Mary Ann Hughes
An investigation quickly turns cold in rural Tennessee when the body of a small-town farmer and businessman is found near a trash pile; the case is reopened 25 years later, hoping advances in technology will finally help close this cold case.
Season 30 Episode 02
Originally aired: September 16, 2018
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Transcript
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Big city crime strikes this small Tennessee town when a local legend disappears without a trace.
We have to decide whether that person is missing or whether they chose to go missing.
There were questions about maybe some infidelity.
I got mad because I thought Eden had that want in my house.
But a grim discovery changes everything.
It was not some type of natural causes.
It was a homicide.
To find the truth, authorities must narrow down the killer between two sets of twisted siblings.
There were twins, known in this area as the evil twins.
There's an old saying that, you know, a friend will help you move, but family will help you move a body.
I didn't know who to believe or who did what and who I could trust.
And when this 25-year-long cold case is finally reopened, it heats up fast.
They sprayed that lumino in there and they told us it lit up like a Christmas tree.
I'm thankful that something happened after you and him come home that night.
It was just, thank God, we may find out the truth.
Can't be nothing else but evil, plain evil, to do a person like that.
Life moves slowly in the small town of Pulaski, Tennessee.
But on March 29th, 1990, deputies race to the home of 43-year-old Mary Ann Hughes, who hasn't seen her husband Larry in over 24 hours.
The morning of the 28th, 1990, Mary Ann and Larry got up as they usually did.
They lived in the country.
They had a farm, but they also were partners in a hardware store here in town, and that's where they worked.
He took the day off.
She says when she left about seven that morning, he was in the house, drinking a cup of coffee and everything was fine she rode to work with one of the neighbors jeff claude
who uh worked at the hardware store marianne said she made an attempt to call larry around 12 o'clock that day and there was no answer
she returned back home that afternoon sometime around 5 5 30 p.m
Mary Ann tells investigators as Jeff dropped her back home, she immediately noticed something wasn't right.
She goes in the house.
He's not there.
The car's there.
It hadn't been moved.
So she gets in her car
and drives and starts to look for him.
And she goes by her brother's house, Rex's house.
And her and Rex go looking for Larry.
So they went out there, didn't find him.
So she went back to the house.
With no word from Larry in over a a day marianne says her worry intensified
so 36 hours after larry's missing she contacts the local sheriff's department and reports larry missing with time not on their side investigators hit the ground running you want to find out what kind of person they are what their habits are how do they get along with their family, and you're hoping tips come along that will help you find them.
Born in 1946, Pulaski native Larry Hughes was well known throughout Giles County.
I think everybody in the community knew my father.
It's a tight-knit community.
Everybody liked him, you know, everybody I've ever met that...
finds out I'm his nephew, they always say, oh yeah, I know him, he's a good man.
In his teens, Larry became a bit of a local celebrity.
My father was apparently an amazing basketball player.
When he was a senior in high school, he had a scholarship to play basketball in college.
But in November 1964, Larry had a devastating accident.
He worked in a grocery store in the meat department.
His hand got caught in a meat grinder.
He lost his hand.
Therefore, his college basketball career went to the wayside.
Despite the accident, Larry adapted quickly.
My father losing his hand did not hold him back at all.
At some point, you know, he picked up the strap, so to speak, and moved on with life.
He could do more with one hand than most people can with two.
I've never seen anything that he couldn't do.
In his early 20s, Larry met and married a young woman named Nancy Sneed, and the couple soon welcomed their baby girl, Benet.
Though the marriage was short-lived, Larry and Nancy remained friends.
My mother never said anything bad about my father, and vice versa.
They both spoke very highly of each other.
Benet and her mother moved to Birmingham, Alabama, and Larry stayed in Pulaski, Tennessee, where he fell in love again in 1972, this time with a single mother named Mary Ann Bailey Beets.
She was an outgoing person, her personality.
You know, she was always bubbly and cheerful and smiling.
They seemed to be a good match for each other.
Mary Ann was previously married.
She already had three sons.
After a brief courtship, the two 26-year-olds married in February of 1973.
Their newly blended family moved into a home perched on over 100 acres of farmland.
I would come up to Pulaski, spend my summers, vacations.
I gained a mom and three brothers when they got together.
We became an instant family.
In addition to farming, Larry also had a passion for business.
He ended up buying into the Abernathy hardware store here in town on the square.
Abernathy Hardware was a small business when Uncle Larry got into it and they built the business up.
Shortly thereafter, Mary Ann came to work up there with him.
She was a hard worker.
By 1990, after 17 years of marriage, the kids were grown and out of the house.
With the farm and the hardware store thriving, the Empty Nesters seemed like the perfect team.
I always thought that Uncle Larry and Mary Ann had a good relationship.
They was always, you know, a loving couple.
But on March 29th, after 17 years of marriage, Mary Ann is now desperate to find her loving husband as she files a missing persons report with the Giles County Sheriff's Department.
They took a, what I would call a general statement from her as to a couple of days leading up to his disappearance and actually the day of him disappearing.
Mary Ann says on March 27th, the evening before Larry went missing, the couple went out for a nice dinner.
She said that he had chicken and salad and peaches.
They ate around seven.
They came home,
sat around, went to bed about 10, 10.30.
Mary Ann says when she came home from work the following evening, Larry was gone, along with his gun.
She reported that his 22 pistol was also missing.
Investigators asked Mary Ann if Larry had any enemies.
Larry was a very respected business person.
There were no enemies that brought forth any type of ill will towards Larry.
Mary Ann suggests that her husband may be too well liked, especially by the opposite sex.
Mary Ann put out the theory that he'd run off with another woman.
But after a day or two and you still ain't found him, then you begin to get worried.
Maybe he walked in on a drug bust.
I mean, there were just insane rumors at that time.
Nobody knew what to believe.
Coming up, a new lead gives investigators hope.
She said that she's seen Larry and he was with another woman.
And Larry's daughter begins her own investigation.
I went to this drawer in the bathroom and all of his stuff was there.
Those would be things that Larry would not leave the house without.
At that point, I'm scared.
I'm like, who's done this?
March 29th, 1990.
Well-known farmer and businessman Larry Hughes has just been reported missing by his wife of 17 years, Mary Ann Hughes.
She said that I think he's run off with another woman.
We'd have to decide whether that person is missing or whether they chose to go missing.
While investigators follow up on the possibility that Larry abandoned his wife for another woman, a different team speaks with Larry's worried daughter, Benet.
It was a shock.
I didn't understand.
Especially when you're talking about a man who stays home, goes to work, comes home, works on the farm, and that's it.
That's his life.
Bene says, based on her own investigating, she feels something terrible has happened to her dad.
She said her dad kept all of his personal items in a drawer in the bathroom.
When I got to the house, the first place that I went was his drawer in the bathroom.
And all of his stuff was there.
His keys were there.
His wallet was there.
His ring was there, and his watch was there.
Larry was a creature of habit.
If Larry was leaving the premises, those would be things that Larry would not leave the house without.
I kind of knew in that moment that I would never see my father again.
Investigators ask Benet her thoughts on Marianne's theory of an affair.
I never believed that.
The two of them were so tightly intertwined.
I don't know how either one of them could have had an affair.
After a week of working the case with zero leads, investigators reach out to the public for help.
A few days in, they got a phone call from a lady that worked in Franklin, Tennessee, which is north of Giles County.
And she said that she's seen Larry.
and he was with another woman.
While investigators investigators send deputies to check out the lead, they get another call about something peculiar at the Hughes farm.
A neighbor contacts the Sheriff's Department and says that Marianne Hughes is cutting the mattress up and attempting to burn it.
She took the mattress outside and she sliced it like a piece of bread.
and she cut the top and the bottom off and she put the cover in a 55 gallon bucket and set it all on fire.
And she had taken all the stuffing that was inside the bed
and put it into a dog kennel.
When investigators arrive at the farm, they ask Marianne about her sudden urge to burn the couple's bed.
She told him, well, I didn't want that bed because I was mad because he'd been with another woman.
Although Marianne's explanation seems plausible, Investigators collect what's left of the mattress.
He took what we would call the inner stuffing or the innards of the mattress and placed it into evidence.
Days pass with no sign of Larry since a tipster reportedly spotted him in Franklin, Tennessee.
They went down there, man.
As they were doing that, he wasn't located.
No one had seen him.
Desperate for answers, Larry's daughter takes matters into her own hands.
We were all just like, this makes no sense.
So I drove to Franklin, Tennessee, and sat down with this woman with pictures.
And she actually identified the woman that was with him that day that she saw him as my stepmother, Mary Ann.
It was determined that her timeframe was off.
He'd actually had a doctor's appointment, a cardiologist appointment, and he was actually in that restaurant with Mary Ann.
It was relief that, okay,
my dad isn't a bad person.
I was right.
He's not doing anything crazy.
And now we're back to, where is he and what's happened?
On April 13th, 16 days after Larry was reported missing, investigators respond to reports of a gruesome discovery.
Two kids were playing on a county road in Jows, an area where people just sort of threw trash off to the side of of the road.
We were walking down the road and it smelled something real bad.
And we walked down
through that wedge and
I saw a foot.
As they got closer, they realized they seen a foot.
They realized it was a body.
When investigators survey the scene, they encounter a horrific sight.
He was there completely nude.
No socks, no underwear, no pants, no shirt, no nothing.
Laying there in that ditch.
Nobody should have to die like that.
Just throw it away, discarded.
Like trash.
Ain't right.
A closer look gives investigators a probable ID.
By the time they found his body, I think it'd been 16 days since he was killed.
So the decomposition was pretty bad.
But the hand was still visible and was clearly identical to the way Larry's hand looked.
A subsequent autopsy confirms the recovered body is Larry Hughes and provides more context for his gruesome end.
Larry had two gunshot wounds to the head.
So it was apparent that it was not a missing person or some type of natural causes.
It was a homicide.
You realize, okay, he's been found dead.
You're never going to see him again.
And all your fears just come to realization.
This was extremely, extremely hard on my father.
Uncle Larry being his baby brother.
We just all sat around and cried and we're all in shock and upset.
And
at that point, I'm scared.
I'm like, who's done this?
Should I be worried about my life?
It was just a whole lot of questions and a whole lot of fear.
The autopsy report reveals that Larry's stomach contents mirror those of the dinner he shared with Mary Ann.
The stomach contents of Mr.
Hughes contained chicken, potatoes, salad, and peaches.
The report also notes the recovery of two.22 caliber projectiles from Larry's skull.
The significance of the 22 projectiles that were removed from Mr.
Hughes,
if you recall, there was a.22 Armenius revolver that Ms.
Hughes reported missing.
Investigators collect projectiles from Larry's target range on his farm.
Those bullets, along with the projectiles removed from Mr.
Hughes' body, was sent to the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation, where they were compared.
The same gun was used at target practice was used to kill Larry Hughes, which would then lead one to believe that it was his weapon.
Coming up, investigators uncover a promising new witness that could be the key to solving this case.
Well, the car that threw Larry's founder
back on his driveway.
And a curveball throws the investigation into a tailspin.
The community was very afraid of, and the folks that they killed is folks they believed that did them wrong.
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April 14th, 1990.
Less than 24 hours after the body of 43-year-old Larry Hughes was found shot to death, investigators interview Larry's worried neighbor, Elmer Rainey, who says he might have some key information.
Mr.
Rainey says that at 3 o'clock on the morning of the 28th, he sees a vehicle backed in over there at the Hughes house, and he doesn't recognize the vehicle.
That's the question and it backed up.
Was a car in the front of Larry's house?
And it backed up and back onto his driveway.
He sees a pickup truck back up under the canopy and the porch light come on and then the porch light go off
and then a little while later the truck leaves.
It concerned Elmer Rainey to the extent that when Mary Ann left at 6.30 that morning, Elmer walks over to the house at 7 o'clock and knocks on the door, gets no response.
He calls multiple times and even calls Mary Ann at work and says, Hey, do you know where Larry's at?
He's that concerned.
Sensing Marianne knows more than she's letting on, investigators consider the possibility of her involvement.
Larry was a big guy.
No way Mary Ann Hughes
with her statue could even move him.
So she would have to have help.
There's an old saying that, you know, a friend will help you move, but family will help you move a body.
Her brother is a big guy, and he drove a pickup truck.
So that would make you lead to believe that
Rex was involved.
As they dig deeper into their new theory, investigators subpoena phone records from the Hughes home and find some intriguing activity on the night of March 27th.
There was two phone calls from that house that night, one at 10.30 and one at 12.30.
They were from the Hughes household, Rex and then Rex to the Hughes household.
And you remember, she says she went to bed.
Investigators contact Rex and ask him to provide an alibi and an explanation of the late night phone calls.
They had talked to Marianne's brother, Rex Bailey.
He recalls on the night of March the 27th, there were two distinct phone calls.
He does remember on one point in time that he talks to Larry and Larry is upset talking about Marianne's going to leave him.
After Rex passes a polygraph, investigators confront Mary Ann, who originally claimed she was asleep by 10.30 p.m.
on March 27th.
She said in her statement she don't remember anybody calling.
She don't remember Larry getting out of bed.
She was given some polygraph examinations and
she failed all of them.
Despite Marianne's suspected deception, investigators lack hard evidence to bring any charges.
She didn't have the evidence to go by or any physical evidence, so didn't charge anyone with anything.
But several months later, on August 1st, the case is turned on its head when a shocking tip comes in from the local jail involving two serial killers.
Pete and Pat Bondurant were twins, known in this area as the Evil Twins.
They peddled in drugs, and the folks that they killed is folks they believed that did them wrong.
The community was very afraid of them.
They were known to be ruthless murderers.
There was a jailhouse hit that one of the Bondurants had confessed that they killed Mr.
Larry Hughes.
He said they went to the hardware store and got this businessman, carried him out the back door, carried him up out in the county and shot him.
The investigators focused in a lot on that.
Obviously, they had prior knowledge about the Bondurance and what they were capable of.
When confronted, the Bondurance refused to cooperate.
When the Bondurance name came up, it seems like that's when the case just became kind of fractured and the investigation lost its focus.
He wouldn't have had any interaction with them.
I never believed it or understood it.
Despite their efforts, the case grows cold again and remains unsolved for decades.
I didn't know who to believe or who did what and who I could trust.
There was a lot of fear.
And I hightailed it back to Birmingham, Alabama, and just kind of cut myself off.
Finally, 25 years later, Lieutenant Shane Hunter is tasked with re-examining the case.
Basically, there's a new sheriff in town.
We've got these co-cases.
Can we revisit them?
We're looking at 25 years.
Technology has definitely changed a lot.
So we reached out to Benet and said, look, we want to revisit this.
On January 7th, 2015, Lieutenant Hunter sits down with Larry's daughter, Benet, who for decades has held on to suspicion of her estranged stepmother, Mary Ann.
What was your gut feeling?
Then and now?
Oh, it's always been that either she did it, made somebody do it,
or somehow was involved.
I mean, I've always thought that.
I didn't want to believe it, and I tried not to believe it and went into denial about it.
But it's always been there all these years in the back of my head.
Everything leads back to her.
Did she keep it in your dad's stuff?
Not to my knowledge.
She was selling dogs, vehicles.
I don't know what she got out of the hardware store and then I feel like there was probably some kind of life insurance.
She thought she was going to get some insurance money, $100,000 to be exact.
And when she got the money, she realized she didn't get the $100,000.
That money went towards paying off the hardware store.
It was an agreement between Larry and the other owner.
Mary Ann
was very angry when she found out that most of it was going to have to be paid to the partners at the hardware store.
Benet says the partial payout didn't stop Mary Ann from flaunting her money.
She was going on shopping sprees.
I mean she's buying clothes.
All of a sudden she's out caring about how she looks and all that.
It was like a
I'm free kind of thing
when you take the totality of the evidence the projectiles from mr hughes the projectiles from the target area you know obviously she was spending a lot of money it becomes very clear who the primary suspect was
Investigators tried to narrow down Larry's time of death by the food found in his stomach during the autopsy.
When we researched that and talked to some experts, it was determined that after eight hours you eat, the food is unrecognizable.
So basically from 7 p.m.,
sometime within the next six to eight hours, Larry was murdered.
I don't think they ever recognized that back in 1990.
Despite this revelation, the 25-year-old cold case is riddled with its share of setbacks.
They built a new jail, and when they moved to the new jail, everything got lost.
A lot of the original evidence and stuff they had from the original investigation was lost.
We realized pretty quick some evidence is missing.
We'd lost the bullets.
It was all gone.
Luckily, the mattress stuffing is still accounted for.
We sent the mattress stuffings to the lab to see if they could find any blood or anything on it.
While investigators await results, they interview Jeff Claude, the man who gave Mary Ann a ride to and from work on March 28th, 1990.
He didn't see Larry that morning.
He didn't see Larry that afternoon, which was strange because he usually sees Larry standing in the door or out on the porch.
But Jeff says, even more unusual was what Marianne said right as he dropped her off.
It struck me as funny as,
I mean, before the tires was even stopped rolling, you know, it was, look, there ain't been no work done here today.
And I didn't think much of it then.
But looking back, how would you know?
Coming up, when investigators put Larry Hughes' widow in the hot seat, tensions mount.
She leaned back, she crossed her arms, and she came defensive.
I did not kill my husband.
And buried secrets come to the surface.
I asked, I said, What type of evidence you look for?
He said, Really anything.
I said, What about blood?
January 26th, 2015.
It's been 25 years since the murder of Larry Hughes, and investigators now have reason to believe his widow, Mary Ann, was his killer.
I started asking her specific questions.
You know, his 22 pistol, how'd you know that was gone?
Did he keep it beside the bed?
She goes, Well, he used to, but now he keeps it in the shed.
Do you remember the last place you seen that?
Out in the shop last time I saw it.
I said, so you knew the gun was gone from the shed?
Yeah, I went out there and I didn't see it.
I said, well, okay, and then we went on about the bed.
That's bored up.
I got mad because I thought he had had that woman in my house.
And he hadn't, but I thought he had.
I hated that beat.
I said, well, what were you going to do when Larry walked back through that door and he have a bed.
Well, he didn't like it either, was her reply.
Unconvinced by Marianne's answer, investigators turn up the heat.
So I'm thinking, Miss Hugh,
that something happened after you and him come home that night.
But as we went, her demeanor changed.
She leaned back, she crossed her arms, and she came defensive.
I did not kill my husband.
Just reading her body language, you could see it.
That may have been really the tipping point for me was sitting across from her and realizing that this is the person that killed Larry Hughes.
Investigators continue to push Marianne by suggesting another reason she may have destroyed the mattress.
You know why?
Because that's what's covered in blood.
No, it's not.
Yeah.
No.
We were trying to see if we could get her to confess to the homicide of Larry Hughes.
We give her every opportunity to tell us a story,
and she just wouldn't.
And I'm about through talking to y'all, because I did not kill my husband,
and I'm doing it.
So,
am I through?
Ma'am, you walk out that door anytime you want.
Just know that, you know, you turn your back on your husband.
She whatever and went on out the door
investigators know they are closing in on their prime suspect they just need stronger evidence to make an arrest and on january 29th 2015 they obtain a search warrant for the couple's former home hoping to find it
They told us they were reopening the case, want to know if they could come down, look around the property.
and i told officer shane hunter i asked i said what type of evidence you're looking for he said really anything i said what about blood
his eyes got as big as half a dollar
homeowner richard pierce tells investigators he and his wife kathleen had bought the house in the late 90s
we had heard that there's a possibility he had been murdered there.
Richard says he never thought much of the rumors until he he decided to put hardwood floors in the main bedroom in 2006.
So when I pulled the carpet to take press wood up, I found a big old circle of blood in the bedroom.
As soon as I see it, I holler at my wife.
I told her, well, I just found out where Larry got killed at.
I go, what?
And he said, yeah.
It was just rumors at the time, but now I say it wasn't a rumor.
It actually happened here.
Investigators ask where the stained flooring is now, and Richard says he disposed of it long ago.
They asked me that why I didn't call them.
And my exact words to the state was, I figured you done all the investigating you were going to do.
With Richard and Kathleen's permission, investigators tear up the bedroom floor, hoping for a miracle.
They talked to the TBI or somebody and told them that if it was as much blood as I said, said, it would go through the press wood into the plywood subfloor.
That was something that really sparked some hope in us that we were going to absolutely nail this case.
They finally got down to it and they sprayed that luminol in there and they told us it lit up like a Christmas tree.
All them years later.
The subfloor samples are sent to the lab for testing.
As they they await results, investigators try to elicit a confession out of Marianne's brother, Rex Bailey.
I feel real confident that Larry was killed in his bedroom
from all the blood that I've seen on the floor that we've cut up.
Really?
And you're the last person to talk to him.
The last man to talk to him.
At three o'clock in the morning, a witness sees a vehicle back into the driveway.
Horse light come on, horse light go off.
That wasn't you, was it Rex?
Unfortunately, in cold cases, a lot of time that's what it comes down to: is the only option you have is to try to get some sort of confession or admission.
And Rex,
being a lot like his sister, wasn't going to admit to anything.
With no confession, the entire case hinges on the floor and mattress samples.
Ultimately, we get a call back from the TBI that they have a male DNA marker from the bloodstains that are on the mattress or mattress stuffings.
To confirm the blood on the mattress is Larry's, investigators need his DNA for comparison.
The family did agree to exhume the body.
We were all for it.
Anything that we could do to help them prove the case or to find out what exactly happened to my father, we were willing to do.
On September 1st, 2016, the results come in.
The profiles we got from
the bed stuffings
matched
the body DNA taken from Larry Hughes.
So then we knew the blood at the home was Larry Hughes.
And General Cooper seeked indictments for Mary Ann Hughes' arrest.
Coming up, a devastating setback threatens the pursuit of justice.
That's when the cold case comes to haunt you.
It seemed like somebody is going to pay for what was done to my uncle and bam.
Just like hitting a brick wall.
In October of 2016, after 26 years, the suspected killer of Larry Hughes is almost in investigators' clutches.
We spent several hours in the grand jury and were successful in getting an indictment for Mary Ann Hughes' arrest.
We went and served her at her house, brought her in.
I think the motive was money.
It's plain and simple, all about money.
After evading arrest for years, Mary Ann Hughes, now 69, could spend the rest of her life in prison if convicted.
I was in shock.
I mean, I knew the whole time that she was looked at as the main suspect, always had been, but I couldn't believe it had finally happened.
I was thankful that something had finally been done,
that finally we was going to get some kind of justice.
With Mary Ann in custody, prosecutors worked to strengthen their case.
The theory was that Mary Hughes wanted Larry dead.
And,
you know, we didn't have any smoking gun proof of why.
We did have the life insurance policy.
If she did think Larry was running around on her, that's also a motive to kill Larry.
Gathering all the evidence, prosecutors pieced together how they believe Larry spent his final moments.
At some point between 10.30 and 12 o'clock, Larry was shot with his own revolver in his bedroom, in his bed.
It could have been an argument that night.
He could have simply been asleep and she says, you know, enough's enough, and pulls the trigger twice.
Two gunshot wounds, to the head.
There would have been a lot of bleeding, which would have caused blood to soak into the mattress.
and possibly even leave a large puddle on the floor.
She contact her brother.
He comes over at 3 o'clock in the morning.
And then they take Larry and the gun and drive him out to those dumps.
Rex Bailey was never charged with his role in this case, even though we believe he was involved.
We never had the proof we needed.
Though the state feels confident in its argument against Mary Ann, taking a case to trial with a 25-year lapse in the investigation and missing ballistic evidence proves risky.
We knew there's a decent opportunity we would walk out with an acquittal if we go to trial.
And
that's the last thing you want with a murder case.
As they weigh the odds, the state asks Larry's family how they want closure.
The ultimate decision that we came to with the family was that we wanted for history to record through these court records that Mary Ann Hughes was responsible for the death of Larry Hughes.
And that was more important than the satisfaction of trying to go for first-degree murder and a life sentence.
And the only way to guarantee that was to come up with a plea offer that Mary Ann would agree to.
The plea deal was brought forward.
I was ready to go to trial, but
I let my uncle make that decision because that
it has run his life.
And we all agreed to accept the plea deal.
In August of 2019, after 29 years of denial, Marianne Hughes pleads guilty to voluntary manslaughter in exchange for time served and 10 years probation.
She spent a little bit of time in jail while they were waiting to bail her out.
And then once they bailed her out, she was out.
It seemed like somebody is going to pay for what was done to my uncle.
And bam, just like hitting a brick wall.
It's not fair that she got so little time for what she done.
Might as well say she got away with murder.
I mean, my uncle, my dad's brother,
Benet's father is gone.
He's not in our live anymore.
She still has her three sons and her freedom.
And to me, that is not justice.
She didn't get what she deserved, that's for sure.
But she had to admit she killed Larry.
And
that gives me satisfaction.
I feel like we all get what we deserve in life somehow, some way.
We pay for our bad deeds.
God takes care of it.
While Marianne may have admitted to killing Larry, she'll likely take her reason to the grave.
We'll never know what the motivation was.
We'll never know, you know, the reason behind it, what actually happened that made her snap.
Evil, plain evil.
What else could it be?
Can't be nothing else but evil to do a person like that.
Rex Bailey died in July of 2020, less than a year after Marianne pled guilty.
Marianne's probation ends in 2029.
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