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- <text id=94TT1571>
- <link 94TO0215>
- <title>
- Nov. 14, 1994: Cover:Death and Deceit
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Nov. 14, 1994 How Could She Do It?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER STORIES, Page 42
- Death and Deceit
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Two little boys vanished, but hope remained; now, after a stunning
- confession and a shocking finale, the search is over but the
- questions have just begun
- </p>
- <p>By Nancy Gibbs--Reported by Cathy Booth, Sophfronia Scott Gregory, Sylvester
- Monroe and Lisa H. Towle/Union
- </p>
- <p> Forget that you once loved them, that of your body they were
- born. For one short day, forget your children; afterwards, weep.
- Though you kill them, they were your beloved sons.
- </p>
- <p>-- Euripides, Medea
- </p>
- <p> No town said sadder prayers than Union, South Carolina, last
- week. The easiest prayers were for the father who had lost his
- sons; rather harder for the mother who had surely lost her mind.
- But the hardest of all were for the boys. Dear God, let them
- have been asleep that night, snuggled in the safety of their
- car seats. That way they wouldn't have felt the rough gravel
- road through the forest, or seen the edge of the dark lake.
- They would not have wondered why their mother got out of the
- car, leaving the doors and windows shut tight, why the car was
- still moving forward with no one behind the wheel. It was too
- much to hope that they never felt the water, or the sinking,
- or the terror of dying together, alone.
- </p>
- <p> The divers finally found the bodies last week, nearly 100 feet
- out from a boat ramp in the man-made lake stocked full of catfish.
- The children were still securely strapped in; with the windows
- shut, the car had floated slowly out into the lake as it filled
- with water, then flipped over and settled into the silt. When
- the search team finally dragged the car out, veteran diver Steve
- Morrow stood on the banks and cried. "There's no way to be thick
- skinned about something like this," he says. "When it's an accidental
- death you can deal with it a little better, but knowing that
- someone could deliberately..." his voice trails off. When
- he got home that night, Morrow says, he crawled into bed with
- his little boy. "I just had to hold him for awhile."
- </p>
- <p> They had searched the lake before, but in the murky water it
- would have been impossible to find the car unless they knew
- just where to look--as they did by Thursday afternoon. Sweet
- Susan Smith--the mother America had come to know over breakfast,
- crying for the return of her stolen children on the Today show,
- playing with them at a videotaped birthday party, pleading that
- the kidnapper feed them and care for them--had confessed to
- killing them.
- </p>
- <p> God made them cute so we wouldn't kill them, goes the old joke.
- All anyone wanted to know was how she could possibly have done
- it. What person watching--and parents from the President on
- down couldn't turn their eyes away--had not felt the sleep-depriving,
- soul-splitting pressures of parenting and worried about their
- own capacity for violence? But this was not the typical child
- murder, the experts rushed to explain, not an outburst of uncontrollable
- rage turned accidentally fatal. This was cold calculation. Parents
- who began the week trying to explain to their own children about
- Stranger Danger ended it having to explain something far scarier.
- </p>
- <p> The statistics promise that kidnapped children are a hundred
- times more likely to be taken by friends, loved ones, parents,
- than by strangers. And yet, as the search for Michael and Alex
- Smith continued, it required too complex a calculation to suspend
- pity and suspect a plot. Even when wormy doubts poked through--Could this possibly all be a hoax?--millions watched Susan
- Smith's sorrowful pleas and put suspicions aside.
- </p>
- <p> "I can't even describe what I'm going through. It just aches
- so bad. I can't sleep. I can't eat. I can't do anything but
- think about them."
- </p>
- <p> The story began with an emergency call to 911. "There's a lady
- who came to our door," the caller told the operator. "Some guy
- jumped into her car with her two kids in it, and he took off."
- </p>
- <p> "And he's got the kids?"
- </p>
- <p> "Yes Ma'am, and her car. She's real hysterical, and I just thought
- I need to call the law and get 'em down here."
- </p>
- <p> These things don't happen in Union, a 200-year-old mill town
- with a huge sign on Main Street welcoming visitors to THE CITY
- OF HOSPITALITY. There had been two murders in the past two years,
- both within families. People don't lock their doors, and it's
- O.K. to talk to strangers. "It's a boringly God-fearing, law-abiding
- place," says Mark Johnson, 35, who runs veterans' affairs for
- the county. "The worst thing that happens here is like the song:
- Bubba shot the jukebox 'cause he didn't like the song."
- </p>
- <p> The Smiths were well-known and well-liked: "good people from
- good stock," Johnson says. Susan was an honor student, member
- of the Math Club, voted the "friendliest female" for the class
- of '89 at Union High. She met David while working at the local
- Winn-Dixie supermarket; they married in 1991 and had Michael
- seven months later. The marriage fell apart just one year after
- the birth of their second child, and the divorce papers were
- filed in September, though everyone said the split was amicable.
- Out of his $21,700 or so annual salary at the supermarket, David
- pledged $115 a week in child support. For awhile after they
- separated, he even came over to mow the lawn and play with the
- kids.
- </p>
- <p> But Smith's image wrinkled a bit as rumors surfaced of a troubled
- past; of the cruel teasing from other children after her father
- shot himself through the head when she was eight years old;
- of a hasty marriage to a man less achieving and ultimately unfaithful;
- of her own suicide attempts, including one in high school that
- kept her out of class for a month; and most recently of money
- problems growing all the more pressing for a single parent.
- She took home $1,096 a month, but her $344 mortgage, $300 in
- daycare--plus car payments, utilities and other costs--added
- up to $1,284. She still owed money to the doctor who delivered
- Alex 14 months ago.
- </p>
- <p> As the autumn unfolded, the pressures grew; she began a romance
- with Tom Findlay, the handsome, personable son of the owner
- of Conso Products, the textile plant where Smith worked as a
- secretary. But a week before the boys disappeared, he wrote
- her a letter on his computer. He wanted to be with her, he said,
- but he was not ready for the responsibilities of a ready-made
- family. After news spread of the crime, Findlay printed out
- a copy of the letter and gave it to police. "At no time," he
- said in a statement last week, "did I suggest to Ms. Smith that
- her children were the only obstacle in any potential relationship
- with her."
- </p>
- <p> When she finally confessed, Smith reportedly explained to police
- how she had been overwhelmed by worries about "money, her failed
- marriage and a series of other romantic relationships in disarray."
- "Something had to be going on there," says Lewis Jeter III,
- the former special-education teacher at Union High School who
- supervised Susan in the Junior Civitan Club, which helped disabled
- kids. He remembers "a sweet, loving young lady" who seemed to
- adore children. "The woman that killed her children is not the
- same young woman I knew in high school," he insists. "Someone
- close to her should have noticed, and it bothers me that no
- one did."
- </p>
- <p> "I think what's kept me going more than anything is the Lord.
- I pray to Him every day to give me the strength to make it through
- the day."
- </p>
- <p> Susan's story of October 25 rocked Union. She explained to police
- that she was on her way to visit a friend at about 9:00 when
- she stopped at a red light and encountered her attacker. A black
- man in his twenties, wearing a plaid jacket and jeans and waving
- a gun, out of breath as though he had been running, jumped into
- the passenger seat: "Shut up and drive or I'll kill you!" Ten
- miles out of town he ordered her out of the car, a 1990 burgundy
- Mazda Protege. She told police that she begged him to let her
- take the kids. "I don't have time," he said, "but I won't hurt
- them." And he drove off, leaving her screaming in the road:
- "I love y'all!"
- </p>
- <p> The town reared up in horror. Police, state troopers, FBI agents
- and thousands of volunteers fanned out through the 515-sq.-mi.
- county, searching for the car, the kids, any clue at all. Helicopters
- with heat-seeking devices combed through the Uwharrie National
- Forest after someone reported hearing a child crying in the
- forest.
- </p>
- <p> The townspeople welcomed the national press with coffee and
- doughnuts and open homes, hoping that all the attention might
- help find the kids quickly. Once the story went national, police
- expected the thief to dump the car--and the children--in
- a hospital parking lot, or at a convenience store, or a shopping
- mall. But still there was no sign. And everywhere parents suffered,
- as the temperature fell below freezing two nights of the first
- five.
- </p>
- <p> "I was running around my house yesterday morning all excited;
- I really thought they had found one of my children. And when
- I got to the courthouse and found that the lead had disintegrated,
- I was very devastated."
- </p>
- <p> Sheriff Howard Wells, unfazed by his sudden fame, directed his
- team along parallel tracks. With the help of a new FBI computer
- system, authorities pursued every lead that came in, from psychics
- and crackpots, from well-meaning citizens as far away as the
- West Coast. A motel desk clerk in Seattle told police that a
- man had driven up in a car with South Carolina plates and dropped
- off a little boy. Police hoped it might be Alex. But it turned
- out to be someone else's child.
- </p>
- <p> Susan and David were too distraught to appear in public for
- the first few days; David's father and many other family members
- moved in with Susan to lend her comfort, and a relative served
- as spokesman. But eventually the parents faced the cameras to
- enlist their power. "Michael, Alex, we love you very much and
- we're not giving up on you," David said. "Hang on and be strong."
- </p>
- <p> But all along officials pursued the other track as well, the
- grim road most likely to lead police to missing kids. There
- were all sorts of ugly, irksome questions about Smith's story.
- No crimes had been reported in the area that night--so why
- would a suspect be fleeing? If he needed a car to make a getaway,
- why take the kids? She said he had approached her at a stoplight,
- with no one else around; but that particular light required
- another auto approaching the intersection to turn it red. Above
- all, where was the damn car?
- </p>
- <p> "I don't think any parent could love their children any more
- than I do, and I would never even think about doing anything
- that would harm them. It's very painful to have the finger pointed
- at you when it's your children involved."
- </p>
- <p> The case was too clean, too clueless. "It would be very hard
- to be lost in this county for a long period of time," Sheriff
- Wells observed. "This is a large hunting area. We've never looked
- for a car this long here that we haven't found." The sheriff,
- however, did not dwell publicly on his suspicions. For one thing,
- parents who turn violent toward their children often turn suicidal
- too--in which case the mystery might never be solved.
- </p>
- <p> Then there was Smith's behavior. What would be a "normal" reaction
- for a parent faced with the loss of her children? She might
- have found a natural ally in Marc Klaas, who since the kidnapping
- and murder of his daughter Polly Klass in October 1993 has devoted
- himself to helping parents in a similar plight. He flew to South
- Carolina with Jeanne Boylan, a cognitive artist with a background
- in psychology who has produced remarkably accurate suspect sketches
- in the Klaas case and many others. The sketch of the carjacker
- was so generic as to be useless, and Boylan thought she might
- be able to help pierce through Smith's trauma and retrieve a
- more vivid image of the abductor.
- </p>
- <p> For five frustrating days Klaas and Boylan were turned away
- from the house. Finally, Boylan says, "I had to admit I was
- a threat to her, because here's a person who had been flown
- in to produce information that you do not have. She knew my
- background was psychology; she must have felt it would be very
- difficult to put one over on me. I'm the last person she wanted
- to see on that driveway."
- </p>
- <p> Smith's story began to crumble even before she failed the first
- of two lie-detector tests. Police continued to give her the
- benefit of the doubt, at least in public; extreme stress or
- medication could make the test results inconclusive, they noted.
- But some neighbors, too, began to wonder. Catherine Frost lives
- across the street from Smith's tidy little brick house. She
- heard about the crime on the police scanner she keeps in her
- bedroom. She supported Smith in the crisis, but the story nagged
- at her. "Ain't no carjacker going to put a lady out in front
- of a home," says Frost. "They would take them out in the country
- where there's no telephones." Frost finally called the FBI and
- told them about the male friend who had recently been visiting
- Smith.
- </p>
- <p> Last Wednesday police called Smith in for questioning again.
- That same day a team searched her home, dusting for fingerprints,
- exploring a crawl space in the basement and removing several
- bags from the house. It was all finally too much: Smith broke
- down under questioning and told police where the boys' bodies
- could be found. Following her directions, divers returned to
- John D. Long Lake; around 4:15 on Thursday afternoon, they pulled
- Smith's car from the mud. "Even after she said it, I just couldn't
- believe the children would be there in the car, no way," says
- diver Francis Mitchum. An hour later a helicopter brought Sheriff
- Wells to the Smith house. Then, at 6:45 p.m., in front of the
- Union County Courthouse, he confirmed the unthinkable. "Two
- bodies were found in the vehicle's backseat," he said. "Mrs.
- Smith has been arrested, and will be charged with two counts
- of murder."
- </p>
- <p> "I think it takes a very sick and emotionally unstable person
- to be able to take two beautiful children like that, to be able
- to keep them from their parents."
- </p>
- <p> Some people wondered if Smith had created the crisis in order
- to reunite with her husband or just to win attention. But others
- suggested that she had never anticipated the furor. "Whatever
- led her to do this, in her own mind, I don't think she ever
- thought it would be this big," said one woman in town. "She
- didn't realize that people would respond the way they did with
- such loving and caring."
- </p>
- <p> The reaction was intense and furious, as people sadly removed
- the yellow ribbons outside their homes and replaced them with
- black ones. "She's slime, just slime," said a woman at the Greenville/Spartanburg
- Airport upon hearing the news. All through the area and around
- the country, people asked again and again: Why did she have
- to go and kill them? "How does someone do what she did and then
- think they can get away with it?" asked Kathy Richardson, whose
- daughter worked with Smith at Conso. "I would have taken those
- babies in a heartbeat."
- </p>
- <p> There was particular bitterness among Union's African Americans,
- many of whom had joined in the search for the boys. "This whole
- incident with her labeling a black man as the criminal sends
- a message of the black male as savage and barbarian," said McElroy
- Hughes, a retired minister and local president of the National
- Association for the Advancement of Colored People. But "you
- have to give Sheriff Wells credit for the discreet and appropriate
- way he handled this," said the Rev. A.L. Brackett, pastor of
- the all-black, 400-member St. Paul Baptist Church in downtown
- Union. "He didn't drag in all the black men who could have fit
- the description."
- </p>
- <p> Out of the anger came ugliness. There were those like Richardson
- who advocated "stringing her up right in the middle of the courthouse."
- Worried about Smith's safety, SWAT team members staked out the
- courthouse roof, scanning the crowd below as helicopters circled
- overhead.
- </p>
- <p> After her arraignment Friday, Smith left the courthouse with
- her head covered against the crowd's jeers and hisses. Prosecutor
- Thomas Pope said he was still weighing whether he would seek
- the death penalty. Asked about her state of mind, her lawyer,
- David Bruck--a specialist in capital cases--took a long
- pause before answering, then said somberly, "She is heartbroken."
- Her family, says one friend, was "living hour by hour."
- </p>
- <p> Smith was placed under a suicide watch at the Women's Correctional
- Center near Columbia, allowed only her glasses, Bible, blanket
- and pillow. A camera watches her 24 hours a day, and guards
- regularly pass by her 6-ft. by 18-ft. cell. Down by the lake,
- the first crosses appeared, and flowers, an improvised memorial
- for the boys everyone wanted so desperately to find, anyplace
- else but there.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-