The Girlfriends S3/E2: The Good, The Bad and The Kelly
Listen and follow along
Transcript
This is an iHeart podcast.
Let's be real.
Life happens.
Kids spill.
Pets shed.
And accidents are inevitable.
Find a sofa that can keep up at washable sofas.com.
Starting at just $699, our sofas are fully machine washable inside and out.
So you can say goodbye to stains and hello to worry-free living.
Made with liquid and stain-resistant fabrics.
They're kid-proof, pet-friendly, and built for everyday life.
Plus, changeable fabric covers let you refresh your sofa whenever you want.
Neat flexibility?
Our modular design lets you rearrange your sofa anytime to fit your space, whether it's a growing family room or a cozy apartment.
Plus, they're earth-friendly and trusted by over 200,000 happy customers.
It's time to upgrade to a stress-free, mis-proof sofa.
Visit washable sofas.com today and save.
That's washablesofas.com.
Offers are subject to change and certain restrictions may apply.
This is Matt Rogers from Lost Culture Eastas with Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang.
Hey, so what if you could boost the Wi-Fi to one of your devices when you need it most?
Because Xfiniti Wi-Fi can.
And what if your Wi-Fi could fix itself before there's even really a problem?
Xfiniti does that too.
What if your Wi-Fi had parental instincts?
Xfiniti Wi-Fi is part nanny, part ninja, protecting your kids while they're online.
And finally, what if your Wi-Fi was like like the smartest Wi-Fi?
Yeah, it's Wi-Fi that is so smart.
It makes everything work better together.
Xfinity.
Imagine that.
This is Andrea Gunning from Betrayal.
Are there two sides to every story?
Academy Award nominee Robin Wright stars in The Girlfriend on Prime September 10th, a psychological thriller that will make you question everything.
Laura has the perfect life and a son she'd die for.
But when he brings home his new girlfriend Cherry, played by Olivia Cook, something feels off.
Also starring Lori Davidson, The Girlfriend is a twisted game of cat and mouse where nothing is what it seems.
Don't miss the girlfriend, streaming exclusively on Prime September 10th.
Sometimes the truth is just a matter of perspective.
There's a lot going on in Hollywood.
How are you supposed to stay on top of it all?
Variety has the solution.
Take 20 minutes out of your day and listen to the new Daily Variety podcast for breaking entertainment news and expert perspectives.
Where do you see the business actually heading?
Featuring Featuring the iconic journalists of Variety and hosted by co-editor-in-chief Cynthia Littleton.
The only constant in Hollywood is change.
Open your free iHeartRadio app, search Daily Variety, and listen now.
Hey, it's Anna, giving you a heads up on what to expect in this episode.
There's going to be a lot about domestic abuse, with some examples of pretty extreme violence.
We'll talk heavily about addiction, and there's also brief references to sexual assault and suicide.
So make sure you take care.
But don't worry, it's not all bad.
You'll get the chance to learn more about Kelly, who she was, the life she led, and you'll hear about the moments of light that shine through the darkness.
If you feel impacted by some of the themes in this show, you can reach out to Know More.
They're a domestic violence charity with a lot of great resources to help you or your loved ones.
You can search knowmore.org and we've also put a link to their website in the episode description.
Oh, and as usual, there's some bad language.
I see all of the teddy bears.
The group came out.
Yo.
Because Brady and Jonathan told them all about it.
They were getting so much attention.
They were.
And I was like, all right, I'll bring all of you, okay?
Kelly and Ronnie Harnett have, I think, 30 stuffed toys and counting.
They're all over the apartment they share.
I still love stuffed animals.
And the fact that I was not able to have them for so long when I came out, I got so many of them.
So now I have like a whole family of stuffed animals.
I love them.
They make me sick.
Kelly's stuffed animal passion is lifelong.
But once she comes out of prison, it goes through the roof.
To Ronnie, it starts to seem like every time she leaves the house, she returns with a new toy.
And the apartment is overflowing.
So he offers Kelly a deal.
She can only bring home a new stuffed toy if it's a different type of animal to the ones they already have.
He's hoping that it will slow Kelly down as she tries to find increasingly obscure animals.
But the thing about Kelly is she's resourceful, so the collection continues to grow.
And now the menagerie of toys with their big personalities has taken over.
While I'm here, I'm getting to know a few.
There's Ivan, the rhino.
And he talks like this.
Hello.
I just want to tell everybody that I call Kelly Cookie because I like milk and cookies.
Alan, the bear.
Hi, yeah.
Hi, Kelly.
How are you doing?
Sherman, the lamb.
Yeah, man.
My job is called the Watcher.
So when Ronnie and Kelly don't feel well, I watch them.
We can't forget about his honor, Brady, of course.
She's a reformed judge, but he said he's going to go back to the stand and let all the prisoners out soon.
The last one that I will introduce you to.
Luna, a formerly incarcerated stuffed animal that was knitted by a woman Kelly was inside with.
Luna's a sea turtle and a mother of two.
The cute part, too, is she has a pouch.
These are the eggs that she carries.
I did not see that coming.
As I'm becoming acquainted with Kelly's fluffy friends, my mind can't help but drift to the night of the murder.
When Kelly and her boyfriend Tommy Donovan were arrested in Astoria Park, she says the police records show stuffed animals were found at the scene of the crime, including a big blue duck and a dog with wings.
If you're wondering how something as innocent and childlike as a stuffed animal could end up in a situation so dark, you're not alone.
In the last episode, I told you that this series is about learning how Kelly ended up where she is today.
And now we're going to start figuring that out.
I'm going to take you right back to the beginning, way before the night of the murder.
And together, we'll see if we can trace the path through Kelly's life that led her to Astoria Park in July 2010 and that landed her in prison for almost 12 years after that.
I'm Anna Sinfield, and and from the teams at Novel and iHeart Podcast, this is The Girlfriends, Jailhouse Lawyer.
Yes, I've got me got
you.
Episode two: The Good, the Bad, and the Kelly.
As a kid, I was very, very shy.
I used to shy away from everybody.
When I was in an elevator, anytime anyone came in that my mom knew, she would have to say, say hi, Kelly, and I hid behind her leg.
Strangers, oh gosh, they were just so scary for me.
I was so.
When Kelly's little and shy, there's nobody that quite gets her like her big brother Ronnie.
The two of them were born four years apart.
Four years and one day, to be exact.
Their birthdays are the day after each other.
I would say I was
so close to Ronnie at the early years that my mother didn't even understand what I was saying.
They would be like, Ronnie, come over here.
We don't know what you're saying.
But I didn't know it was going to turn into such a friendship like we have now.
The moment Kelly and Ronnie really became the double actor that they are today came after a stupid argument.
Their mom takes the two bickering five and nine-year-olds and tells them to stand facing each other.
And she said,
Brother and sister, look at each other.
Take a good look.
When you guys get older, all that you're going to have is one another.
You cannot fight with each other.
You ought to protect one another.
Never go against one another.
You always take their side.
And it's something that resonated with us forever.
Really, we took it serious.
Like now, it's like prophetic because it's true.
Back in 1986, a young Ronnie has no concept of how prescient his mum's words would become.
He's just focusing on being a good big brother.
He spends hours coaching Kelly about football and softball so she can play in the streets with the big kids.
But one of the best things that Ronnie ever does for Kelly is introduce her to a true 80s icon, Paula Abdul.
Oh my god, it changed my world.
I wanted to be her.
If there was a music video, I wanted to see it.
I copied all of her moves.
Pause, rewind, pause, rewind, pause, rewind.
Until I had every single thing down pat.
Then I used to call the whole family in and I used to dance right next to the TV and put on shows for them and they loved them.
That's when I realized that my love for music was
different
than other people's.
When the Harnett kids show an interest in something, their parents, Kathleen and Danny, go above and beyond to support them.
Coaching their little league baseball teams, paying for gymnastics lessons.
One Christmas, they even bought their little Paula Abdul fan a piano.
Our Christmases were beyond belief.
It looked like Macy's in there.
I mean, the amount of toys that my brother and I used to get, we were so spoiled.
It was crazy, but it was so much fun.
The Harnett family isn't just comfortable.
They're well off.
A white-collar white-collar family from Queens, proud Irish Americans who made it good.
Kelly's dad is a hiring manager at MCI, which is a telecoms company.
Kelly and Ronnie say that at this point he's earning a six-figure salary, which is a lot now, never mind back then.
For young Kelly, it feels like life is set.
When I was four, I went to Disney World.
And I remember my mother and father being happy and kissing in the pool.
And I remember songs that were playing.
Everybody wants to rule the world.
Yeah, that was playing when they were kissing.
There was.
But their family life isn't a Disney movie.
Ronnie, being a few years older than Kelly, starts to notice that things aren't as they should be.
The main thing he notices is how much his dad is drinking.
He was, I guess, what you call a functional alcoholic.
You know, he wouldn't miss work, but the thing is, when he went to work, he would drink at work too.
And
if he came home at 11 o'clock at night, that would be early.
Their dad being drunk and their mom giving him shit for it.
just became part of the family noise for a while.
But then Danny starts to disappear for days on end, coming home drunk to an angry and hurt wife who doesn't want her children to see their father in this state.
So, even when Danny does turn up, Kathleen often tells him to leave.
Sometimes she even calls the police on him when he refuses.
Soon enough, Danny loses his job, and without that to ground him, he spirals.
He gets new jobs, but he can't hold them down, and eventually he gives up on work entirely.
It's not long before they're evicted from their home and the one after that and the one after that.
They go from Christmases that look like Macy's to barely being able to make ends meet.
The only way that I was able to get through any of this was because of Ronnie and like Ronnie would always joke about things at the most inappropriate times.
And like if Ronnie had not been telling these jokes all along the way, like, I think I would have been such a broken child.
In the middle of all of this dysfunction, Kathleen starts to think Danny might be having an affair.
She finds a business card in his wallet.
She took down the address, you know, didn't say anything to my dad, acted like nothing.
So she takes me to Manhattan on these stakeouts.
We were waiting, like across the street, and we would wait.
We did it a few days in a row.
And then one day she was holding my hand.
She goes, There he is!
And she dropped my hand.
She went running across the street.
My dad dropped the lady's hand and looked like he saw a ghost.
My mom, instead of going after him first, grabbed the lady and beat the hell out of the lady.
The lady started running and screaming, Help!
Help!
And then my mother slapped the hell out of my father and screaming like a a truck driver at both of them.
I feel for Kelly.
This sounds like an incredibly traumatizing thing to witness, so I'm honestly struck by her little chuckle.
It's that laugh, otherwise, you'll cry thing, I guess, which is something Kelly does often.
But there's also times when the violence between her parents is no laughing matter.
The worst example of this happens one terrible night when Kelly is just seven years old.
After going AWOL for two weeks, Danny comes home.
He's wasted and asking for money.
Kathleen tells him she's not giving him anything and to get the hell out.
My dad came in and I saw a look in his eyes that I've never seen before.
He
stood on the bed, grabbed the phone,
and wrapped the cord around my mother's neck and yanked her up on the bed.
I ran and I started biting his arm as hard as I could.
There was blood everywhere, but he wasn't stopping.
So I started more,
more,
like an animal.
I had already screamed to Ronnie to call 911.
My mother was turning colors.
And at some point when I bit again, he like twitched and like looked at me and like I could see my father again
and he saw that his daughter was biting him
and then he looked down and he saw that he had a cord around my mother's neck and he let it go
and my mother was like
but I wouldn't let go of his arm and he was like Kelly
Kelly it
It's okay.
You could let it go now.
He didn't even say I'm sorry.
I will never forget that.
I thought he was going to kill her.
To this day, that was the worst day of my life.
Time for a sofa upgrade?
Visit washable sofas.com and discover Anibay, where designer style meets budget-friendly prices, with sofas starting at $699.
Anibay brings you the ultimate in furniture innovation with a modular design that allows you to rearrange your space effortlessly.
Perfect for both small and large spaces, Anibay is the only machine-washable sofa inside and out.
Say goodbye to stains and messes with liquid and stain-resistant fabrics that make cleaning easy.
Liquid simply slides right off.
Designed for custom comfort, our high-resilience foam lets you choose between a sink-in feel or a supportive memory foam blend.
Plus, our pet-friendly stain-resistant fabrics ensure your sofa stays beautiful for years.
Don't compromise quality for price.
Visit washablesofas.com to upgrade your living space today with no risk returns and a 30-day money-back guarantee.
Get up to 60% off plus free shipping and free returns.
Shop now at washablesofas.com.
Offers are subject to change and certain restrictions may apply.
There's a lot going on in Hollywood.
How are you supposed to stay on top of it all?
Variety has the solution.
Take 20 minutes out of your day and listen to the new Daily Variety podcast for breaking entertainment news and expert perspectives.
Where do you see the business actually heading?
Featuring the iconic journalists of variety and hosted by co-editor-in-chief Cynthia Littleton.
The only constant in Hollywood is change.
Open your free iHeartRadio app, search Daily Variety, and listen now.
This is Andrea Gunning from Betrayal.
Are there two sides to every story?
Academy Award nominee Robin Wright stars in The Girlfriend on Prime September 10th, a spine-tingling psychological thriller that will make you question everything you think you know.
Laura has the dream job, the perfect husband, and a son she'd die for.
But when her beloved Daniel brings home his new girlfriend Cherry, played by Olivia Cook, something feels off.
Is Cherry the sweet, innocent girl she appears to be?
Or is there something more manipulative beneath the surface?
And how far will a mother go to protect her son?
Also starring Lori Davidson, the girlfriend is a twisted game of cat and mouse mouse where nothing is what it seems and everyone has something to hide.
Don't miss the girlfriend streaming exclusively on Prime September 10th.
Sometimes the truth is just a matter of perspective.
Top reasons your career wants you to move to Ohio.
So many amazing growth opportunities, high-paying jobs in technology, advanced manufacturing, engineering, life sciences, and more.
You'll soar to new heights, just like the Wright brothers, John Glenn, even Neil Armstrong.
Their careers all took off in Ohio, and yours can too.
A job that can take you further and a place you can't wait to come home to.
Have it all in the heart of it all.
Launch your search at callohiohome.com.
After the horrific phone cord incident, Kelly's parents somehow managed to patch things up.
But like before, it never lasts.
Kelly's dad moves in and out over and over again.
At one point, they split for a few years.
Kathleen even has a protection order put on Danny for a time.
And while all of this is going on, money is becoming tighter and tighter.
One night, Kelly, Ronnie, and Kathleen become homeless.
sleeping rough at a McDonald's.
Danny isn't with them at the time.
When Kelly is 13, the family get into an apartment.
It's the one she and Ronnie still live in today.
With that stability, Danny comes back into the picture.
Ronnie feels a lot of resentment towards their dad.
He's 17 now, and the scales have long since fallen from his eyes.
Kelly still looks at him through the eyes of a child.
And it's here, in this new flat, this new chance, that Kelly starts to form a real relationship with him.
He helps her with her maths homework, takes her to the movies every Sunday.
But he's still a bad husband.
I feel that my mother deserved a lot better than what he gave her.
So if I could look back and change anything, I would have had it that he never came back into her life and that she met a very successful man who was great to her because that's what she deserved.
But unfortunately, that's not what happened.
The relationship and their family struggles, it's changed Kathleen.
And not just mentally.
Years of grueling physical work have also taken their toll on her.
She ends up with spinal stenosis, which they said it was severe deterioration of her spine.
What it was showing was that her spine was collapsing.
Kathleen has to go in for serious surgery to help save her spine.
They put four rods, 16 screws, and a cage in her back.
They gave her last rights.
They didn't think she was going to make it.
The surgery is a success in that it doesn't kill Kathleen, but the back pain she's in is still excruciating.
And with that comes an overwhelming depression.
Both keep her in bed for weeks at a time.
Kelly tries to take care of her mom, but she's still just a teenager.
who's trying to cope with some really heavy shit going on at home.
I believe believe I was 17 years old when my mom got sick.
She was being given all sorts of pain medications.
In fact, so many different ones that she was taking one, and
there were three others that she didn't feel the need to take and didn't like the way they made her feel.
So being that she wasn't getting out of the bed, she was just handing them to me.
Can you throw this out?
Throw this out.
Along with everything else.
Walking out of her mom's room, Kelly looks at the pills in her hand.
I said, I wonder if these will help me stop feeling.
And they did.
I still felt, but I didn't feel
as gloom and doom and depressed as I normally felt.
A little bit happier and a little bit like more motivated or like I could handle things.
It was potent and that's what I was looking for.
I would say within two weeks
I was physically addicted to painkillers.
Eventually I came clean with my mother and I told her I was hooked
that didn't go over so well.
However, she was supportive and she told me to go to rehab.
I completed the 28-day program.
I came back home and
I started taking her pills again.
Like her dad, Kelly is able to function with her addiction for a time.
She even attends St.
John's University, studying communications.
Ronnie and her are working too.
Both of them are trying to keep a roof over their heads.
Now their mom's essentially bedbound.
Kathleen's also becoming increasingly controlling and angry as her injury and depression start to consume her.
It seems like she takes a lot of her frustrations out on her kids.
It's a lot of weight on young shoulders.
Too much.
So every weekend to blow off some steam, Kelly and Ronnie go clubbing.
They spend all night dancing in hot, sweaty clubs to the best house and techno that late 90s and early 2000s New York has to offer.
We used to dance alongside each other or across from each other and people used to scream, brother and sister,
brother and sister, and it just, it was just the happiest time of my life.
Now, I've been to a few clubs in my time, all of varying degrees of coolness, but I have never heard anything like this.
But maybe I'm just not heading to the right places, the ones that go mad for some sibling duo dancing.
But these moments are just cracks of light in a dark room.
Around this time, Kelly is drugged and sexually assaulted at a party.
She also goes through her first major breakup.
She spirals into a heavy depression.
and ends up in psychiatric treatment.
Once her mental health improves and at the behest of her mum, Kelly decides to tackle her other major problem.
At 19, she joins a methadone program,
but all that really does is replace one addiction with another.
The program works by increasing the methadone dosage each time you show signs of withdrawal, which is how, in just a matter of months, Kelly climbs from a 40-milligram dose to a whopping 170.
Around the same time as all of this is going on, Kelly meets a series of boyfriends, a lot of them in rehab or methadone clinics, and each one more deadbeat than the last.
One will call Steve.
During their relationship, he throws Kelly down the stairs and cracks her ribs.
I guess I called Ronnie during it because Ronnie came there with a baseball bat and with my mother also in a cab.
And when they got there,
Ronnie told me, he goes, Kelly, you kicked the living shit out of that guy.
I said, well, he broke my rib.
He goes, Jesus Christ.
He said, I didn't need a baseball bet.
You should have seen what you did to him.
I remember his shirt.
I ripped his shirt except for the bottom.
And I think I knocked one of his teeth out.
It's shocking, isn't it, to hear someone accused of murder so candidly talk about violence.
It's something I'm still getting used to.
It's not what you'd expect from someone who describes themselves as a victim.
But there are times when fighting back is the only way to survive.
I've never been in a fight in my life, but also, I've not been raised around fighters.
Kelly laughs while telling a story that would make me cry.
And how lucky am I to still be shocked by the violence of it all?
Back to the shitty boyfriends.
There's one we'll call Joe.
Kelly meets him in rehab, and she says he's the son of a mob boss.
The father rented him an apartment in Riverdale, the Bronx, which is a beautiful neighborhood.
And he asked me if I wanted to move in with him.
Clearly, way too fast, but I didn't want to come home.
I was always trying to escape.
So
I said, hell yeah, I do.
And
while in rehab, you know, we kissed once.
We knew we liked one another, but we had to sneak a kiss in the laundry room.
But Kelly, being a good Catholic girl who was taught that sex before marriage is a sin, doesn't want to move too fast.
I explained, I moved in with you because it's rough at home.
So can you please treat me as if we are just dating right now?
And he seemed okay with that.
And he was for months, which I was so grateful for.
During this time, Kelly keeps spiraling and falling off the wagon.
She attempts suicide, but is found in time and taken to a hospital.
Only her dad comes to see her.
Not long after, Kelly says she comes home to find Joe smoking crack.
Even though they say a drug is a drug is a drug, I will be honest with you, if he had disclosed the fact that he was in there for crack, there's no way I would have moved in with him.
She says Joe then tries to assault her.
He got my shirt off and I grabbed my cell phone and then he took a knife and I ran to the bathroom.
I locked myself in.
It was like a nightmare, literally, because the knife was slowly coming through the door.
Don't ask me why.
I call Ronnie.
Poor Ronnie.
He's in Astoria.
I'm in the Bronx.
He's like, oh my God, call 911, you know.
Unfortunately for Kelly, the police aren't much help to her anyway.
He told me in the past that because of his father, because of how powerful he is, he said that he had almost the whole precinct paid off.
And I was like, this kid is so exaggerating, whatever.
He just wants me to think that's cool.
And I don't.
And when the guys got there, the officers, I heard, hey, what's up?
And then I heard him slapping five with two of them.
And I felt my heart sink.
I hear whisper, whisper, whisper.
I opened the door.
When they knocked on the door, they put me in handcuffs immediately.
What
the hell?
Like, where's the justice?
Then she meets someone who she thinks is finally going to give her the fairy tale romance she's been waiting for.
It's late spring 2010.
Kelly and some other people from the methadone program are hanging out in Union Square Park at their usual spot near 14th Street.
When she notices there's a new face in the crowd
there's nothing that made me think that he was on methadone because he was very clean shaven very handsome
and i was instantly attracted to him
she hears he's got quite the reputation everyone knew him as pissed off christoph
Because he was always pissed off at someone.
Right away, I was like, okay, yeah, nice.
Anyway, what's your real name?
And he told me Tommy.
I said, okay, well, I'll be calling you Tommy.
And he's like, no, don't call me that in front of people.
Oh, we got games going.
I said, okay, so I have to call you Christoph when we're around people.
But then when the people are.
We all know that the combination of clean-cut good looks and a bad boy Edge is powerful.
So it's no surprise that Kelly falls for Tommy fast.
I'm very much
an emotionally distraught person, just looking and desperate for love.
I thought he was like my hero, my knight in shining armor.
He could protect me and he provided me with what I thought was love.
Their early dates play out like a montage in a 90s rom-com.
We would go out to dinner.
We wanted to see the Statue of Liberty.
We would take tours of Manhattan as if we were sightseers.
So I had so much fun with him.
He was so spontaneous, which was so cool.
It was just like, I'll see you at this time and then we'll figure it out.
And
I love that about him.
So spontaneous and so exciting.
Tommy isn't like the other guys Kelly's dated.
He's cool, fun, incredibly sweet to her.
But he can also keep up with her intellectually.
He often tells Kelly to meet him in the bookshop, Barnes and Noble.
He was by far the smartest guy I have ever dated.
His intelligence made me fall head over heels in love for him.
There's nothing more attractive than an intelligent man.
But during their romantic bookshop dates, Kelly starts to notice that there's one section Tommy seems particularly interested in.
In the true crime section.
I was like, what is this fascination?
He bought them all the time.
And then
he was ripping pages out of the books and like
cutting things out.
And that was getting a little creepy.
Kelly rationalizes her weird feeling away.
Tommy's a smart guy.
Maybe this is just some intellectual exercise.
Plus, who doesn't like a bit of true crime, right?
Anyway, compared to her past boyfriends, Tommy still seems like a knight in shining armor.
But back at the park, Kelly starts to see yet another side to Tommy, one that she can't explain away.
I've seen him assault people.
As if it was a sport he thought it was funny, that he knew how to choke people out and then they would come back to like a few seconds.
I was like, but what if they don't?
Life's messy.
We're talking spills, stains, pets, and kids.
But with Anibay, you never have to stress about messes again.
At washablesofas.com, discover Anibay Sofas, the only fully machine washable sofas inside and out, starting at just $699.
Made with liquid and stain-resistant fabrics.
That means fewer stains and more peace of mind.
Designed for real life, our sofas feature changeable fabric covers, allowing you to refresh your style anytime.
Need flexibility?
Our modular design lets you rearrange your sofa effortlessly.
Perfect for cozy apartments or spacious homes.
Plus, they're earth-friendly and built to last.
That's why over 200,000 happy customers have made the switch.
Upgrade your space today.
Visit washable sofas.com now and bring home a sofa made for life.
That's washablesofas.com.
Offers are subject to change and certain restrictions may apply.
There's a lot going on in Hollywood.
How are you supposed to stay on top of it all?
Variety has the solution.
Take 20 minutes out of your day and listen to the new Daily Variety podcast for breaking entertainment news and expert perspectives.
Where do you see the business actually heading?
Featuring the iconic journalists of Variety and hosted by co-editor-in-chief Cynthia Littleton.
The only constant in Hollywood is change.
Open your free iHeartRadio app, search Daily Variety, and listen now.
This is Andrea Gunning from Betrayal.
Are there two sides to every story?
Academy Award nominee Robin Wright stars in The Girlfriend on Prime September 10th, a spine-tingling psychological thriller that will make you question everything you think you know.
Laura has the dream job, the perfect husband, and a a son she'd die for.
But when her beloved Daniel brings home his new girlfriend Cherry, played by Olivia Cook, something feels off.
Is Cherry the sweet, innocent girl she appears to be?
Or is there something more manipulative beneath the surface?
And how far will a mother go to protect her son?
Also starring Lori Davidson, the girlfriend is a twisted game of cat and mouse where nothing is what it seems and everyone has something to hide.
Don't miss the
streaming exclusively on Prime September 10th.
Sometimes the truth is just a matter of perspective.
Top reasons your dog wants you to move to Ohio.
Amazing dog parks to stretch your legs.
All four of them.
Dog-friendly patios.
Even gourmet hot dogs loaded with the good stuff.
Bone appetite.
And Ohio has so many high-paying jobs, you'll be top dog in no time.
Jobs in technology, engineering, science, advanced manufacturing, and more.
The career you want and a life you'll love.
Have it all in the heart of it all.
Go to callohiohome.com.
There's always a fine line between like being a genius and also being crazy.
Sometimes you could be crazy in a quirky way.
Sometimes you could be a flat-out psychopath.
And unfortunately, in this case, that's what it was.
It's early summer in 2010, and Tommy is standing in Kelly's courtyard.
The building wraps around him, windows glinting in the sunlight.
He's screaming for Kelly.
Neighbors start appearing in the windows, wondering what Kelly's new shithead boyfriend is doing this time.
One day they got into a fright and I told my mom I was going out there to help her.
This is Lori, Kelly's childhood friend and neighbor.
You know, I yelled to Kelly, is she okay?
But Kelly just waves Lori off.
We call the police.
We try to get her to stay in the house.
Many of times she was over there throwing rocks at the windows and stuff like that.
This is Eileen, Lori's mom and the matriarch of the apartment block.
He always had this cold stare and he always looked to argue with anybody.
Like people say good morning to him and he would just say,
he had to jump right in.
My brother one time was getting out of the car and my brothers know Kelly from growing up too.
Hi Kelly, how are you?
he started arguing with my brother and my brother said what are you doing i'm saying hello to a kid what's wrong with you
it was like kelly was his possession
kelly and tommy have barely been together for two months but already he's managed to scare threaten and offend everyone in her life all while his grip on kelly becomes tighter and tighter Tommy also threatens a friend of Laurie's with a knife he's hidden under a trash can near Kelly's Kelly's apartment just because she was gay.
Another time I was on a bus, a city bus, and Kelly happened to be on the bus.
And he started like pulling her hair and really choking her.
Then he threw her to the floor.
I told the bus driver, stop this bus.
Me and him started arguing.
He says, you're not taking her anywhere.
And he was dragging her.
I said, Kelly, what the hell?
This is not right.
I mean, he had her on the floor.
And, you know, I called the police.
And by the time the police came, he was gone.
So I spoke to Kelly's mother.
I said, Listen, something's got to be done about it.
And he was dangerous because the man always carried a knife.
He always did something.
She said, There's nothing you can do.
He didn't want Kelly to go home anymore, but I don't think it was the point that Kelly was staying with him.
I think she was afraid to walk away from him.
One day, Tommy asked Kelly whether she'd care if her mom went missing.
Now I'm scared to death.
I have to stay with him.
It's not just me anymore.
Now it's my whole family.
Because if he's talking about getting rid of my mother,
what about my brother?
He knows that I love my brother so much.
Because I had tried to leave him a couple of times, but he would stalk me.
Now I was stuck with him because I had to keep my family safe.
By this point, Kelly knows how dangerous it can be to stand up to Tommy.
He's huge, built like a brick shithouse, and he's much, much stronger than she is.
He's already hurt her more times than she can count, threatened to kill her and her family.
He's dangerous to be around, but even more dangerous to leave.
Kelly, like so many women who've been in her same situation, becomes increasingly isolated.
cut off from her family and friends, which is exactly where Tommy wants her.
He even tells Kelly that they can't go near the methadone program.
He's been fighting with people who hang out in the park next to the program, and he doesn't want to show his face.
So neither can she.
For three days, he stops her from getting the medicine she needs to properly function.
I said, well, I'm going because I can't.
I'm going to be sick.
And he said, no, you're not.
No, you're not.
No, you're not.
And like, we had a big fight.
Like, I was trying to get on the train.
He was pushing me around.
Kelly doesn't go to the clinic because, as she told me, she knew she wasn't going to make it there.
I've not really been able to figure out if she meant that casually, like that was a losing argument, or fatalistically.
I imagine it's both.
In any case, Tommy gets his way, as usual.
Like when she was with him, she wouldn't really want to interact with us, which I found funny because we always had a pack.
No man or nobody can come into your life and take away our friendship.
But she was never somebody that wanted people to be concerned about her.
Kelly was always just independent and wanted to do things her way.
And that's why she started living in the park.
This is the Kelly Harnett that walked into Astoria Park that night in July 2010.
A woman who witnessed extreme violence and dysfunction at home as a child, who then experienced it herself over and over again, in increasing intensity throughout each one of her romantic relationships.
A woman who had experienced sexual abuse as a teenager, who then attempted to take her own life multiple times, who fell deeper and deeper into a years-long addiction as she tried to medicate through all the pain, who was held back from her methadone dose by the most violent of all her partners.
A woman who then watched that same partner choke another man to death right in front of her.
This is why Kelly calls herself a victim.
And I do too.
It seems so painfully obvious to me that Kelly's volatile childhood set her on a path where she would come crashing into Tommy, who undoubtedly was then extremely controlling, coercive, and violently abusive towards her.
So, we know what brought Kelly to the point of the murder.
But now it's time for the next question.
How does she end up in prison for it?
To answer that, we need to go back to Astoria Park.
It's around 4 a.m.
on July 7th.
Angel Vargas is dead, and police are quickly arriving on the scene.
First, they focus on Tommy.
There was like 15 of them that jumped on him, and I felt such a sigh of relief.
And I just waited there, like on the curb, waiting, waiting, waiting.
But then they turned to Kelly.
They put me in handcuffs.
And
I was confused, but then I decided, well, this is probably protocol.
The police put Kelly into a car.
And then they read her her Miranda rights.
And that's when she realizes she's not being taken in as a witness.
She's a suspect.
This is bad.
This is very bad.
Next time, on the girlfriend's jailhouse lawyer, the police build their case against Kelly.
She's like, Kelly got arrested for murder.
Disgusting pigs.
I have absolutely no respect for them.
I didn't even fucking commit this crime.
Who's the victim?
I think everybody's the victim.
You have to think of the domestic violence aspect and not the truth-finding aspect.
The domestic violence aspect of the matter is that I was afraid of Tommy.
No, I'm not gonna worry about going to kick someone.
I adopted what they stated so they leave me the fuck alone.
The Girlfriend's Jailhouse Lawyer is produced by Novel for iHeart Podcasts.
For more from Novel, visit novel.audio.
The show is hosted by me, Anna Sinfield, and is written and produced by me and Lee Meyer, with additional production from Jaco Tayvich and Michael Ginnow.
Our assistant producer is Madeline Parr.
The editors are Georgia Moody and me, Anna Sinfield.
Production management from Cherie Houston and Joe Savage.
Our fact checker is Dania Suleiman.
Sound design, mixing and scoring by Daniel Kempson and Nicholas Alexander.
Music supervision by me, Anna Sinfield, Lee Meyer and Nicholas Alexander.
Original music composed by Nicholas Alexander, Daniel Kempson and Louisa Gerstein.
Story development by Willard Foxton, creative director of Novel.
Max O'Brien and Craig Strachan are our executive producers for Novel.
And Katrina Norvell and Nikki Etor are the executive producers for iHeart Podcasts.
And the marketing lead is Alison Cantor.
Thanks also to Carrie Lieberman and the whole team at WME.
Ah, smart water.
Pure, crisp taste, perfectly refreshing.
Wow, that's really good water.
With electrolytes for taste, it's the kind of water that says, I have my life together.
I'm still pretending the laundry on the chair is part of the decor.
Yet, here you are, making excellent hydration choices.
I do feel more sophisticated.
That's called having a taste for taste.
Huh, a taste for taste.
I like that.
For those with a taste for taste, grab yours today.
There's nothing like sinking into luxury.
At washablefas.com, you'll find the Anibay sofa, which combines ultimate comfort and design at an affordable price.
And get this, it's the only sofa that's fully machine washable from top to bottom, starting at only $699.
The stain-resistant performance fabric slip covers and cloud-like frame duvet can go straight into your wash.
Perfect for anyone with kids, pets, or anyone who loves an easy-to-clean, spotless sofa.
With a modular design and changeable slip covers, you can customize your sofa to fit any space and style.
Whether you need a single chair, love seat, or a luxuriously large sectional, Anibay has you covered.
Visit washablesofas.com to upgrade your home.
Right now, you can shop up to 60% off store-wide with a 30-day money-back guarantee.
Shop now at washablesofas.com.
Add a little
to your life.
Offers are subject to change and certain restrictions may apply.
There's a lot going on in Hollywood.
How are you supposed to stay on top of it all?
Variety has the solution.
Take 20 minutes out of your day and listen to the new Daily Variety podcast for breaking entertainment news and expert perspectives.
Where do you see the business actually heading?
Featuring the iconic journalists of Variety and hosted by co-editor-in-chief Cynthia Littleton.
The only constant in Hollywood is change.
Open your free iHeartRadio app, search Daily Variety, and listen now.
Kevin and Rachel and Peanut Peanut MMs and an eight-hour road trip.
And Rachel's new favorite audiobook, The Cerulean Empress, Scoundrel's Inferno.
And Florian, the reckless yet charming scoundrel from said audiobook.
And his pecs glistened in the moonlight.
And Kevin, feeling weird because of all the talk about PEX, and Rachel handing him Peanut MMs to keep him quiet.
Uh, Kevin, I can't hear.
Yellow, we're keeping it PG-13.
MMs, it's more fun together.
This is an iHeart podcast.