Susan Smith is up for parole 30 years after drowning her kids in a South
Carolina lake
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[October 22, 2024]
By JEFFREY COLLINS
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — Susan Smith will be up for parole next month,
nearly 30 years after she was convicted of rolling her car into a South
Carolina lake and drowning her two sons who were strapped in their car
seats.
Smith, 53, is serving life in prison after a jury decided not to
sentence her to death in her 1995 murder trial. Under the law at the
time, she is eligible to ask to be released after serving 30 years in
prison.
Smith's hearing is scheduled for Nov. 20, the state Department of
Probation, Parole and Pardon Services said Monday. Parole hearings are
done virtually in South Carolina with the inmate joining by a video call
from prison.
Parole in South Carolina is only granted about 8% of the time and is
less likely on an inmate's first appearance before the board, in
notorious cases or when prosecutors and the families of victims are
opposed. Smith falls in all of those categories.
“The jury believed she got a life sentence and that’s what she should
serve," said Tommy Pope, the lead prosecutor in Smith’s trial who is now
the Republican Speaker Pro Tem of the South Carolina House.
“Secondarily, I would point to her conduct in prison to show,
unfortunately, what a juror hoped would happen, that she would be
remorseful and think about those kids. She’s proven she’s only thinking
about Susan Smith,” Pope said.
Smith made international headlines in October 1994 when she said she was
carjacked late at night near the city of Union and that a man drove away
with her sons inside. Smith, who is white, said the carjacker was Black.
For nine days, Smith made numerous and sometimes tearful pleas asking
that 3-year-old Michael and 14-month-old Alex be returned safely.
But the whole time, the boys and Smith's car were at the bottom of
nearby John D. Long Lake, authorities said.
Investigators said Smith's story didn't add up. Carjackers usually just
want a vehicle, so investigators asked why would they let Smith out but
not her kids. The traffic light where Smith said she had stopped when
her car was taken would only be red if another car was waiting to cross
and Smith said no other cars were around. And other bits and pieces of
the story did not make sense.
Smith confessed to letting her car roll down a boat ramp and into the
lake. A re-creation by investigators showed it took six minutes for the
Mazda to dip below the water surface, while cameras inside the vehicle
showed water pouring in through the vents and steadily rising. The boys'
bodies were found dangling upside-down in their car seats, one tiny hand
pressed against a window.
Prosecutors said Smith was having an affair with the wealthy son of the
owner of the business she worked at. He broke it off because she had the
two young sons and Smith decided that was how she would solve that
problem.
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Susan and David Smith address reporters Nov. 2, 1994 during a news
conference in Union, S.C. (AP photo/Mary Ann Chastain, file)
Prosecutors sought the death penalty and the trial of the young
mother became a national sensation and a true crime touchstone even
though it wasn't televised by a judge who worried about what cameras
were doing to the O.J. Simpson murder trial going on at the same
time. A jury convicted Smith but decided she did not deserve the
death penalty.
Smith's lawyers said she was remorseful, suffering a mental
breakdown and intended to die alongside her children but left the
car at the last moment.
Smith's 30 years in prison have been eventful too. South Carolina
prison rules don't allow broadcast interviews, but Smith has
frequently written reporters, true crime aficionados and potential
suitors who then talk about the letters publicly.
She unsuccessfully tried to appeal her conviction, saying her
husband David Smith abused her. He adamantly denied it and
authorities said there was no proof.
“During the ensuing 30 years — again, it’s hard to believe it’s come
this quick — she’s had sex with guards. She's got attention for her
social media opportunities. She has got sugar daddies that can’t
wait till she gets out, help support her," Pope said.
Pope said David Smith plans to join him to oppose his ex-wife's
parole.
In an interview with Court TV, David Smith said he struggles to
remember his sons. He said while he has forgiven Susan Smith, that
doesn't take away the fact that she killed their children and
deserves to spend more than 30 years in prison for it.
“You have no idea of how much damage you have done to so many
people,” David Smith said in the Court TV interview. “In my
capabilities I am going to do everything in my power to make sure
you stay behind bars."
Pope plans to tell the parole board that when jurors rejected the
death penalty, they thought a life sentence meant the rest of her
life and did not think she could be released after just 30 years.
Pope expects Susan Smith to make her own argument to the parole
board. He thinks she will try to use the same sympathy and
difficulty to believe a mother would do something like this to her
children to convince the board to grant her parole.
“She’s been rehearsing what she’ll say to the parole board for 30
years," Pope said.
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