Missing Pieces
Michelle Somers was born on January 15, 1957, in Concord, California, into a family with seven children. Despite having an absent father, her mother maintained a happy home, and Michelle grew up to be an empathetic, popular student, a cheerleader, and a prom queen. She became highly involved in the Mormon church in her late teens, worked as a model to support herself, and won the title of Miss Concord in 1976.At a young adult church meeting, she met Martin MacNeil, a man from a troubled background in New York who received a military pension due to emotional issues. Despite Martin's history of financial fraud and the disapproval of Michelle's family, the two secretly married in February 1978. The couple eventually had four biological children, adopted three girls from Ukraine, and adopted their teenage daughter's baby. Martin became a doctor and a lay Mormon bishop, though he had actually falsified documents to gain admission into both medical and law schools.Their seemingly perfect life concealed Martin's infidelities, including a long-term affair with a woman named Gypsy Willis that began in 2005. Martin heavily pressured Michelle to undergo a facelift in April 2007, despite her suffering from hypertension. Following the surgery, Martin took charge of her recovery and prescribed a dangerous combination of medications, including diazepam and oxycodone. On April 11, 2007, Martin claimed to have found Michelle unresponsive in a bathtub full of water.Immediately after her death, Martin ordered his son to flush the remaining medications down the toilet and quickly moved Gypsy Willis into the family home under the guise of being a nanny. He also attempted to steal one of his adopted daughters' identities to help Gypsy avoid her financial debts, which eventually resulted in a fraud conviction for both of them. Suspecting foul play, Michelle's daughter Alexis, a medical student, alongside her aunt, pushed for an investigation to challenge the initial ruling of cardiovascular disease. Medical experts determined the prescribed drug mix was highly dangerous, witnesses reported Martin had previously fabricated terminal illnesses to explain Michelle's weakened state, and an inmate testified that Martin confessed to drugging and drowning his wife.In September 2014, Martin was sentenced to a minimum of 16 years to life in prison for his actions and for obstructing justice. The tragic story ultimately concluded with the suicides of their son Damien in 2010 and Martin himself while incarcerated in 2017. Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/missing-pieces--6886558/support [https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/missing-pieces--6886558/support?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=rss].
159 episodios
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