You're Wrong About - "The Prom Mom"
Episode Date: June 25, 2020“The criminal justice system should treat everyone like a white teenage girl whose future it’s concerned about disrupting.” Sarah tells Mike about Melissa Drexler, the New Jersey teenager who (a...ccording to George F. Will) killed her newborn baby due to the influence of Metallica and the United States Supreme Court. Digressions include Baby Moses laws, “Citizen Ruth” and Ted Bundy’s political leanings. To the surprise of no one, we end up discussing true crime tropes in great detail.This episode contains detailed descriptions of neonaticide. Support us:Subscribe on PatreonDonate on PaypalBuy cute merchWhere else to find us: Sarah's other show, Why Are Dads Mike's other show, Maintenance PhaseSupport the show
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In the 90s, we were like, children are murderers.
And now 20 years later, the alarmist logic is like,
too many of these children are non-binary.
Welcome to You're Wrong About, the podcast that debunks misunderstood history or tells
you something you never knew in the first place.
Beautiful.
This is a reference to the fact that once again, you're just going in with no idea of
what's going to happen.
Yes, the last couple of weeks have been a journey through the gaps in my public school
education that I had no idea who Anastasia or Rasputin were.
I did not learn that in school.
I learned that from cable TV.
Yeah, and I just think for the next couple of episodes, we should rename the show You're
Unaware of.
I think that's more accurate.
I'm Michael Hobbs.
I'm a reporter for The Huffington Post.
I'm Sarah Marshall.
I'm working on a book about the satanic panic.
We're on Patreon and we take donations on PayPal and you can buy t-shirts and you can
also decide not to support us for any reason you want because it's quarantine and it's
tough and weird out there.
That's chill, too.
There you go.
We still love you.
Even if you're listening to this post-quarantine, I bet it's still tough and weird.
I'm willing to guess that.
You know what?
It's still tough and weird.
It's always tough and weird.
Yeah.
Today, we are talking about something called the prom mom, which I think has something
to do with a mother who killed her daughter, maybe?
Go on.
I want to hear what you think this is about.
That's literally it.
You told me these words like a month ago and I've never heard these words in that order
before.
Right.
It's very important that if there's a crime, you need to be able to get a rhyming title
out of it somehow.
The prom mom was what the media started calling Melissa Drexler, who was 18 years old, on
June 6, 1997, when she and her boyfriend and another couple arrived at their high school
prom in New Jersey and she went to the bathroom and delivered a baby and then came back out
to prom.
This was massive news.
Oh my God.
Just at the top, this episode is going to be about dead babies and I feel like that's
already become my calling card on this show.
That's dark.
There's in the stalls of the women's bathroom, each one has a little metal kind of a canister
that tends to be on the side of the stall and you open it and that's where you throw
away tampons and stuff.
Like a sharps container.
Yes.
Yeah.
It can have a serrated edge.
Okay.
Melissa Drexler apparently used the serrated edge of that to cut her baby's umbilical
cord.
Oh my God.
And then threw the baby in the main trash of the bathroom.
Soon after, Melissa throws her baby in the trash and goes back out to prom.
A maintenance worker comes along and tries to lift the trash bag and is like, this is
much heavier than usual.
Oh, it's in a bag.
So I'm going to send you an image.
This is the cover of People Magazine that is reporting on Melissa Drexler and a few
other cases that it seems similar.
Oh, wow.
So it's a People Magazine cover with just atrocious graphic design and that's kind
of their thing.
And the headline is Heartbreaking Crimes, Kids Without A Conscience.
It's actually kids without a conscience.
Rape murder a baby dead at prom.
A look at young lives that seem to have gone very, comma, very wrong.
It's a little disturbing to me that they made that rhyme.
Wait, look at young lives that seem to have gone very, very wrong.
That's like a Michelle remembers rhyme.
We're like, yeah, I see what you were going for, Michelle.
It's an Emily Dickinson rhyme.
And so we have five kids pictured.
We have Melissa Drexler, 18.
Her baby was found dead at prom.
Jeremy Strohmeyer, 18, accused of killing a seven-year-old.
Daphne Abdelah, 15, accused of a Central Park murder.
Gray Arthur, 19, accused of murdering Jonathan Levine.
Amy Grossberg, 18, accused of killing her newborn.
So these are five separate cases.
These are not all the kids involved in this prom mom thing.
No, yeah.
It was the prom mom was a solo thing.
And yeah, it's interesting to me that aside from Melissa Drexler and Amy Grossberg, I
don't think any of these teenagers have name recognition for Americans today.
And even if you pull someone off the street and ask them who Amy Grossberg is, I don't
think they're going to be able to tell you.
No, I've never heard of her.
She's anesthesia to me.
Interestingly, Amy Grossberg and Melissa Drexler both lived in New Jersey and they
both were arrested for having allegedly killed their newborn babies within a year of each
other.
And interestingly, the Amy Grossberg and Melissa Drexler cases sort of get fused together in
the public mind to form this like super case, because Melissa Drexler gave birth at prom
and Amy Grossberg gave birth in a motel room with her boyfriend present.
And then he disposed of her baby in a dumpster.
Oh, wow.
So now I want to redo a Reddit question, which is what the hell is a prom dumpster baby?
And where did it originate?
Oh, it seems to be a fairly common question.
It would be a fairly cliched joke about prom.
I've heard it in many TV shows and comedy references was putting a baby in a dumpster
or a common occurrence.
Why prom?
So many questions.
And then there's like 400 responses to it.
I think this also happened because there was a family guy segment in 2007, I believe
called prom night dumpster baby.
So we have this fusion of these two real cases that made significant headlines in 1997, one
involving a baby being thrown in the trash can at the bathroom of a prom and one being
thrown in a dumpster.
And yeah.
And we have the merging of the most salacious details of both.
We have the prom and the dumpster.
Yeah.
It's like we needed to fit those things together.
Yeah.
Okay.
I'm going to read you the opening of this People magazine article whose cover I just
had you look at.
Kids without a conscience.
Kids.
Kids.
And I would just like to hear your response.
Yeah.
Okay.
So during the past decade, the number of murders committed by teenagers has leaped from roughly
1,000 a year to nearly 4,000.
Oh, wow.
Worry some as that trend may be a fleeting glance at recent headlines suggest some teens
these days are also committing crimes of incomprehensible callousness.
The young people involved in some of these violent acts are without the capacity to make
the connection with another life, says Dr. David Hartman.
They need have no more reason for hurting another human being than they have for peeling
an orange.
Oh, no.
It's greatest hits again.
The solid logic always follows the phrase teens these days, right?
Exactly.
You know that you're going to hear something that is unimpeachable and has nothing to do
with projection or fear mongering.
And then of course, the final half of the paragraph is just this pure like suburban parents fear
for your lives message.
And the same way we saw in a lot of sex panics around teenagers were like, they'll give
a blow job just as quickly as shaking your hand.
It's doing the thing where like, they'll murder someone or text them.
It doesn't matter.
Like these things that don't make any sense in human behaviors.
Yes.
This is what every generation thinks about the subsequent generation.
I think it allows us to make peace with our own aging, but like humanity is degrading
and they are worse than we were.
I was listening to a podcast the other day about this and there's literally letters from
people in ancient Rome writing about like kids today, like I'm really worried about
this next generation.
Like this is one of the most common human traits to be fair.
The Romans fucked this article has that fantastic opening paragraph and then it talks about
Melissa Drexler.
Wonderful.
One of the members of the class of 97 at Lacy Township High School in New Jersey, Melissa
Drexler 18 was known as a quiet, diligent student, an aspiring fashion designer who dreamed of
becoming the next Donna Karen.
She seemed shy and opened up only to a few close friends.
On June 6, she went to her senior prom dressed in a floor length black sleeveless velvet
gown.
Drexler arrived in a limousine at the Garden Manor Banquet Hall in Aberdeen, New Jersey
at about 745 PM with her boyfriend, John Lewis.
He immediately retreated to the restroom with a classmate to freshen up.
When her friend grew concerned that she was taking so long in one of the stalls, Drexler,
mom of county prosecutors say, told her she was having a heavy period and to let their
dates know she would be a while.
The girl returned to the restroom about 15 minutes later and Drexler emerged, zipped her
dress and touched up her makeup.
A few minutes later, after asking the DJ to play a Metallica song, she hit the dance
floor with Lewis.
She seemed normal, says a fellow student.
All smiles.
Meanwhile, a cleaning woman, summoned by school officials to clean up the blood streak stall
to the ladies room, discovered the lifeless body of a six pound six ounce baby boy in
a tied garbage bag in a trash basket.
After learning that Drexler was the last to use the restroom, teachers began questioning
her.
She was not upset, says Monmouth County prosecutor Robert Honaker.
She indicated that she had delivered an infant.
Such a blank response, though bewildering, is not unheard of, says Dr. Philip Resnick,
a professor of psychiatry at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland.
Oh, no.
With mothers who deny their pregnancy and don't form a bond, it's like a foreign body going
through them, like a peach pit.
Yeah. So yeah, what do you think?
Eventually me and you are going to have to reckon with the fact that all we want to do
is just read 20 year old people magazine stories to each other on Saturday mornings.
I think you did reckon with that by starting a podcast where we get to do that in a professional
capacity. I think we've really done well.
I mean, I have roughly 174 follow up questions about what really happened and what was really
going on and the logistics of how this is even possible.
I just want to know everything.
Yeah. Well, for context, so another source has it that Melissa Drexler gives birth in
the space of about 20 minutes, like later in emerges that her water broke earlier that
day. So she was in contractions throughout the day as she was getting ready for prom,
whether she was aware of that or not.
And so she gets to prom, she goes into the bathroom and 20 minutes later, she has a baby.
20 minutes. That's amazing to me.
I know. That's another thing that really stood out to me logistically, that as a gay man,
I am not an expert on birth procedures.
But I mean, people talk about like 12, 14 hours.
Like people don't say like 20 minutes.
And then I like listened to Metallica and I was dancing 10 minutes after.
I mean, that it almost sounds fake to me, but this seems like some version of these
events actually occurred.
So I mean, what's interesting is that this aspect of it is not really called into question.
Like the timing is reported pretty consistently.
It doesn't appear that she or her lawyers attempt to challenge that in any way.
The issue basically is it is whenever one of these cases is in the news is was the
baby born alive and if so, did she kill it?
And if so, was she in a state of dissociation or distress or what have you that mitigates
that or are we going to look at it as murder?
And this becomes a question, you know, that is obviously very divisive and brings in
also, you know, just the are the political value of babies, which is quite profound.
Because having a stillbirth in a bathroom is a very different act than having a living
baby and then suffocating it.
Yes. And then it's like, did she do it intentionally?
Or did she take a living baby and put it in the trash?
Right. She's still responsible, but it's a more passive act.
And how do we deal with that?
And how do we deal with the fact that, you know, she made literally no effort to conceal
any of this from anybody, right?
Like she had concealed the entire pregnancy.
Nobody knew she was pregnant, but like she gave birth in her bathroom at prom.
Like that's like, if you made a list of like places where I could get caught most easily,
like, yeah, it is interesting.
That's got to be at the top of it.
Like she didn't even leave prom.
Yeah.
To me, it suggests like a profound level of self denial.
Yeah, it has to.
And there is in fact a term for this very thing.
When you become pregnant, you are in deep denial of being pregnant and you either genuinely
do not know or you have some awareness of it, but you're able to totally compartmentalize it.
Oh.
And so here's a quote from a really great article in Dame by Miranda Kulp.
We hear from Dr. Diana Lynn Barnes, a psychotherapist who specializes in maternal mental health,
who describes the different types of denial and provides a framework for understanding
these cases.
Affective denial is when the new mother knows intellectually that she is pregnant,
but the heightened sensitivity around a pregnancy that we might expect is absent.
They don't ask and don't talk about it.
This is often overlooked or chalked up to difficulty adjusting.
But with affective denial, the new mother relates to the baby not as a joyous event,
but as, quote, a traumatic reminder.
Wow.
These women will often come around to accept the baby when they see the sonogram
or start to show physical signs of pregnancy.
But pervasive denial is when the knowledge of the baby either disappears or never comes
into the woman's consciousness.
Denial is a coping mechanism that gives us some distance from a shocking piece of information
before it, quote, sinks in.
But these women never awaken to the pregnancy, even when they are asked directly.
It's simply too terrifying to face the consequences.
I mean, what's amazing about that is on some level, we all do that all the time.
Yes.
Right?
Like, I know there's $17 in my bank account, but like, I'm going to go to Applebee's anyway.
Like, you do these things where it's like, you don't want something to be true.
Yes.
Oh, yeah.
And so you just don't do it.
That's a really good metaphor.
You're like, I'm not going to have an overdraft.
I'm not going to have an overdraft.
I'm not going to have an overdraft.
But this is just a really extreme form of that.
Yes.
Yeah, exactly.
It's an extreme form of very recognizable human behavior.
And I think that it's one of the things that freaks us out about it.
Yeah.
And also just contemplating, like, how much of having a baby is rehearsal and is thinking about it.
And I think we have this very culturally inscribed idea that, like, we know what pregnancy looks like.
When you are pregnant, you get really big and you have food cravings and, you know,
and it's very obvious to everyone what's going on.
And it turns out that it doesn't have to be, especially if, apparently, if you're in deep denial.
So there are many cases over the years where young women give birth to babies that no one
in their life had any idea they were pregnant with.
And what people frequently say is like, she did not even look pregnant.
Like, there's a girl named Brooke Schuyler Richardson
who was wearing a bikini the summer before she gave birth.
Like, when she was quite pregnant.
Like, some people just don't grow her show all that much.
Wow.
Mm-hmm.
Well, and the funny thing too about, so we had a quote from Dr. Philip J. Resnick
about, you know, for these young mothers in denial, it's like passing a peach pit,
which sounds like he's, I mean, that's, you don't get enough context,
but I feel like that quote is being used in a way to suggest like,
yeah, they're heartless, peeling an orange, passing a peach pit, it's terrible.
But interestingly, Philip J. Resnick is the father of neonaticide studies and was one of the most
vocal and early proponents of like, let's think seriously about the social phenomenon and what,
like he coined the term neonaticide.
Interesting.
So here's, here's the classification we have.
This is a Resnick quote.
In the literature, all child murders by parents are usually lumped together under the term
infanticide. So that refers to all murders of children by their parents.
In the author's opinion, there are two distinct types of child murder.
Neonaticide is defined as the killing of a neonate on the day of its birth.
Okay.
Phyllicide is operationally defined as the murder of a son or daughter older than 24 hours.
So those are two completely separate categories.
He's taken infanticide and for his purposes, this is published in 1970,
has split it into two separate categories psychologically.
So there is killing your own child for whatever reason or combination of reasons
at some point when they are a child.
And neonaticide, according to Resnick, is a separate thing that like,
it takes place immediately after birth and it I think relates more to the birth and the pregnancy
than to the child themselves in a way.
It's an extension of the denial that you were ever pregnant.
Yes.
Wow.
In cases like this, the places that babies are found, they get found in trash cans,
they get found in dumpsters, they get found in alleys, dumped by the side of the highway,
like awful things like that.
And if you think about it in terms of like, this person killed this baby and then dumped their
corpse, they just treated them like garbage, like what a terrible person.
Like you can make that argument.
And I think you can also make the argument and this is my argument that
all of these places are congruent with the fact that these people just have not accepted that
they have given birth to a baby at all.
Like this is the way you treat evidence that you're trying to dispose of.
This is like where you throw a gun that you've used to commit a murder.
Right.
So when do we rewind and find out what really happened with Melissa?
The beginning of the story, I guess, if we want to begin with Melissa Drexler,
we can talk about how her friends remembered her before this happened.
And there's a New York Times article that I'm drawing on this for that information
and also for the way that she is described by the media after committing this crime
that is shocking to many people and that have many people calling for blood.
And so the title is, Before prom night, a suspect was the girl next door.
That's very the first 10 minutes of every true crime podcast.
Yes.
And I feel like often in kind of true crime tropes,
we have like the normalcy was a cover in darkness inside.
And often I think like the normalcy is the darkness or what we read as the normalcy
is the darkness.
But I'll read to you a little bit from this article.
Please do.
A month ago, 18-year-old Melissa Drexler was just a quiet, somewhat introverted high school
senior who wanted to graduate from Lacy Township High School, get on with her summer job at a
retail store on the beach and hang out with her boyfriend.
By all accounts, hers was an undistinguished life.
She, an ordinary girl, really mellow, one friend called her.
She'd gone to dancing school.
She wanted to be a fashion designer.
She liked club music.
She was looking forward to the prom, trying on dresses with her friend Rebecca.
And so we learned from this article that according to her friends and to people who
knew her family, Melissa is kind of quiet.
They describe her as a compassionate person and someone who always wants to
lend an ear to a friend who is in need of some consolation or support.
But who also, according to her friends, is kind of on the stoic side.
She's not prone to really opening up about her feelings.
And so her senior year of high school, she's been taking a fashion merchandising course
at vocational school in the mornings.
And then she has high school classes.
And then she's apparently been spending most of the day with her boyfriend.
So she gets off school at one.
And then they spend the afternoon together.
And then he goes to work at Walmart at eight.
Right.
And so that's kind of her life, her boyfriend.
And then this close, smallish group of female friends,
is how she's described at the time.
And apparently the fall preceding the prom where she gives birth to the baby,
in November, the previous year, her boyfriend is like, Melissa's period's late.
And then he's like, never mind, everything's fine.
And that's like the only thing anyone hears about that at all.
That's the only foreshadowing.
Yeah.
And it's interesting because this case is in the news at the same time as the Amy Grossberg case.
And interestingly, it seems like Amy Grossberg did realize she was pregnant,
like was able to verbalize it.
Her boyfriend knew.
She had told him.
And they were both kind of in on it.
But in this maybe, I would still call it a form of denial, but like a less profound form of denial.
I think there's different, you know, degrees of all these kinds of psychological states.
And so with Grossberg and Peterson, it seems like they were like, okay, Amy's pregnant,
but no one can know.
And we're not going to tell anyone about it.
And that's a problem for future us.
And then with Melissa Drexler, there seems to have been just this total denial.
Like no one even appears to have suspected anything.
Yeah, it's amazing.
It's also interesting that she doesn't have any history of any mental health stuff, it seems like.
I mean, like nothing that she was treated for or like taken in.
And that's interesting too, because it's like how many kind of like middle class
kids are really struggling, but in ways that never manifest in behavior
for which there are severe enough consequences.
Or that leaves a paper trail at all.
Yeah. So who knows?
Yeah. I mean, what else do we know about sort of what was going on with her
that would have put her into this state, this mental state?
So a week after the news about Melissa Breaks, there is a New York Times article
called Concealing a Pregnancy to Avoid Telling Mom.
And that is the thesis.
If parents and mothers in particular haven't been blamed for enough of their children's problems,
there is yet another accusation against them.
One of the most common reasons some young women hide their pregnancies for nine months
is that they are afraid to tell their mothers.
So they talk about Melissa, they talk about another teenage girl also in New Jersey.
1997 was a bad year for New Jersey who went to her parents' garage in the middle of the night
to give birth to a baby and then was intending to take the baby out somewhere to surrender,
but passed out instead.
And her parents found her in the baby when they woke up.
Wow.
And then we have a quote from Dr. Margaret Spinelli of Columbia University,
who says that in extensive interviews with 19 ages who killed their newborns,
she found several patterns.
Seven of the nine had been sexually or physically abused by someone outside the family.
The girl was usually her father's favorite, excelling in school and earning good grades.
They have no sociopathic traits, she said.
Some are cheerleaders.
Oh, God.
I love that quote.
Oh, my God.
That's such Sarah Bate.
Yes.
Because what's the opposite of a sociopath?
A cheerleader.
And those are the two poles of human morality,
sociopath and cheerleader, and most of us are somewhere in between.
And then do we have any information on why she wasn't showing?
Okay, so here's a paragraph from Newsweek.
Students have started placing bets on whether Drexler will show up for graduation this Saturday.
Others are still arguing over whether she was the one to request the Modlin Metallica song
Unforgiven at the prom.
Nearly all of them has flipped to her picture in the New Year book,
searching for clues into the psyche of the quiet slender girl
who hid her pregnancy under nothing more than baggy clothes and a slouch.
Wow.
But all they find is a photo and a name, no teams, no activities, no clubs.
Wow.
Although that song is actually really good.
It is.
If she did choose it, it's a very interesting choice.
What do we know about Melissa's like upbringing in parents and stuff?
She's described as being shy and having parents who indulged her.
They bought her a car.
They bought her gas.
They didn't want her to have to work.
A classmate's mother says in the People article that Melissa is a child emotionally.
She didn't make decisions on her own about things.
Someone else says her family is almost too nice.
This is a People magazine article, so I'm inclined to take with a grain of salt any
sort of categorization of a family that's done sort of on a very tight deadline where
you need to kind of hammer out a thesis and be like, her parents were overindulgent.
Yeah, that's the picket.
Right.
Right.
But on the other hand, that also makes sense to me as at least potentially the picture that
we're looking at where, yeah, there's this unwillingness to bring this adult truth into
the household.
Yeah.
So here's how the New York Times describes her parents.
So also prepare to unpack this.
So imagine that I'm handing you a nice lumpy tote bag.
The Drexler's by all account are decent, ordinary people, stunned by the events of June 6th,
and their sudden notoriety.
My heart goes out to these people, said their lawyer.
This is their first encounter with the criminal justice system.
The case is to go to a grand jury in a few weeks.
If Mr. Drexler is indicted, goes to trial and is convicted,
she could face 30 years to life in prison.
These are very unsophisticated, very humble people, their lawyer said.
These people don't have a disingenuous phone in their bodies.
There is nothing special about them.
They're religious.
They're well liked in their neighborhood.
I mean, you know what this reminds me of actually?
What?
It reminds me of whenever we see a standup comedian do something that indicates
like a deep well of sadness.
We always have this fake sense of surprise.
Like when Robin Williams killed himself, there was this fake like,
how could a funny person be so sad inside?
And it's like most comedians are sad inside.
Like this is a very typical story that we've heard many times of people using humor
to cover up real hurt.
And it's the same thing here where there's like this fake sense of surprise of like
a family in the suburbs.
How could this happen to an ordinary family?
It's like most bad things happen to ordinary people
and like bad things happen to ordinary people all the time
and ordinariness is a cover for something much more complicated most of the time.
This is why the Ted Bundy industrial complex drives me insane
because like the crux of the argument about why Ted Bundy is like
the most surprising and therefore the most amazing serial killer or whatever
is that like he seemed so normal.
He was a normal American man and it's like, yes.
And then they're like, and he was active in the Republican Party
and it's like, yes, like he had trouble with empathy.
Of course he was doing well in Republican and political organizing.
I mean, that is part of like the construction of suburban whiteness, right,
is this idea that like, well, everything's normal as the default.
And it's like every time we see something darker, we're like little goldfish.
It's like swimming around in a circle and being like, a castle, a castle, a castle.
And it's like the same revelation over and over again.
That's the best description of American audience's relationship to true crime I've ever heard.
And it's not that we don't remember seeing the castle before.
We just like pretending like, oh my gosh, who could have imagined a castle?
Right. Like somebody struggling with mental illness in the suburbs?
In the suburbs?
Yeah. And to me, one of the originary functions of true crime as a genre and sort of what it
has come to represent, it exists to tell us whose lives are important, right?
Because if Melissa Drexler were black and she killed her baby,
I'm pretty sure she would be described in the 90s as a super predator.
She would be picked up as like an example for a super predator trend piece.
And you know, part of the reason that she and Amy Grossberg become kind of a trend is because
they're both from like idyllic New Jersey, like nice white kid New Jersey, like how could it be?
And again, the implication is like, how could you kill a baby if we bought you this garbage disposal?
That sounds weirder now that I say it than it was in my head.
Do we have any indication of like how we could predict this in people or cure it somehow?
So in a previous episode, long, long ago, I mentioned that I had a Google News Alert set
for the phrase dead baby.
Yes.
And I think this started for me when I started thinking more about kind of the disparity between
the fact that as a country, we are making it harder and harder for women to access abortion
and to access contraception.
And as much as we love the symbolic baby and we want to get babies born,
we are increasingly unwilling to help people take care of their babies.
And so the dead baby Google News Alert was basically this worst case scenario
digest in my inbox every day and a headline from December 11th, 2018.
Headline, unidentified baby girl is New Jersey's first safe surrender of 2018.
So in 1999, after these dead and abandoned baby cases kind of had captured headlines for a while,
we saw the first American safe haven law, which are also sometimes called baby Moses laws being
passed, which basically means that we are establishing that if you give birth to a baby
and you're like, I can't take care of this baby.
I don't even want anyone to know that I had this baby.
I need to get this baby far away from me right now that you can take your baby to the locations
very based on states, but frequently they're like hospitals, fire stations, and you can
anonymously surrender your baby.
And so these laws didn't exist until 1999.
Now all 50 states have them on the books, but this was something that like
ways of surrendering infants safely have existed since like the 14th century.
But this is when as modern Americans, we looked up and were like, hey, we should have
some kind of a system that allows you to give up a baby that you cannot take care of with no
repercussions. Like that's an idea.
So we have these safe haven laws in all 50 states, which the goal is to combat exactly the
situation, like someone concealing a pregnancy, secretly giving birth, feeling panic, feeling
shame, feeling nothing. And so I feel like that answers some of the problem. But I think more
deeply that, you know, the question too is like, how do you address the issue of the denial?
Right, right. And how do you predict this in advance? Because of course parents wouldn't know
that their daughter was doing this because by definition, she's not talking about it.
So I'm trying to find a George Will thing. We're going to hear some George Will.
Oh, no.
I know. Michael, who is George F. Will?
Oh, just a conservative ghoul columnist who's been around since 1907.
Okay, this is this is peak George F. Will. He's starting off by talking about
Unforgiven, the song that some say Melissa requested the DJ to play at prom.
Metallica's song begins, new blood joins the earth. And quickly he's subdued. I love that he's
quoting Metallica. It is just another song of adolescent self pity, the not altogether
intelligible gist of which is the usual of that genre. Society, the Unforgiven is oppressive,
subduing the new blood of youth. But the society that shaped Ms. Drexler seemed not to have
inhibited her noticeably. She seemed to be enjoying herself said a friend about Ms. Drexler's
postpartum dancing. Medical examiners have determined that the baby was alive during the
birthing process, which occurred early in the prom. Ms. Drexler will be charged with something,
maybe murder, maybe endangering a child, maybe conducting a partial birth abortion at prom
without a license. Oh, God, who taught her to think or not think in a way that caused her to
regard her newborn baby as disposable trash. It was Metallica. She has grown up in a society that
does not stress deferral of gratification. And it's not her fault that the baby arrived during
prom for Pete's sake. She has come of age in a society where condom dispensing schools teach
sex education in the manner which has been well described as plumbing for hedonists.
If she is like millions of other young adults, she has pumped into her ears thousands of hours of
the coarsening lyrics of popular music. Yeah. However, foremost among the moral tutors who
prepared Ms. Drexler to act as she did is the Supreme Court. Oh, God. By pretending in Roe v. Wade
not to know when life begins, the court encouraged looking away from the stark fact that abortion
kills something. So according to George F. Will, we have to stop Metallica and we have to stop the
Supreme Court. It's like you just type in teen mom and then you just click on whatever predictive
text gives you over and over and over again. Yeah. You type in like teens and it's like
sexting or like rap lyrics. Pierce labia. I also, I'm sorry, but I hate, I know you went to grad
school, but I hate the thing where we do this literary thing where we link the lyrics of songs
to like the situation. It's just, there's something so hacky about it. Yes, it is very hacky. I just
think it's one of those things of where it makes you seem smart to do that. Yes. But you're not
actually performing any analysis there. You're just being like, this thing is like this other thing.
It's like, great, George. Okay. And then it's condoms and Supreme Court all the way down. This is
like the Natalie Wynn argument that like conservative pundits love talking about the classics,
but they don't appear to actually read them. And this is a nice way that I can contradict George
F. Will actually, because there's this interesting trend in colonial America where,
hold on, let me pull up. I have another, I got to go to on JSTOR and I love JSTOR so much.
Give me two. I feel so happy when I'm there. I think it creates joy in me the way Lexis
Nexus does for you. So we're going to talk about the Concealment Act of 1624. And I'm going to
read a passage about that from a book by Arlie Laughnan whose name I hope I'm pronouncing correctly
who's a professor at the University of Sydney Law School. And so this is about the UK. We're
going to see British law migrate over to the United States or what's going to become the United
States eventually. Concern with women's sexual immorality, illegitimacy and poverty coalesced
in a statute dealing specifically with newborn child murder by single women and acted in 1624.
The 1624 act created a species of constructive crime, an offense paralleling murder and a
legal presumption that a woman concealing the death of her illegitimate child had murdered it.
The act provided that where lewd women concealed the death of a bastard child,
the said mother so offending shall suffer death as in the case of murder. Remember it was spelling
it murder back then. And there's a broadsheet called my favorite murder. Oh my god.
The 1624 act provided that if a woman could produce a witness to testify that the child
had been born dead, she could avoid conviction and death. However, as several writers point out,
it was often difficult for unmarried women to secure a witness to the birth because of the
secrecy of the affair or seduction that led to it. Right. So in other words, if I have become
pregnant in a quote, illegitimate way, then it is my job to like, even if I've been concealing
this pregnancy the whole time to like, find a witness to have the baby in front of and someone
who's like, societally respected enough that they will be listened to if they're like, yep,
the baby did not survive. Because like, automatically, it just, it puts me in a position
where like, if something goes wrong, I could face theoretically the death penalty. Right. Right. If
your baby dies of natural causes, then you'll have to prove that it wasn't you. Yeah. It's also
notable that they include the word lewd in there, lewd women. It's also greatest hits blaming
the women for the illegitimacy, of course, right? It's not ever blaming the men. Yeah, it's the hit
board game of the 1690s, blame a woman. Yeah. But so the nice thing about this, the Concealment
Act of 1624 is that it's like, this law has no pretenses. It's like, guilty until proven innocent
because you're a woman and you're unmarried and pregnant and this lewdness will not stand.
Yeah. And so this was the extremely punitive way that we went about prosecuting women who we,
perhaps, very slightly suspected of lying about having not killed their babies.
Prove it. Yeah. And what happens, interestingly, is that this extremely punitive law, because the
punishment is death and increasingly courts are reluctant to execute women for this and the women
who are executed are at the margins of society. They're non-white, they're servants, they're
enslaved people. It's a very classic American example of some people being more equal under
the law than others. But basically, we end up with this very harsh law that is on the books
and that people generally don't really want to use. And I think that's where we are today.
So is this what ended up happening with Melissa?
Yes. When she's indicted in September of 1997, the Monmouth County prosecutor tells the media
that he's not going to seek the death penalty. He's decided he's not going to seek the death
penalty, which implies that it was ever on the table. What I think happened is this,
and this is the same thing that happened with Amy Grossberg. You start off
by implying that, well, the death penalty is on the table. We could use that, but we're not going
to. We're going to be nice when the chances of getting a jury to impose the death penalty
on a middle-class white teenage girl is just in New Jersey. That's going to be tough.
Right? That's like me saying, yeah, I could have a skate off with Tanya Harding, but I
choose not to. I choose not to skate. This actually made me want to look this up.
And so I want you to guess this. So the death penalty, as you know, was taken off the table
for a period and then reinstated in 1976. So how many women do you think the United States
has executed since 1976? Oh, wow. God, my guess is going to be wildly off 25?
That's pretty close. Really? 16. Oh, that's how many men have we executed in that time?
Oh, my God. Like many, like more than 100? Yeah, it's 1,500 and 18. Oh, wow. Yeah.
Yeah, so 100 times more almost. Yeah. And so that's very interesting to me that the death
penalty is something you sort of talk about to conjure with the idea and be like, by the way,
I'm capable of doing this, but functionally, I'm not and I won't. And then we start talking about
aggravated manslaughter. Aggravated manslaughter is 10 to 30 years. And as they're preparing to go
to trial or for her to make a plea, Melissa Drexler is also free on bond. So people kind of
know where this is going. And my feeling is that at the start, when the outrage is strong,
when people are as upset as they ever will be and they want the sense of a strong hand,
velvet, fist, glove, whatever thing, that's the right time to be like, death penalty is possible.
Okay, no death penalty, but 30 years or maybe murder. And people are like, yeah, okay, good.
And then they like move on with their lives. They get distracted by sales,
they take up a craft. This stops being front page news. And then you plead it down to a couple of
years. Oh, so is that what happens? This is what happens. So the prosecution's medical examiners
are saying the baby definitely was born alive. And the fact that there's air in the baby's lungs
means we know that she has fixated the baby. The defense lawyers bring in forensic pathologist
Dr. Michael Bodden, who is also a former member of OJ Simpson's defense team.
No fucking way. Were there like two lawyers in America in the 1990s?
There were apparently like five forensic pathologists. Yeah. But yeah, he comes on as
the pathologist for the defense and says, well, the air found in the baby's lungs could come
from the EMTs trying to resuscitate him. Okay. So is there is there a trial or
this is just a plea deal? This is a plea deal. Okay. So Melissa does plead guilty in August of 1998.
And as part of her guilty plea, she has to describe the circumstances surrounding her baby's death.
So this is how the New York Times reports it. Ms. Drexler stood next to her lawyer as she read
a statement written in a blocky, upright cursive. I went to the bathroom and delivered the baby.
She said, the baby was born alive. I knowingly took the baby out of the toilet and wrapped a
series of garbage bags around the baby. In matter of fact, language apparently intended to show the
quote, knowing indifference that is required for a charge of aggravated manslaughter. She continued,
I was aware of what I was doing when I placed the baby in the bag. I was further aware that what I
did would most certainly result in the death of the baby. Wow. Yeah. I mean, it's interesting to
think about how much we don't know because we don't know how she's saying these words. We don't know
how she feels about what she's saying. When you plead guilty to a crime, you have to describe
your guilt. So like, it's possible that she on the inside is still maintaining like,
no, the baby was born dead, I swear. But just like has to describe this as part of what a plea
deal is. Right. So I don't know. I mean, it seems we can believe either one. I personally, I don't
find it hard to believe at all that she could have delivered her baby. And then I mean, she was in
there for 20 minutes. So like it's, I don't think there was time for contemplation. I mean, I have
no evidence for this, but I can imagine someone just sort of sleepwalking through these steps
without giving them a lot of thought. Yeah. Just sort of acting on instinct, which doesn't like
make it okay. It makes it imaginable. Yeah. It's something that you can imagine a non-monster
doing. Yeah. And then or this feeling of like, if I don't acknowledge that this has happened,
then like it won't have happened. Like this can continue to not be a baby. Yeah. And Melissa ends
up pleading guilty to aggravated manslaughter, which is the one that has been described in the
previous New York Times article is having a 10 to 30 year sentence. The headline when she pleads
guilty is woman gets 15 years and death of newborn at prom. Okay. And then second paragraph,
the judge said that the woman, Melissa Drexler 20 would be eligible for her first parole hearing
after serving two years and 11 months. Okay. She ended up being in prison for 37 months. So
three years and one month. And so my theory is that you, you know, you start off sounding as harsh
as possible. And then you slowly kind of whittle it down to something that's actually reasonable.
Maybe this is an example of how the law at times is more about, I don't know, that there are some
populations that you want to show what you could do to them and some populations that you just,
you know, you have no reluctance at all and you just do it. Right. That's how the same system gets
applied unequally to different populations is because it always has the capabilities,
but only for certain people do you reach that potential. Yes. And so this becomes also interesting
in the Grossberg case where Amy Grossberg and her boyfriend, Brian Peterson had gone to this
motel in Delaware and she had given birth there and they start off presenting a unified front
and saying, we panicked. We thought the baby was stillborn and we panicked and disposed of the
body. And then they turn on each other because what happens is that eventually Amy's lawyers are
like, actually, it was Brian's idea to get rid of the body. And then Brian Peterson's lawyers come
back and are like, no, Amy Grossberg told me to get rid of it and I did. And so between them,
each contradicting each other's stories, Brian Peterson serves 20 months and Amy Grossberg
serves 22 months. This just goes to my argument that like, the criminal justice system should
treat everyone like a white teenage girl whose future it's truly concerned about disrupting.
Just the idea that Melissa Drexler kills a baby, people are able on some level to appreciate the
fact that it seems more just wildly out of touch with sanity and reality than malice. And this
is not a well person and they have a salvageable life, so let's try and salvage that. I feel
that's just a perspective that it's possible to bring to everyone who's brought in front of you
as an officer of the law. I feel like regardless of whether you feel any sympathy or empathy for
Melissa Drexler, it's inevitably very interesting to see her as like this monkey ranch that fell
into the criminal justice machinery where like every person she appeared before, they were like,
well, you know, it's just so interesting like how the machinery reacts to something that it
registers as a person. And I wish we could say more about her life, but it also seems like
she has figured out how to disappear. There's like an interesting story about when she appeared in
court after the initial flurry of crest coverage, she had lightened her hair and the initial pictures
of her, she had dark hair in all of them, so she just kind of like walked past the cameras that
were like on stake out waiting to see her walk by. Oh, cool. Like Citizen Ruth, I love that.
Yeah, just pregnant with no plans. Citizen Ruth. And, you know, she does her time and then,
you know, like she managed to just like be uninteresting. And my hope is that she's found
some peace. Yeah. And people don't know her name, you know, it's also interesting to see what happens
when you just kind of go limp. Right. She's somehow managed to avoid the where are they now
industrial complex. Yeah, except for us. Yeah, except for us. So yeah, what's our conclusion?
What are our final thoughts? I don't know. Let's just I guess maybe my conclusion. Okay, here's
something constructive. I also interviewed a Penn doctoral candidate named Sarah Ray,
who is a scholar of monstrous birds, which dead babies form a Venn diagram with.
Monstrous birds? Yeah, monstrous birds. This was a big thing in Puritan America specifically.
I mean, think about it, like we didn't have ultrasound until quite recently, right? So like
we haven't really known like how long is pregnancy? What does it look like? When does it
start? Oh, well, pregnancy become viable. So women who are accused of having given birth
illegitimately or having killed a baby are able to be like, Well, I actually was only pregnant for
like a couple of months, like it wasn't a viable pregnancy. And also previous like throughout
also much of, you know, history, when we've had any science at all, we have said that
pregnancy is really only viable at quickening, like when you start to feel the baby move. And
before that, we were like, you're kind of pregnant, but it's like, it's not,
you're a little bit pregnant. Like you feel the baby move, it's a gray area. That was previously
how we saw all this. And so ultrasound was really what revolutionized that idea, because
suddenly you could see the baby. Right. So historically, you know, pregnancy has been
more accepted as the sort of mysterious thing. There were ways that you could get out of it.
But then this is my favorite quote from that interview. Where you find laws against illegitimacy,
you also find strong motivation for infanticide. And to me, that's what George F. Will is missing.
And that's, I think, one of the reasons why we have not meaningfully progressed past the 1600s,
at least legally. Tagline. Yeah, sorry. But it's true.
Is that, you know, why are women killing their babies? And there's so many possible reasons,
right? There's, there's shame, there's profound denial. And the question of how do we affect
that I think is manifold, because it has to do with teen psychology, it has to do with
a lack for teenagers of people who are able to listen to them and not immediately give them
consequences for what's going on in their life. Right. I also think that like, if you become
pregnant, just going into some form of denial about it might be just the most feasible response.
Like, you know, the reason that we see infanticide where illegitimacy is illegal is that if you give
birth to a baby, you are revealing the fact that you're having an illegitimate baby or the baby
is illegal, like the baby is wrong. And so society places you in a position where neonaticide becomes
one of your better options. Right. And, you know, that's society's fault. Right. Right. Well, I mean,
one of the things that fosters being in denial is when something will have a catastrophic impact
on your life. Like, I was in denial about being gay for a very long time, because I thought that it
would be the worst thing that ever happened to me and that I would never be capable of happiness,
and that I was the sinner and I would go to hell. But I was never in denial about being left-handed,
because that has no effect on my life. So it seems like one of the ways you can reduce this in the
aggregate is just make it less catastrophic for an 18-year-old girl to have a baby. Right. Right.
That like, there will be free childcare and she's going to have enough money. And I mean, all of
these things, it seems like would make it less likely that you'd be like, I'm not having a baby,
I'm not having a baby, I'm not having a baby. I like this, because my argument was like,
let's use this as an argument for increased access to contraception and abortion. And you're like,
galaxy brain, let's do that. And let's have universal free childcare. Yes. And then you
get fewer dead babies. I mean, everybody wins. Ever. Yes. It's funny. I feel like that George F.
Willpeace is so dear to me, because I feel like he is so flamboyantly missing the point at every
single turn. It's just beautiful. It's like, first of all, these Metallica lyrics, like he
unconvincingly applies them to her. And then, you know, his argument is like, too much sex education,
too much de-stigmatization of sex. That's what has made this happen. And it's like, no, I think
it's the opposite. I think that you yourself are helping to create and strengthen this culture
where sex is bad. There is something unsavory and wicked about it. And if you have started having it,
maybe your mom can't know. Maybe your parents can't know. Maybe you have absorbed a cultural
message that tells you that you are bad now, and they cannot love you anymore. Like that is a very
reasonable thing to believe if you grow up in the United States, because people say it to you every
day. Yeah. So yeah, George Will is bad. Metallica is good. And lyrics mean nothing. Sex is wholesome.
Have safe sex. Get an abortion if you need one. And I think that we have this dangerous tendency
to look at behaviors that we don't like and prohibit or punish them. Wouldn't it be exciting
if we were to look at the ways people behave and that are harmful to themselves and or others
and be like, I believe that this behavior is not a conscious and well thought out choice. I think
that you are doing your best and your best could be better if we gave you more resources to work
with and if we shaped our laws around the question of what it would take for you to flourish as a
human being. Right. And I also think that, you know, with all of the moral catastrophes of this
People Magazine article, everything they're doing is still not as bad as the graphic design.