obviously still in the thick of it. And that's kind of what
brings me on today. Instead of headline highlights today, we actually are going to do a case
deep dive together. Now, there is a dramatization series that recently released on Netflix called
Love and Death. And so many of you have been asking me to cover this case because a lot of you
are new listeners and you didn't know that we covered this case a few years ago. So what we're going
to do today is a little bit of a throwback episode. We're going to revisit that case. I'm going to
give you all of the deep dive details and we will resume regular headline highlights next week.
But now for this week, you'll have, you know, a little bit of a longer episode to get you through
the family get-togethers, get you into the new year. And yeah, so interested to hear what you
guys think about this case it definitely is a wild one and let me know if you guys have watched love
and death on netflix yet i again hope you all had an amazing holiday and happy new year oh gosh guys
today's episode it is just a wild one it was one that i was debating if i wanted to cover with you guys
and if i wanted to do it on the podcast or if i wanted to do it over on 10 to life but it's one that is
the epitome of serialously and makes you kind of say seriously what the i like what is going on
And it's very interesting, and you'll understand what I'm talking about here in a second.
But it's very interesting because it's a case that has been repurposed into material on Netflix,
or I'm sorry, not Netflix, on Hulu, HBO Max.
But two different points of view are stated in the series version of this case.
And also, they missed so much information.
So I'm going to talk more about that in a second, guys.
Sorry, I know I'm getting ahead of myself.
But anyways, welcome back.
I'm so glad you're here with me, besties.
it's another true crime case that we just have to talk about.
So before we jump in, if you could quickly do me a solid, just double check that you're
listening, or I'm sorry, that you're listening, der, that you're following this podcast.
I didn't even know that following a podcast was a thing until recently, but it's almost like
Instagram or any other social media.
You can follow along so that you actually get notified of future episodes that I drop.
And lately, I've kind of been dropping a lot of random bonus episodes throughout the week
as we've been following so many cases with trial updates, things like that.
So you're going to want to follow the podcast if you're not already so that you get
notified of those bonus episodes as they drop.
So take a quick second.
I'll pause and you can do so really quick.
And then also if you, of course, enjoy this episode, please at the very end of it,
take a quick second to rate and review.
So today we are going to be delving into yet another chilling true crime story.
This one is from the late 70s, early 80s.
and it pits two women against each other in a story filled with just truly twisted
friendships, secret love affairs, and a brutal, brutal murder that truly shocked a small
Texas town to its core. Now, at first glance, it appeared to be a random act of violence,
but as the investigation unfolded, it became clear that this was no ordinary crime guys. As the
truth came to light, it revealed a truly horrifying case of lust, deception, and a fatal
friendship that would end in absolute bloodshed, copious amounts of bloodshed.
Now, as I mentioned, this story has recently been highlighted in the media, and specifically,
it's been recently highlighted on HBO Max's series Love and Death, starring Elizabeth Olson,
who I absolutely am obsessed with and love.
love, as well as on the Hulu original series Candy starring Jessica Biel, which was released back in
2022. Now, if you haven't seen those, I highly do recommend watching them because they are so, so
good. But like any made-for-TV series or movies, sometimes the facts, the dates, or situations
are added, manufactured, or not included at all. And it's done in an effort to dramatize
certain events in a way to make the story flow better, to make it more intriguing, to make you
able to follow along a little bit closer as a viewer, and of course to add mystery to it, which let me
just say. And there is no shade here because I love Hulu and I love me some HBO Max and both
series are amazing. I've watched them both. But do you ever watch something knowing the case?
And it's supposed to be based on a true story. And then you wonder to yourself, what's the real
story here? What are the real events? I know this case. They're missing X, Y, and Z, or hey, wait, I
thought this really happened, this way, didn't happen that way. Well, that's the same situation here
because what's been portrayed on both of these series isn't quite exactly the real story here,
which is why I wanted to come on here and tell it to you guys. And also, just another little
fun fact about these series. So apparently production on Love and Death on HBO Max, which is
airing right now new episodes every single week. I think a new episode comes out in two days.
That production started back in either 2020 or 2021 well before the production on the Hulu's
series Candy Started. But Candy came out first and Love and Death came out almost a year later.
And I obviously don't know the ins and outs of production. I don't know what's going on there.
But based on watching both of these series and knowing the case myself personally and the true
story of what happened. I almost think that candy, the people on candy knew that love and death
were starting production or had started production. So they kind of rushed to the finish because
although it is a very good series, there are so many things that have been skipped and omitted.
And I can't help but wonder if it's because they were trying to get the jump on HBO Max.
And so they just rushed to then put the series out ahead of them on Hulu. And so then when I
watched the HBO Max version and I'm still watching it now, I was like, there's still
stuff missing. And you guys have had years to get it right. So I get it. They do it all to
dramatize it and do everything that way. And I love it as a viewer. But still, I wanted to come on
here and tell you like the true story here because it is a very, very scary case and a very
brutal case. So we're going to go through all of the details. Their friendship, the secrets that
they harbored, and the true events that culminated the perfect storm for a gruesome, horrific murder.
state police, Dallas police, the Collin County Sheriff are all assisting.
It's just some tragic thing that some sick person has come along and did that I hope they find.
People who normally don't even lock their doors tell us tonight they'll sleep with shotguns by their beds.
This was a terrible thing to walk in on. You can imagine whatever you think to be the very worst possible thing you could see in the middle of the night
and then multiply that by about six and maybe you'd have it.
Something that don't happen in Wiley very often.
People are scared, they're concerned about it.
Wiley's a small town, and a lot of people know everybody around, they've lived around them from years,
and we're just scared that it might be somebody we know, you know, someone that we thought was, you know, sweet guy.
Almost everyone has the latest version of the latest rumor, but Wiley's police chief tells us he doesn't have much of anything.
Well, I've been here for almost the whole trial, and I can't believe it.
Everybody's in shock.
Hey y'all.
Candy Montgomery was a vivacious, charming woman who had moved to the small town of Wiley, Texas with her husband, Pat, and their two children.
On the surface, Candy appeared to be the embodiment of the all-American suburban mom.
She was juggling her responsibilities as a loving wife, a doting mother, while finding time to be active.
in her church and her community, singing on the choir, being the PTA mom, doing the baked goods,
literally the definition of the all-American perfect mother, or one that you would think,
especially back in like the 70s. She was so active in her church and her community,
and through that she met a dear friend of hers or someone who would become a friend of hers,
Betty Gore. Now, Betty Gore was a very kind and gentle soul. She too was deeply devoted to her faith,
her family and her community.
Betty was married to a man named Alan Gore, and the couple had two beautiful daughters
together, and as Candy Montgomery appeared to be living the American dream.
So why, or how I should say, how on earth would either of these women be involved in a case involving a murder?
Well, to understand this story, we have to go back to the beginning to understand who Candy Montgomery is and who Betty Gore is.
Starting with Candy, Candy Montgomery was born in the mid-40s as Candice Lynn Wheeler, but she went by the nickname Candy for short.
She was raised in a typical post-war American home.
By all accounts, her childhood was seemingly normal.
She was described as a charismatic woman who possessed a certain spark that made her really stand out in a crowd and stand out from other people.
In her early 20s, she met the man who would later become her husband, and his name is Pat Montgomery.
The two of them met at work. Pat was an electrical engineer who worked for Texas Instruments.
He was paid an annual salary of $70,000, which is roughly, if you're just kind of thinking back to when it was in the 70s, 70 grand back them now equates to $340,000 today.
So he had a pretty handsome salary, and this was as an engineer.
Candy was working as a secretary at the time at the same place, Texas Instruments.
Pat was a reliable, hardworking man and the kind of guy who could provide the stability and
comfort and life that Candy really had envisioned for herself.
There are some reports that Candy initially felt like Pat was too much of an introvert for her
and that she didn't even find him physically attractive.
But when she realized the amount of money that he was earning, she gave him a second chance.
But I'm not sure if that's 100% true or not.
that's just some reports that I was finding, according to some people who knew the couple.
Either way, they met, they may or may not have fallen in true love and whated bliss, but they did tie the knot, promising to share a life of happiness and love.
And they did. They relocated to Wiley, Texas in 1977 and started their life in this quiet, tight-knit community.
And the way that their life is depicted in the HBO series and even in the Hulu series very much aligns with this.
They appear to live in a cookie cutter neighborhood.
She is, by all accounts, the perfect PTA mom doing the baked goods, doing the soccer lessons or not soccer lessons, soccer practice runs, you know, very, very dinner is on the table at 5.30.
Pat comes home from work.
But there was sort of in both series, this underlying feeling that you get as a viewer that maybe Candy wasn't as in to Pat as he was into her, which also aligns with the accounts that we had heard from friends of the couple.
that she maybe was more blinded and into the money than she was truly the physique of Pat himself
and his introverted personality. And you kind of get this underlying feeling too as you're watching the
series, but not enough to where you would ever think that she would step out on him or be
unhappy in the marriage, just maybe that there wasn't as much passion or lust that you would
see in other marriages or other series. But still living on the beautiful block, the perfect
manicured landscaping and live in their best life. Now at the time, Wiley was an extremely small town,
just being discovered by the wealthier executives of Texas Instruments, who were all looking to
settle in the suburbs outside of Dallas. So they built a beautiful home. They made friends with the
neighbors and became regular faces at the First United Methodist Church of Lucas, which is another
small town located near Wiley. And Candy seemed like she was the perfect. And Candy seemed like she was the
perfect wife. But she wasn't just a wife remember. She was also a mother. She and Pat were blessed
with two children, a girl and a boy. She was very active in her community. She juggled her
responsibilities with an extreme amount of grace and had a beautiful voice. She sang often in
the church's choir and she stood out while singing with that beautiful voice. They had a very well
respected reputation, which was extremely important to candy. She wanted to be seen as the perfect
family, the perfectly well-groomed woman, the woman who could do it all, who could juggle it all
while keeping her man happy and food on the table promptly, you know, at 5.30 p.m. She was your typical
southern suburban mom in the 1970s, absolutely hands down. And if you're from the South, you know
exactly what I am talking about when I say that. So after they moved to Wiley, Candy met another
local resident, and she was also a fifth grade teacher, and her name was Betty Gore. She
She met Betty while at church, where they both sang in that choir.
Candy's daughter Jenny and Betty's daughter, Alyssa, became best friends very, very quickly.
And this, of course, caused Candy and Betty to become even closer friends because their daughters were hanging out.
They were doing sleepovers together.
They were the best of friends.
So it was only natural that Candy and Betty would, of course, also bloom a friendship between the two of them.
They spent time together, attending events, and sharing the ups and downs of life together.
However, life in Texas was not all sunshine and rainbows for candy.
The pressures of her marriage, the responsibilities of motherhood, and the mundane aspects of suburban mom life began to weigh heavily on her.
She was growing increasingly restless, and she was seeking excitement, seeking a thrill, and seeking for validation outside of her marriage, which could easily turn into a recipe for disaster.
Now, before we go any further into this story, we need to talk about another couple and another key player in this story, Betty and Alan Gore.
Betty was from a small town in Texas, and Betty and Allen's paths first crossed at a social gathering, where they were both instantly drawn to one another, a very different connection than what is to have been said about Candy and Pat.
Betty and Alan had a spark and they were instantly drawn to each other. Their shared values and aspirations for a family-oriented life quickly formed the foundation of their relationship together. It wasn't long before they realized that they were meant to be together, and they got married and started a family of their own. Alan Gore, Betty's husband, was a hardworking and dedicated family man. His work often took him away on business trips out of the area, and Betty hated,
hated, hated the fact that he traveled so much for work.
Betty struggled with feelings of loneliness and isolation as Alan's frequent travels
left her alone to care for their young children and manage the household all on her own.
She would call Alan constantly at work, calling the hotels that he was at, calling his boss,
calling the restaurants, and when she would make these calls, she would even call his boss
and ask him not to send Alan on these work trips anymore, which,
I just can't even imagine as not only a working mother, but married to a working spouse,
if my spouse was calling my boss behind my back saying, please don't send Annie on these work trips
anymore, please, I need her home more.
I would be absolutely mortified and really frustrated with my partner because that is just
extremely unprofessional and, I don't know, doesn't look good.
So she would call constantly while he was at work on these trips, call the boss, call the hotel,
kind of crazy behavior in my opinion, but she just couldn't handle him being gone and being
away from her. It was also said that Betty had been struggling with postpartum depression and that
Alan traveling for work made this much worse on her. Now, as someone who has been very open and
candid with my personal struggles with postpartum depression, I can understand where this could
come into play and make what maybe normally wouldn't seem like a big deal if your husband
has gone away on work, it could seem like the end of the world, absolutely. But luckily during
all of this, Betty still had her church friends and she could rely on them, like Candy Montgomery.
But other than her small circle of church friends and Candy, she didn't have many other friends.
In both the HBO and Hulu series, she was depicted as an extremely unlikable person who her friends, or quote
unquote friends just tolerated because that's what nice churchgoing people do. She was also seen as
irrational with her demands on Allen. Very cold, very just kind of withdrawn, not likable,
not approachable, very brash and just not an easy to get along with person. There was also a scene
in the series where they had welcomed in a foster child and Betty got really upset yelling at this
child and then demanded Alan return the boy to the shelter, which was also kind of weird.
And of course, we don't know the exact truth with that particular situation.
But in the series, it portrayed this child as seemingly maybe adjusting in a little bit
difficult of a manner, but a nice kid wanting to have a birthday party, wanting to celebrate,
and Betty just lashing out time after time and making things very difficult for him.
And then putting the onus on Alan and telling Alan, you need to send this kid back
to the shelter. I don't want to deal with him anymore. Now, Betty's family has said that that was not
true at all and that that depiction in that series was not accurate and that it was not an accurate
representation of her character at all, which I get it. That's her family. But it is true that
Betty had a foster child and many, as a matter of fact. She took in more than 60 children during
her time as a foster parent. So as for Allen in this marriage, because it's a two-way street,
we know. He wasn't the only one who felt like the pressures of work and his absence away from home
were taking a toll on his marriage. He was pretty annoyed with Betty and the fact that she didn't
understand that he had to do this for work. He had to go away and on these work trips in order to
provide for their family, put food on the table, and provide for their children, especially with
needing to provide her with the lifestyle that they had and that she had come accustomed to. Her behavior was
also pretty frustrating for him. And he kind of had to walk on eggshells with just about every
detail and situation in their life to not make her mad. And similar to the two series depicting
Candy and Pat's relationship and possibly the no love lost there kind of dynamic and maybe
him being a little bit of an introvert, the series also depicted Allen and Betty's relationship
in a way that very much aligns with the reports from family and friends. They depict her, as I mentioned,
as very withdrawn, not easy to get along with, very mean. And they depicted Alan as, like I said,
walking on eggshells, not wanting to upset Betty, wanting to treat her with kid gloves. Now,
whether he was doing this because of the postpartum depression or doing this because he just didn't
want another battle and another argument with Betty, it's unknown. But you definitely could get
this energy between the two of them while you're watching both of these series play out,
almost as though you feel that feeling in the pit of your stomach of, such as the dread of not wanting to go home and face your partner or not wanting to voice your true opinion on something because you're trying to avoid an argument from erupting, you could feel the tension.
It was thick between the two of them.
So you have these two marriages, kind of on opposite ends of the tracks, but both dealing with things behind closed doors, private and personally, things that were struggles in their marriage.
how did the two of them intersect? How did they all cross paths to where we would end up with massive bloodshed?
Well, as portrayed in the Hulu and HBO miniseries, Candy really did approach Alan first,
following a church volleyball match in October of 1978. She approaches Alan confessing her attraction
and proposing they start a casual affair in secret between the two of them. According to Texas Monthly,
Candy said and I quote, I've been thinking about you a lot and it's really bothering me and I don't know whether I want you to do anything about it or not. I'm very attracted to you and I'm tired of thinking about it. So I wanted to tell you. Kind of a big bombshell to just drop on somebody after a casual church volleyball game. But okay, to each their own. I don't know that I would necessarily sneak off into a car in the parking lot after a church gathering and say, hey, I can't stop.
thinking about you but you know what i don't know if i want to do anything about it yet and then just
kind of like mic drop and leave the car but it takes a lot of courage it takes a lot of balls to do that
also kind of a little bit distasteful in my opinion but whatever that was candy's jam and that is
what candy did so about a week later there was another church volleyball game and at this point
allan's interest was peaked he had been stewing over this information for about a week he had been
in his own home with betty where things had high levels of
attention. So in his mind, he's like this beautiful woman who appears to have it all wants me.
She's interested in me. She's going to give me that validation. The wheels are turning for about a
week now until this next church volleyball game. So at this game, Alan then approaches her and asked her
what she had in mind. And Candy replied to him very, very matter of factly, asking, would you be
interested in having an affair? And it was so unbelievably direct, but apparently that is just
just how Candy was. And this scene, as it all plays out in both of the series, is actually dead on
to how it played out in real life. She was very matter of fact, very direct, very to the point,
had a lot of confidence, which I also have to say, not only does that take an increasingly
high amount of confidence and courage and a brass set of balls to not only tell somebody that
you find them attractive and you want to have an affair with them, but imagine if he's not
interested. Imagine if he is a devoted husband, faithful, you come in so brazen and like confident
and not scared that he's going to tell his wife what you just told him or not tell your husband.
You're all part of a church. What if he was like a true man of God and said, no, we can't do this
candy and then tells the pastor or confides in other churchgoers. Like that is a big, big risk that
she took. But nonetheless, Homegirl took it. In both the
the Hulu and HBO series, the pastor of the church, who is a woman named Jackie, was one of Candy's
closest friends. In both series, Candy confided in Jackie that she was wanting to spice up her sex
life and have an affair with somebody after she had learned that Jackie was getting divorced.
And in both of the series, it kind of insinuated that even though Jackie told her not to,
she kind of encouraged the affair a little bit or kickstarted it in some way by not saying
absolutely not or don't do that or that's a sin. It kind of felt like in the series that she wasn't
entirely against it. At least that's the way I interpreted it. However, that part was not true at all.
Jackie was a real person and was a real close friend of Candies. And they did gossip over coffee from
time to time, especially after Jackie told her that she was getting a divorce. So Candy initially
had shared with Jackie her desire for a passionate adventure. However, Jackie,
didn't know anything specific or any of the specific developments of an affair ever happening.
There were also some scenes with Candy sharing the details of her affair with her good friend,
best friend Sherry, who she later went into business with. And from what I've read,
this is in fact true, but it's unknown if she actually gave specific details to Sherry,
like Allen's name and the times and the locations and things of that nature. So Alan was a little
bit hesitant about starting an affair. He truly didn't want to wreck his marriage, and neither did
Candy. Although Candy wanted to spice things up and get things going, she didn't want to ruin her
happy life, her happy home with her children, and her husband who was so wildly successful.
So Alan took a little bit more time to agree to having an affair, but nevertheless, eventually,
he said yes, he was in. And what's so interesting, because I thought when I saw this in the series,
that this next detail was absolutely not true. I was like, there is no,
way that this could be true. Who would ever do something like this to make it so business-like,
so transactional? But as researching the case, it was in fact true. They both made a list of
pros and cons to having an affair. And in addition to a pro and cons list, they also set up
strict rules that they were going to put in place for this affair, making it feel very transactional,
almost as though it was strictly just for the physical pleasure of it. There was no emotion
involved, so we are going to be very black and white as to what this means. Within those rules,
they both agreed that it would remain purely physical, not emotional. They said that they would
meet at motels in Dallas so that they wouldn't be recognized, and that candy would pay for these
motel rooms in cash, which then later, Alan would apparently reimburse her for half of the hotel
amount, which they say chivalry is dead. Am I wrong? Am I right? I mean, the least you could do,
Alan, is pay for the motel room. Give me a break. But whatever. So,
Most of these little motel trists would happen while Alan was supposed to be on his lunch break
because he wasn't able to, of course, get out of his home undetected without Betty throwing a fit.
So because of this, Alan wasn't going to go hungry.
He was dipping out to these motel rooms to meet candy, but he was still hungry.
He still had an appetite.
So candy would bring meals to Alan in the motel room.
She did this not only because boys got to eat, but also so that they would have more time
together while they were in the motel room. And another part of one of their rules was that if either
one of them started to have any sort of emotional feelings for the other, they would immediately
end the affair and go back to their lives as if nothing had ever happened. So you have all of these
rules in place, you have your pros and cons list, you have where you're going to have the scene of
the crime, you have the logistics of who's going to pay for it, how you're going to get reimbursed,
how you're still not going to have a growling stomach when you go back to work and clock back
in, what could go wrong, right? What could go wrong? You might be asking. But, as we know, a lot can go
wrong. So after Candy and Allen had their perfect affair set up, the plans were in place,
they knew what they were going to do, they picked the date that their affair was going to begin.
And that, that date that they had set was December 12, 1978. After the affair began,
and after they started sleeping together, they must have been like having a good old time pee in the Vigee.
because the affair was all candy could think about.
It consumed her every single waking moment,
which was very interesting because reports say that it wasn't like she was even that physically
attracted to Allen in the first place.
It wasn't like she found him so hot.
She just had to have him.
So maybe he's like a dynamo in bed, I don't know, but it literally consumed her.
And it was also not necessarily just the physical aspect of it.
It wasn't that the physical attraction is really even what mattered to Candy because it wasn't
really about Alan. It wasn't about him as a person. This really was about her, about her feeling
wanted, feeling validated, and getting that thrill that she had been so desperately seeking.
The affair made her feel alive. It made her feel wanted. It made her feel sexy, free, and all of
the things that she felt she was not getting from her husband, Pat. And not to say that Pat did
anything wrong either because he absolutely didn't. He was a great husband, great father,
good loving provider, fully committed to candy, like fully in it. And he was just a fantastic
stand-up guy. So much so that even throughout the entire affair while she was sleeping with
Alan, she was still acting like everything was fine with Pat. She wasn't retreating. She wasn't
finding reasons to be angry with him to try to justify her actions to herself. She still was
apparently in this happy marriage with him, which I thought that that was really interesting
because in both of the series, it depicts a little bit different scenarios. In one of them,
it shows that she was happy. They were loving still the All-American Family. Where another one,
it kind of magnifies, it kind of started to magnify on Pat being an introvert and candy being so
free and just kind of very quick responding to him. Like she's not super invested.
So it kind of was all over the place as far as the story being told through the series versus what the actual true events were with it.
Now, for Alan, it was weird.
This affair actually had a completely different effect on him than you would expect an affair to have on somebody.
He felt like his marriage was actually initially getting better after starting this affair with candy because he was getting sex.
He was getting physical intimacy.
He was getting all of these aspects that he was craving from some.
someone that was not Betty. So then when he was at home with Betty, he felt fulfilled.
He felt happy because he had been getting all of this from somewhere else. And because of this,
when he was home with Betty, she didn't seem so disappointing. And it didn't seem so annoying
or like she was a nag or anything like that. She seemed pleasant all of the sudden. And he also
felt like because of this, because he didn't have this weight on his shoulders of being unhappy at
home, that he could be more present while he wasn't home. He wasn't so focused on the burdens or
the discomfort or the unpleasantness because now he had his outlet where he was happy. So then it
gave him more patience when he came home. So the affair appeared to be working out between the two of
them. So much so that the affair between Alan and Candy lasted from December 1978 until October
1979, almost a full year. Now get this because this part actually enrages me just on a human level
and on a married woman's level and just like a female level.
But during this time, as this affair was going on, Betty actually got pregnant while Alan
was busy having this affair with Candy.
And the series did portray this detail correctly.
Get this.
Candy actually threw a baby shower for Betty while sleeping with her husband.
It is the ultimate betrayal.
And guys, I'm just going to go off here on a quick tangent because, you know,
lately have had to bring all things back to Scandival, which is the Raquel and Tom Sandoval scandal from
Vanderpump Rules that has like rocked the entire world. Everybody was so shattered by that,
myself included, because he basically cheated on his partner of 10 years with this girl who was
his girlfriend's best friend and they had a secret affair for seven months and like everybody's
like, how could you do this? Candy and Allen, they were going down with each other for like a year.
and Candy's crazy ass through Betty a baby shower.
Imagine if you've been following the Scandival trial,
scant trial, it should be a trial.
If you've been following the Scandival thing,
imagine if Raquel threw Ariana a baby shower
or like a bachelorette party or something like that,
how much worse that would even be,
not saying it's not bad as it is.
But like, that is how crazy and twisted this becomes.
Alan impregnates his wife while having an affair, and then the mistress throws her a baby shower.
It is sick, sick, sick, get out all the red flags, start waving them, and this is where we ask ourselves, seriously?
Like, really?
Make it make sense.
But it wasn't going to be this happy, sick, twisted paradise for long.
No, no, no.
Because soon after the baby was born, things started to shift between Candy and Allen.
Initially, Candy started questioning the affair, feeling that she was becoming overly emotionally invested, wondering, is this a good idea? Should we be having this affair? Now I'm feeling emotionally invested. And Alan soon followed suit, realizing that his primary attention should absolutely be on his marriage and his children. Yeah, Alan, you think? Alan wanted to be with Betty. He wanted to stay with Betty. He wanted to make his marriage work. So he and Betty went to a marriage.
marriage retreat weekend called Marriage Encounter. It was a program that was run through their church or
through a local church, and it was supposed to focus on building back the foundation of your marriage,
the bonding, the coping, the communication, and really just rebuilding brick by brick your levels of
intimacy with each other and the entire foundation of the marriage. And it was said that this retreat
really did, in fact, help the marriage between Betty and Allen. And interestingly,
Candy and Pat also attended that same retreat, but later on.
This was also super interesting because it wasn't touched on a lot in the series Candy,
but in the HBO series Love and Death, it shows Betty and Alan come back from this retreat,
which Candy was babysitting their children when they went on this retreat.
It shows them come back just being touchy-feely with each other.
Alan grabbing his baby from Candy and just being very quick and being like,
okay thank you by not having any not even really making eye contact with her to where as a viewer
it makes you feel like oh this retreat really worked and candy he don't want you no more he's over it
he wants to make his marriage work he wants nothing to do with you or you're you know rotting
nether region sorry that's really mean to say but i just hate people who have affairs i really do
um so anyways this entire retreat seemed to work so much so that later on candy and pat
attended the same one. So Alan seemed to be moving on with his life at this point. But Candy was
fuming on the inside, very, very upset. She felt distraught that now this person who she was
falling in love with at this point was back with his wife. But she also was mad because she felt
like this was the complete end of her fun and adventurous escapade that was keeping her busy. And so
she had lost the one thing that she had focused so much of her attention on. Now it had been ripped away
from her. She was floating. She didn't know what to do. And she had to go back now to her
somewhat stale, boring life of normalcy that many people, let me just say, would kill to have,
no pun intended, but she didn't know what to do. This man who she was in love with, who she's
thinking, she's so confident he wants to be with me, he's now going back to his wife, he doesn't
want her, he's happy in his marriage, she now doesn't have this outlet and this thrill and
validation that she had been getting. So what is she going to do? Through all of this,
poor poor pat candy's husband found a card a greeting card from allan to candy and when he found this he put it together that they had an affair but pat wasn't mad he actually felt like it was kind of his fault for not making candy more of a priority in his life and for letting the marriage get a bit stagnant which let me just say if you are listening to this or watching this and you discover that your loved one is having an affair it is not your fault
you are not the responsible one for that. You absolutely have a right to be mad because it is not your
responsibility to make them not step out on you and make them be faithful to you. So let me just
get that straight right now. So for now, to the best of everybody's knowledge, Candy and Allen's
romantic rendezvous had remained a secret to Betty. Pat knew, but he wasn't going to say anything. He
wanted to repair his marriage with Candy. He wanted to make it work. They go to this couple's marriage
retreat and nobody else knows about the affair. It's a secret that had ended and could die with
them. However, about a year later, everything took a dramatic turn and very dangerous turn.
As reported by the Dallas Morning News, on a fateful Friday the 13th of June 1980, Candy had gone
to Betty's house. She went over there to pick up a swimsuit for Betty's oldest daughter, Alyssa.
Alyssa had been planning on spending the night at Candy and Pat's home because she was hanging out with their daughter and her best friend, Jenny, who remember they had been best friends at this point now for years.
So she was planning on spending the night.
Candy popped over to Betty's house to pick up her swimsuit because she had swimming lessons.
As shown in both the Hulu and the HBO series, the next thing that happens is that candy is covered in blood after picking up this swimsuit and in the shower at Betty's house.
all of her clothes on, washing all of the blood off of her, before leaving Betty's house completely
sopping wet. She walked slowly to her car and then drove straight home. The next memory that Candy
had was inside of her house where she continued to wash up further. Then she continued on
with her day, as if nothing had happened. She had lunch and then later picked up her children
and her daughter Jenny's best friend Alyssa from Bible school. And that night,
the Montgomery family and little Alyssa Gore all went to the movies together to see the new Star Wars movie that had come out. Now simultaneously, as this was happening, Alan, who happened to be away on a business trip, was attempting to reach his wife Betty multiple times. He was calling the house landline over and over again, but there was no answer, which was extremely unlike Betty, who would not only usually be sitting around waiting for his call, but would be calling the hotels herself looking for him. So
Alan kept calling and kept calling, but still nothing.
At this point, Alan was starting to get worried.
So he called Candy, because Candy was a friend of Betty's,
and he called her to see if she knew anything about Betty's whereabouts.
Candy said that she had stopped over earlier in the day to pick up that swimsuit for their daughter, Alyssa,
but that nothing was out of the ordinary.
So he called his house a few more times, and the phone just rang and rang and rang.
Feeling uneasy, he contacted a few of the neighbors and requested that they check on Betty.
So three neighbors decide they were going to go over to the house to check on Betty to see if
everything was okay. They checked around the house at first the perimeter with a flashlight and
then they made entry into the house. And when they did that, they found Betty's lifeless body.
Her body was inside the utility room lying on the floor in a pool of blood.
And not far away in another room, Betty and Ashton.
Allen's one-year-old baby was left alone in her crib. And this was a horrifying discovery to the
neighbors because they didn't just stumble across a dead body or somebody who was deceased or had
died of natural causes. The scene in which they discovered Betty was so brutal, so bloody
that nobody even knew cause of death right away. And many speculated that she had died from a
gunshot wound. But what they were about to
to learn was going to haunt everybody in the community and truly horrify those close to the
investigation. All while their little one-year-old baby was in her crib by herself, in her sheets,
covered in her own feces, I believe there was vomit as well, and had been left there by whatever
perpetrator and monster inflicted this horrific murder on Betty, which this particular detail was
portrayed in the Hulu and HBO series, and it really, really affected me emotionally when you see
the baby crying, screaming, wailing, and you know that that baby had been in that crib by
themselves for hours on end while their mother just lay a few feet away. So you have this
horrifying scene, unraveling, and when the police arrived on the scene, they were met with the
most gruesome and horrific crime scene of their careers. It was,
was an absolute blood bath. And there aren't any other words to describe this, guys. It was a true
blood bath. There was blood on almost every single surface of that utility room. And Betty was on the
ground, literally chopped up by an axe. She suffered a total of 41 blows with an axe. And her face
was completely unrecognizable.
The axe was lying in a pool of blood near her body as well.
Forensic specialists later observed that the majority of these injuries were inflicted
after she had already lost consciousness, which let me just say,
thank God that she was not conscious for the majority of those blows,
because to be killed by means of an axe, I can't even imagine the fear and the pain
that somebody would go through.
And Betty was only 30 years old when she was killed.
The Gore family was the last to enter the first United Methodist Church in Wiley.
It was filled with 300 who mourned Nancy Gore's axe murderer Friday night at her Wiley home.
The event has stunned the small town.
Justice of the Peace and acting corner, John Buddy Newton, was the first to see Miss Gore's body.
This was a terrible thing to walk in on.
You can imagine whatever you think to be the very worst possible thing you could see in the middle of the night
and then multiply that by about six, and maybe you'd have it.
Judge Newton says the crime has brought a different atmosphere to the town of 3,000.
Neighbors near the Gore home, the scene of the crime, are locking doors they never bothered with.
The main street is quiet, and women are fearful.
Wally's a small town, and a lot of people know everybody around, they've lived around them from years,
and we're just scared that it might be somebody we know, you know, someone that we thought was sweet guy or sweet lady.
The Texas Rangers, State Police, Dallas Police, the Collin County Sheriff are all assisting the front.
frustrated Wiley Police Department. At present, there are no new leads. This is something that don't happen
in Wiley very often. People are scared. They're concerned about it. Everything's pretty well in hand.
As the family left the service, state police were on the watch for anything unusual in the crowd,
but they witnessed mostly a town in grief. So now you have Allen, who cannot get a hold of his wife
at all. And then he finds out that his wife has been brutally murdered. He calls the Montgomery House,
Candy's house to check on his daughter, Alyssa, who was spending the night there, who was at
his ex-mistresses house, and he calls them to check on his daughter and to let them know what
happened to Betty. Candy answers the phone, answers the landline off the wall, acting completely
normal, like she can't believe what she's hearing, and that she's so shocked and just acting
completely normal in this whole situation. And in both series, it was initially told to Alan that
Betty had been shot. Like I said a few minutes ago, the cause of death was questioned at first
because of the amount of blood that was at the scene, which in the Hulu series, when Alan
tells Candy this saying they think she's been shot, Betty's dead, Candy believes that maybe
she didn't kill Betty. After all, since she didn't use a gun and she used an axe, that maybe
the gun was used by somebody else later on. And again, this wasn't the real scenario,
but this is how it was depicted in the Hulu series Candy.
Like I mentioned earlier, this was an extremely small town.
This wasn't some hustle and bustle, popular city that has tons of crimes in general, let alone a heinous murder.
So this threw everybody into a tailspin, a tailspin of fear, confusion, and just absolute terror.
As the details of the grisily crime scene spread throughout the town and then later into the local media,
housewives were lighting up their phone trees, asking the next wife on the other line,
Did you hear? Did you hear what happened? Can you believe it? Who do you think it was? There must be some sort of psycho on the loose, a drifter, a mass murderer, a complete maniac, a serial killer. I mean, nobody knew what to think. So you can only imagine the rumors and the speculation that was just going like wildfire through this small town. I mean, nobody knew what to think. And people in the community were terrified that this psychopath was still around, still lurking the streets and lurking these small town neighborhoods.
detectives were at the scene at the Gore home for a very long time. They were processing the crime scene and trying to piece together any evidence that they could collect. And just like in both miniseries, they found a blood-stained thumbprint on the freezer door in the utility room. They also found a bloody footprint in the laundry room, which was made by a rubber flip-flop. They also found traces of blood and hair in the shower, suggesting that the perpetrator had attempted.
to clean themselves after the incident, but didn't really try to spend the time cleaning up the crime
scene at all, as evidenced by what a bloodbath was still in that utility room, and since the
perpetrator left the murder weapon behind. There were also no signs of forced entry into the house,
so this led detectives to believe that Betty knew whoever murdered her, a very haunting
realization to come to. The amount of overkill indicated that the axe murderer was in a state,
of complete rage and that it was likely a crime of passion, which is why detectives initially
suspected that Betty's husband Allen might be the person responsible for this. The fact that
an axe was used in general also led officers to believe that this wasn't planned or premeditated
in any way, making this crime more consistent with a crime of opportunity mixed with a crime
of passion. Inside the living room, there was a table that had Betty's coffee cup still
on it next to her sewing machine. And also next to that was a business card for Candy's new
business. The coffee pot was still turned on and had burnt coffee inside of it, which led investigators
to believe that this was some sort of blitz-type attack. The coffee was still burning, the mug was
still out, things were still askew, and there was a copy of the Dallas Morning newspaper dated June 13,
1980, right there on the table. Two tiny blood spatters appeared on the newspaper's corner near an ad for the
movie The Shining, which coincidentally is a movie about an axe murderer. In the days after the
murder, Candy acted like nothing had happened. She went to church, she spent time with her family,
and just acted, just completely shocked and dumbfounded as everybody else in the community.
However, when Candy got word that the police found a footprint in blood, she immediately cut up those rubber flip-flops that she had been wearing that day.
She cut them into tiny, tiny pieces and then threw those pieces into the trash, just like depicted in both of the series.
So that part really was true.
She was going to great lengths to destroy that evidence, to cut it all up, dispose of it, and make sure that the garbage was taken out so nobody could find it and match it to her shoe.
When Alan was questioned by the police, they asked if either one of them had had any extramarital affairs.
And Alan actually had told them that Betty did have an affair once, but that he had never stepped outside of their marriage.
Then a couple of days later, call it guilt, a heavy conscience, whatever you want to call it, he called the police back.
And he told them that he lied to them and that he did, in fact, have an affair, but that it was a long time ago and that it was over now.
But that he just wanted to come clean, he just wanted to tell them the truth.
And then he drops the bombshell.
He tells the police that the person that he had the affair with was none other than Candy Montgomery.
And even more, he tells the police that he was the one who ended it with her.
Giving her means, motive, there for the swimsuit, so opportunity.
Now, this was a major problem for Candy.
Since Candy was admittedly one of the last people to see Betty alive,
and she literally placed herself at the scene of the crime with her story.
So the police brought her into the station, and they had some questions for her.
Candy told the officers about that day, that she went over to the house to grab Alyssa's
swimsuit and that she had some coffee with Betty for a few minutes, and they got to chatting
while they were having this coffee together.
She said that Betty was fine, and then she left, and she went on with her day as planned,
that she went to the church luncheon, then picked up her two kids and Alyssa from Bible,
camp, and then they all went to go see that Star Wars movie. Then the police asked her about her
affair with Allen, and Candy admitted it, saying that they broke it off a while ago, and that the
breakup was mutual, and that it was amicable. Both Alan and Candy both told police that to their
knowledge, Betty had no idea about the affair. But detectives felt like they couldn't just
overlook this affair as something unrelated. Police also noticed some bruising and some cuts that were
on Candy's hands and feet during her interview with the police. Additionally, they knew from the
size of the footprint that they had recovered, that whoever had killed Betty was in fact a female.
So they took her fingerprints and then later asked if she would like to take a polygraph test,
to which Candy refused. After this, Candy was spooked. She had a feeling that the police were
on to her and that it was only a matter of time before everything caught up with her and she would be
arrested. So Candy went to the only lawyer that she knew, the only one in town that she knew,
and she was later arrested on murder charges, but was released after posting bail for $100,000.
Candice Montgomery surrendered to authorities last night with a curious, bewildering smile.
She had been a suspect for more than a week, and her lawyer in the Collin County DA had struck an
agreement allowing her to turn herself in. Bonn was set at $100,000. This morning, her attorney,
Robert Udushin came to pick her up after securing the money with a local bonding firm.
Udishan would not discuss what his courtroom strategy would be when the case comes to trial,
but he maintained that Montgomery was innocent and that the state had a weak case.
As far as I could tell, the only thing that the police have supposedly is this one fingerprint
that I've read about in the papers.
She went home and resumed life as normal, even attending church, in front of people,
the same people who were friends with Betty, and she continued to deny.
any wrongdoing of any kind. People in the town, too, were appalled and couldn't believe the news.
And also, it was really hard for them to believe that Candy would have been able to physically use
an axe on Betty, especially 41 times. It just seemed so far-fetched that nobody was really
believing that Candy could have been responsible for this. They thought that she was being
targeted by the police and that this was unfair. So that coupled with Candy herself,
advocating for her innocence and that she had nothing to do with this made everybody believe,
in fact, that she didn't have anything to do with this.
Even Candy's own husband, Pat, believed that she didn't do this for a very long time.
However, she did confide in her defense attorney, her version of events, so that the defense team
knew the truth or her truth and knew how to properly defend her.
Candy, who was only 30 years old at the time, just like Betty, ended up going to
going to trial in October of 1980 for Betty's murder. Despite the constant media attention
and the potential to have an impartial jury or trial, the trial happened in Collin County,
where the crime took place. According to reports at the time, three of the people on the 12-person
jury were personal friends of Candies or her attorneys. I mean, the definition of conflict of
interest, right? Now, this is where it gets a little bit fuzzy, as we only know Candies.
side of the story and the side of the story that she told her defense attorney because we know
that Betty cannot speak for herself. But here's how her version of events went down that day.
She stated that she had left the church to go visit Betty's house to collect a swimsuit for
Betty's daughter since the girls were having a sleepover at the Montgomery House later that
evening. According to her, after some small talk, Betty ended up confronting her about the affair
that she had with Allen.
Because of this confrontation and being caught off guard,
Candy allegedly confessed to the affair
and informed Betty that it had ended a long time ago.
She said that Betty didn't believe her
and kept saying, and I quote,
you can't have him.
You can't have him.
Then Candy claimed that Betty,
while pretending to go and get Alyssa's swimsuit for Candy,
instead went to the garage and grabbed an axe.
She said that Betty tried to hit her with the axe.
and when she swung it, the axe actually hit Candy's toe. So at that point, Candy says the two women
began wrestling for control of the axe, which Candy eventually managed to grab. And during this fight for
the axe, Candy's hairline was struck by the axe and cut her and resulted in some blood. During the
altercation, Candy also suffered bruises on her head and her body. So after that, Candy gained control of
the axe and ended up killing Betty with it, striking her 41 times. The defense team argued
that Candy's alleged murder of Betty was a case of self-defense, as Candy had initially
asserted. Now, at first glance, this argument seemed insane, given the extent of Betty's injuries
and the fact that Candy had hit her with the axe 41 times, even continuing after she clearly
was deemed incapacitated and could not defend herself and was unconscious. However, the defense
introduced a psychiatrist from Houston who had evaluated Candy, including conducting hypnosis.
The psychiatrist testified that Candy had undergone a disassociative event, implying that the
confrontation with Betty prompted a psychological response, resulting in Candy becoming unaware of her
actions and being consumed by a blind rage. The psychiatrist,
said that Candy had been injured with a sharp object on her head during her childhood,
which caused her to bleed profusely. And as she cried, her mother shook her and raised her
finger to her lip saying, sh, Candy, sh, Candy, be quiet, and telling Candy that she couldn't
cry at the hospital because what would people think of her? So Candy claimed that Betty made that
same gesture and same sound during their altercation, which the psychiatrist explained
caused Candy to lose complete control. So basically, his theory was that Candy experienced a
disassociative reaction, then entered an unconscious state of rage as she hit Betty with an axe,
and that that's why afterward she didn't realize that she did it. And get this, guys, the jury
completely bought it. After four and a half hours of deliberation, the jury returned a verdict of not
guilty. Candy was acquitted of murder and once again became a free woman. The courtroom was
absolutely filled with anger, shock, and complete disbelief. As Candy left the courthouse,
people were enraged, just screaming at her, calling her a murderer as she got into her car and
she and Pat drove away. After hearing testimony and closing summations for seven days,
it only took three and one half hours for the jury to render its verdict.
Judge Tom Ryan read it to the court late this afternoon.
Candice Montgomery is not guilty of either murder or voluntary manslaughter.
Montgomery wept and hugged her husband,
and was quickly taken out of the courthouse while reporters were kept inside,
unable to get a reaction.
For defense attorney, Don Crowder, a big victory.
This was his first felony criminal trial, and he was confident of the outcome.
I'm just very pleased.
I'm not stunned by the jury, verdict.
I'm not shocked.
We had a good jury, we thought we had a good jury from the outset, and, you know, I think they did a very conscientious job, obviously.
The victim's husband, Alan Gore, slipped quietly away from the commotion.
Many people who sat through the trial as spectators expressed shock at the verdict.
One woman telling me the decision was a poor reflection on the community.
To hack somebody to death 41 times, there's just no reason.
I just think it's terrible.
It's truly just unbelievable because when you look at the details on the surface of this case, it looks pretty clear.
I don't necessarily think that self-defense would consist of 41 axe wounds, but I'm not a professional apparently, but I don't know.
It's hard for me to believe.
So did the jury truly think that she was innocent and not guilty of this?
The fact that she personally knew and her attorney personally knew, three out of the 12 jurors, could that have been?
why she was found not guilty? We already know the entire town didn't think Candy was capable of this.
So then when she spun the self-defense narrative, was it easier for them to believe to be able to justify how she could have physically done this?
It's unbelievable. Shortly after Betty was murdered, Allen actually eventually got remarried and eventually lost custody of both daughters after Betty's parents were awarded sole custody.
There were allegations of neglect and other inhumane treatment from the children, but honestly, there aren't very many details about that online, understandably so, so it's hard to know what's true and what's not true.
Alan's second marriage didn't last long, though, and now he lives in Florida with a longtime girlfriend.
After her trial, Candy and Pat moved to Georgia with their kids in hopes of a fresh start, which, yeah, I mean, I get that they did want a fresh start to say the least, and they needed to get the heck out of Dodge and get the heck out of that town.
Candy and Pat stayed married for a few years, but then ultimately later ended up getting a divorce.
Now get this, as if this story couldn't get even crazier it's going to, guys.
There is another twist that nobody could have saw coming.
So the trial's over, Alan's remarried, then he's not, then he's living with a longtime girlfriend in Florida.
Candy and Pat moved to Georgia, trying to have a happy ending, and end up getting divorced anyway.
Well, after her divorce, Candy changed her name.
from Candy Montgomery to Candy Wheeler, which is her maiden name, and she ended up working as a
mental health therapist to teenagers suffering from depression, and she worked alongside her daughter,
Jenny. Candy is now 73 years old, and since this whole thing went down in 1980, she hasn't had
any run-ins with police or been involved in any other crimes. So was this really an isolated incident
and was this self-defense?
What is the truth here?
Do you believe Candy?
I mean, I have to agree with the police
that 41 times with an axe
is the most outrageous claim of self-defense
that I have ever heard.
I could maybe see it a little bit more
if Betty was some huge man
and Candy really was in fear for her life
or if there were maybe more wounds on candy
than there really were.
But I mean, it just still seems so, so, so extreme.
Then again, I've never been accosted
with an axe before, so I don't know. But if Candy's story is true, I can imagine that it would be
terrifying to be arguing with somebody one minute and then them reemerging holding an axe.
That would be absolutely so scary. But still, 41 times, I mean, are you serious? And why would
Betty, this Susie homemaker, teacher, and avid churchgoer, go and grab an axe? Was she in a
blind rage? We know she hated when her husband was away. So did she feel that she had possession
over him? Did she not want to lose her happy marriage? And is she the one who flew into a blind
rage and grabbed that axe? It's true that people really can flip by, I mean, come on, damn, that's
extreme. The exact nature of Betty's mental health issues remains unknown. So again, I don't want to
speculate too much into that, but maybe she was super pissed and felt like Candy was going to take her
man and take her happy life and she was just seeing red the red mist just came over her i don't know we know
that she was at least struggling with some form of depression and didn't like alan being away and leaving
town and it seemed like they had a very dependent relationship at least from betty's side so is that possible
but going back to candy really quick if and that is a big if if it was truly a case of self-defense
why not call the police after why go home and
try to clean it up. Why throw your bloody clothes in the washer and dryer? And then act like you had
nothing to do with it for days. Why cut up your flip-flops? Why tell police you had nothing to do
with it when questioned? Why not just say it was self-defense from the get-go? This case is one of the
most insane cases that I've heard. And every time I go through it in my mind, I don't necessarily see
candy as a brutal axe murderer that just went over to kill Betty randomly. But the evidence
sure seems to seem like she was.
Was Candy mad that Alan ended the affair and was now going to be in a happy marriage with
his wife?
Did she need to get Betty out of the way so that she could get back that thrill she was having
so that she could get back in Allen's life?
And so the affair, or at least sexual, escapades could resume because I guess it wouldn't
be an affair at that point if Betty were dead.
Is that why she wanted to get rid of Betty because Betty was in her way?
What do you guys think?
I mean, it's pretty brazen that you're still having the daughter over for sleepover.
and hosting shout baby showers and like acting like you're her best friend then you go over there
and kill her with an axe is it more single white female or is it self-defense now overall i said
there were some stark differences between the true story and both series overall i enjoyed both
series and i do think that they did a good job of portraying the story without twisting things up
too too too much or blurring the lines a ton between reality and drama although there were of course
a few discrepancies. But I guess it's like they say, sometimes real life truly is
stranger than fiction. And this is absolutely one of those cases. So I hope you enjoyed the
episode. I am very, very curious to know what it is you think about this case. So if you are
listening to the podcast version, please take a second if you're listening in Spotify and
go on the poll that I posted. Do you think this was self-defense or do you think that this was more
sinister and intentional from candy? Go on Spotify. Give your answer to that poll. Or
if you are watching the video version of this later on in the week, let me know in the comment
section below. As a reminder, new episodes of Serialessly come out every single Monday. They drop
on the podcast first. They will be available via video a few days later in the week or maybe about
a week later. So if you want to have first dibs, first access to listening and hearing these
cases and these case updates, make sure you're following along the podcast. It's available
wherever you get your podcast. And as another little caveat to that, in addition to Mondays, I have
have been posting bonus episodes on the podcast. I think I mentioned that at the top of this video
as we're getting trial updates and new things are dropping. So make sure you're following along
on the podcast so that you don't miss any of those. And if you enjoyed this episode and you're
enjoying this podcast if you're checking it out for the first time, please take a quick second to
rate and review this episode. It totally helps the podcast out, helps the algorithm, helps get more
people to learn about the podcast and see it, come across their page. So I appreciate you taking the time
to do so. As always, you can find me on Instagram at underscore Annie Elise, where I post all breaking
news updates and keep you guys well informed over there as things are happening in real time.
So that's the spiel. I told you guys everything. I broke it all down for you. Thank you so much
for tuning in with me today. And I will see you bright and early next Monday for an all new episode
of serialously unless I see you sooner for a bonus episode. Guess you'll have to stay tuned and see.
We're going to be able to
Thank you.
