Snapped: Women Who Murder - Rebecca Smith
Episode Date: September 11, 2022When the half-dressed, partially frozen body of a Navy veteran is found lying in a ditch, rumors and lies will challenge detectives' efforts to lay bare the truth behind the chilling death.Se...ason 27, Episode 25Originally aired: March 29, 2020Watch full episodes of Snapped for FREE on the Oxygen app: https://oxygentv.app.link/WatchSnappedPodSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Hi, I'm Lindsey Graham, the host of Wonder East Podcast American Scandal.
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They were two young veterans making a new life in the civilian world.
I could kind of see how he would just be drawn to her.
She referred to him, sometimes as a big kid.
He seemed to have a really great sense of humor.
We wanted their relationship to turn out to be the American dream.
They were going to have some kids and they were just going to have a happy life.
But when media reports about a John Doe hit the airwaves, We're gonna have some kids and they're just gonna have a happy life.
But when media reports about a John Doe hit the airwaves, the American dream turns into a deadly nightmare.
The body had been dumped in the ditch.
He was wearing only a white t-shirt and a wedding ring.
Was there something sexual assault?
As investigators piece together evidence, they uncover clear signs of a killer.
If you have a type of personality,
it leads to that type of anger situation.
We went to them with the idea that they're
intentionally involved in homicide.
The loose is getting tighter and tighter and tighter.
Who do you protect?
I'm not protecting it.
I'm not protecting it.
But people we have cleared obviously are not suspects, but everybody else remains.
So that means Irene, you better.
December 19, 2002, 1130 AM. A local scavenger in Springfield Township, Michigan,
is hoping to turn trash into treasure.
An individual, down there, Oak Hill Road
was collecting cans and bottles for purposes of cashing
them in for deposit.
But as he scans a roadside ditch for recyclables, he makes a chilling discovery.
Those didn't found a body.
The man immediately alerts local authorities.
When the call came in, we were just advised that a body had been found
and the entire unit was sent up there to start the investigation.
Homicide investigators soon joined first responders at the scene.
It has to be a little bit clear, right?
Yeah, I see it now.
The body was in a, whatever it was, a semi-feetal position.
A knees were drawn up, arms across the chest.
He was wearing only a white t-shirt and a wedding ring.
The illustrators think of determination
that he had been shot.
We discovered he had two bull holes in him.
They had the victim.
They never had the idea who the victim was.
So the first thing you do, you're going to find out who it is.
Police are unable to locate any official identification
at the scene, but they do find something else that might help.
The only distinctive features were the fact
that he had a large REM Reaper tattoo on one arm.
When we started trying to figure out how
to identify the body, ultimately, we went to the media
with a picture of the tattoo.
we went to the media with a picture of the tattoo.
Less than 24 hours later, the media exposure pays off. Just after 6am on December 20, 2002,
the Oakland County Sheriff's Department
is contacted about the John Doe's distinctive ink.
They had received a call from a woman who
said that she
suspected that the body was her husband's.
I saw the picture of it.
Ooh, this is a toothy cap, baby.
Do you think so?
Yes.
Where's your husband's name?
Michael, first.
What is your name?
Is that his name?
What is your name?
What is your name?
Born on August 26th, 1974, Rebecca Jordan grew up in Berkeley, Michigan, an idyllic suburb
of Detroit.
I think she had a great childhood.
She was quiet, nice, sweet.
She always wanted to be a mom.
That was her main thing.
As soon as she graduated high school, Rebecca got married to her first love, Jason.
Becca and Jason were high school sweethearts.
They was a good guy, you know, they just married Jung.
While Jason began pursuing a career in film, Rebecca decided to follow a very different
calling.
She joined the Navy.
She wanted to see the world.
Her grandfather was also in the military, so she thought that was really cool,
that she would do that.
In January 1995, Rebecca headed to basic training in Tennessee.
The distance from home put a strain on her marriage.
She got into the military, and it just didn't work out.
They just grew apart.
Rebecca became fast friends with her fellow recruits
and found common ground with one in particular.
22-year-old Michael Smith also knew the struggle
of going through training with a spouse at home.
He was in the class with her, along with a couple other friends
that she met. They were both married.
Two years older than Rebecca, Mike was originally from Bartow, Florida.
From a young age, Mike had rebellious tendencies.
He got into trouble at school.
He was disruptive, and he liked to run around with his friends and party.
When he drank, he drank quite a bit.
I think they maybe referred to it as binge drinking.
In 1990, after dropping out of high school,
Mike attended a rehabilitation program
to get his life back on track.
Mike soon became close with the program's pastor,
and the experience pointed him in a new direction.
The pastor there had called him in,
feeling very strongly that he was called to be an evangelist.
He was so excited, he called me to tell me.
Shortly after Mike changed his ways,
he began dating a woman named Penny.
And after just a few months together,
they got a life-changing surprise.
Penny got pregnant, so then they started making arrangements
to get married.
In 1993, 21-year-old Mike became the father of a baby girl,
and he and Penny tied the knot.
Michael loved his daughter very much.
She was just a baby when they got married.
I loved his daughter very much.
She was just a baby when they got married.
Mike tried to settle into the family life,
but it wasn't long before he started to relapse.
He was drinking, and he was doing things that wasn't good
for a marriage, so the marriage just ended up not doing well.
Penny encouraged Michael to enlist in the military
as a way to save their marriage. He was just not very happy with the way his life was going.
It was kind of going in all the wrong directions.
So he decides to go in the Navy.
And that's where he met Rebecca.
As Mike and Rebecca bonded over their marriage struggles,
the friendship soon turned into something more.
I could kind of see how he would just be drawn to her.
She referred to Michael sometimes as a big kid.
You know, he seemed to have a really great sense of humor.
As her feelings for Michael grew,
Rebecca decided to come clean with her husband, Jason.
Becca and Jason announced, well, you know, we decided we're getting a divorce.
It was very amicable. They both realized that they were too young when they got married.
Michael also brought his struggling marriage to an end.
Penny and Michael worked together. I think it was four years.
And they divorced.
four years, and then they divorced. Michael and Rebecca left the Navy
and were now free to follow their hearts.
They didn't have a relationship until after they both
separated from their spouses.
Michael really loved Rebecca.
It was just the way he was about her.
It just made me feel like he really loved her.
In 1997, the couple discovered they were pregnant.
They were very excited about her getting pregnant.
I believe we wanted their relationship
to turn out to be the American dream, you know?
That they were going to have some kids
and they were just going to have a happy life.
With a child on the way, the couple returned to Rebecca's hometown of Berkeley, Michigan.
There, they welcomed their first son, Josh, on November 17, 1997.
Josh was everything. That was her baby. You know, she just loved him to death.
That was her baby. You know, she just loved him enough.
Then in 2001, Rebecca, she was pregnant again.
Michael was, he was very excited.
After their second son was born, Rebecca poured herself into her children.
Rebecca and Michael, when they were raising their kids, she was a good mother to them.
She's very loving and caring.
She was always there for us, me and my brother.
But in 2001, the family fell on hard times
when Mike was injured during a job.
He tore something in his shoulder at work and was just out of work.
He was still struggling with alcohol addiction.
And I think that Rebecca did probably condemn him for that.
I know that they struggled with rent a lot of times.
I think that they had to live with her family quite a bit.
After nearly a year of struggling, Mike found work at a car dealership
and things seemed to be looking up.
Michael, he had a job at the Chrysler as a salesman, and he just felt like he could
get his life straight now. But Mike's progress is cut short on December 20, 2002, when Rebecca
and her family recognize Mike's tattoo on local news and contact authorities. Okay, sir, the words are on the line and he's going to talk to you.
I understand you, but we might be talking about your husband.
Yes, I do, but it can't do.
Now, has he ever been arrested?
Yes.
What for?
Uh, DUI.
With a lead on an identity, investigators search their system for a forensic match.
Mike had been arrested previously, so we had someone else go over to a neighboring community
and get a set of his fingerprints which confirmed Mike's identity.
With their John Doe identified, investigators can focus on finding out how 30-year-old Mike Smith
ended up dead on the side of the road.
The body is taken into custody by the Bulk and gunny medical examiner's office for an autopsy.
And at that point, we're pretty much stuck until we get an autopsy report.
There's despite two bullet holes that may or may not be the cause of death that figures into the investigation.
Coming up, detectives trace the victim's final moments.
I dropped off at the bus station.
Two things were supposed to go back to Pupra.
And I have it in the office.
And a trail of lies leads to a killer.
I think Thao led to a certain amount of frustration
and enhanced anger.
amount of frustration and enhance anger.
December 20, 2002, Oakland County, Michigan. Authorities have positively identified
a John Doe murder victim as 30-year-old husband and father,
Mike Smith.
It's absolutely tortured me, seeing my father's tattoo on TV
and hearing that he had been shot twice.
That's actually one of the most vivid memories
in my mind.
18 hours after their initial survey of the scene,
investigators returned to the body discovery site
in search of more evidence.
We did have deputies go back and a fairly large number
and do a physical searchable side of the roadway down
into the ditch and such.
We did check for our public casings, bullets or anything,
in the area.
A thorough search of the area comes up dry.
It was obvious that the body had been dumped in the ditch.
There was not the place as to where the victim was murdered.
Our guess was that he had been removed from a vehicle that was not the place is to where the victim was murdered.
Our guess was that he had been removed from a vehicle
at the top of the road and rolled down the slope.
In search of a witness who might be
able to validate their suspicions,
investigators canvass passing motorists.
The gentleman in front of the body
was determined that he just had stumbled on his body,
so we had our traffic unit set up at either end of the road and stopped all the cars
were coming through.
We've asked them if they'd seen anything that I before the day before.
It's pretty much standard procedure.
You don't hold out a lot of hope, but every now and then you get lucky.
But we didn't.
With no new leads, detectives go to the home of Mike's widow, 28-year-old Rebecca Smith.
You never know how people are going to react when you tell them that they've lost a family member or a loved one.
She was collected. I mean, I think she's a pretty strong person to start with.
We went through the basic information at that point and then asked, you know, obviously,
when's the last time you saw Mike?
The initial statement was that her husband had made plans to go to Florida to do an alcohol
rehab.
On December 10th, around 6 o'clock or 6'30 I believe she said she picked him up at his
work and then took him down to the Royal Oak bus station.
She dropped him off in the back parking lot of the McDonald's,
so he had to walk across the street to get into the bus station.
I think he had $1,520 on him.
Rebecca says that Mike had long struggled with alcoholism
but had been improving in the past year,
until financial stress drove him back to his old habits.
He wasn't making a lot of money to start with.
Backo was making less than that, so there's money problems.
When he was an alcoholic, he wasn't that pleasant to be around.
But when he would be sober, he would pick up his Bible
and just go totally the opposite way.
Michael was drinking a lot.
You know, they'd get behind on their bills and stuff.
Rebecca didn't like him drinking like he did because she wanted him to not be irresponsible.
He has a family, you know, he's got kids.
According to Rebecca, when the Smith family received an eviction notice in late
November, Mike knew he had to make a change. Michael was a born-again Christian. Michael was
drinking a lot, and he knew that he was not supposed to be doing that, that the Lord was
not pleased with that. Rebecca said Mike was going back programming to
been in as a young adult.
She said that Mike had quit his job to go into this program.
It was an effort to save their marriage.
He just knew that I've got something going on.
And it seems like that I'm not able to control it.
I do need some help to control this.
After speaking with Rebecca, detectives head
to the Royal Oak bus station to search for record of Mike's travel.
We go to the station trying to verify when the bus went, where it went.
If he was on the bus, it turned out that on December 10th,
Michael Smith did not buy a ticket to go to Florida.
We had been through the passenger roster, and there was nobody that
matched Mike's information.
Mike doesn't appear on any of the
station's security cameras either.
As I recall, nobody even bought a
ticket to go to Florida that night.
We were starting to believe Mike had
never gotten on the bus.
Did Mike have second thoughts about
going to rehab or had something more
sinister happened
after Rebecca dropped him off?
For more insight, detectives contact Mike's family
in Florida, who have already heard
the devastating news from Rebecca.
When she said Michael and that,
I'm just kind of just, I couldn't take it.
What, what, what is this? You know, can't be true.
What happened to him?
How did he die?
What's going on?
As Detective Speak to Mike's mother,
she confirms that her son's drinking
had been a problem for years,
but Mike was trying to get help.
He called me in November, and he wanted me to send him a plane ticket.
He wanted to fly down and work on some of his issues.
But he said hurry up because he was afraid he was going to change his mind.
Mike's mom says that the very next day, Mike called her back and told her to forget about
what he said.
He changed his mind.
He was getting close to Christmas.
He didn't want to leave his kids and he didn't want to leave us why I feel there.
Did Mike have another change of heart and decide to head to Florida after all?
His mother doesn't seem to think so.
Michael, he would have first seen him and gotten touched with me.
He would have told me because he would have been happy to me to know that he was going there.
Hoping Mike's co-workers might be able to provide more insight,
deputies head to the dealership where Mike worked.
Mike never indicated to anybody at work
that he was leaving for Florida or applying that quitting.
It was bizarre anyways, because nobody knew.
I do remember him being in no show to work, which
was very not common for him.
It was on the day that we went missing.
He had been in a mandatory 401K meeting at work.
And he was talking to co-workers about how he was going
to invest money.
The fact that he was talking future-looking plans
directly related to his employment
led us to wonder, you know, why would he just up and take off?
As police continue speaking to co-workers,
one woman says she heard a rumor about Mike.
He had been seen in a gay bar.
The location that he had been found near
was rumored to be next to an infamous truck stop,
where maybe certain activity would have been taking place.
So the gay rumors were running rampant.
Coming up, did a secret lifestyle
play a role in Mike's death?
Because Michael was seen in a gay bar.
You can say, maybe a gay lover did this.
As the investigation deepens, new suspects emerge.
They have made statements to add, if Mike did come back,
that he would kill him himself.
I answered a P-Shot microphone.
You said, I'd say no.
I'd say no.
The hardest true crime story to report on is your own.
I'm Tiffany Reese, host of the podcast, Something Was Wrong. The hardest true crime story to report on is your own.
I'm Tiffany Reese, host of the podcast, Something Was Wrong.
For 15 seasons, I've always aimed to validate and amplify the voices of those who have survived
abuse and crime.
But for season 16, I'm opening up for the first time about my own experiences as an abuse
survivor and a murder co-victim.
With the help of trusted friends,
we'll unpack my journey to becoming a victim advocate
by examining my past.
From the emotional and physical abuse
I endured at the hands of my parents
and the bullying I received from my classmates
to the murder of my brother and the securities fraud
my father was convicted of.
I'm covering it all and even learning more
about myself through this process.
This is obviously a very personal journey for me, but I believe that this will play a part in my
healing helping me to process the trauma that I endured. Follow something was wrong wherever you
get your podcasts. You can listen early and add free on the Amazon Music or Wondery app.
on music or wonder yet. Michael was seen in a gay bar up there, so you can say, well, maybe a gay lover did this. You take a look at the body, and it's got a t-shirt,
and it's got no pants. Why doesn't he have any pants on?
Was there something of a sexual assault?
Had Mike been killed by a jilted lover?
Mike's co-workers tell detectives
they should speak to a man named Dan.
There was an employee at the dealership.
And in talking to him, he said that he'd been at an establishment
where one night of the week was a big night for gay clientele.
And he ran across Mike in there one night.
According to Dan, Mike seemed out of place.
Mike was intoxicated, and Mike was
trying to hit on a couple of women who apparently were
lesbians, and Danny told Mike, you know, go home.
You don't know what you're doing here.
People go into gay bars.
You can't say that you're gay because you went into a gay bar.
My dad was one of those guys that anywhere there's booths,
he's going to be there.
Ruling out the likelihood of a scorned secret lover,
detectives turn back to Rebecca.
We had multiple conversations with Rebecca,
as we're working through the investigation.
It's kind of incumbent upon us to keep her abreast
of what's going on with it as it evolves.
On December 23, four days after Mike's body had been discovered,
detectives sit down with Rebecca once again.
As we just really need your help, I'm just OK.
We need you on our team.
We need you on our own.
The only way is to do that.
You probably know what the company is.
You can take part in that team.
Carry on, please. OK? Talk to take and take part in that food period on the field.
OK, talking.
You can find it.
As soon as the polygrapher is available three days later,
Rebecca comes to the station for her polygraph exam.
Chris Landfrey was the polygraphist,
great investigator, arguably polygraph operators
or the supreme interviewer.
You do what's called a pre-test interview.
You go through things that had happened.
That's all done prior to giving her the actual examination itself.
As polygrapher, Chris Landfeer talks to Rebecca before her test,
she reveals new details involving a man named Randy Parks.
She was in the process of moving out of the marital home.
They were being evicted.
She had a guy that she used to work with. He was helping her because he had a truck.
Rebecca said that his friend had made statements to her
that if Mike did come back, that he would kill him himself.
She did insinuate that Randy Parks
made a very well-being responsible for the murder.
Why would this friend take such violent action?
Rebecca has an idea.
She kind of intimated at one point that this friend may have
been kind of burning a candle for her.
Around 7 p.m., Rebecca's polygraph
commences at the Oakland County Sheriff's Department.
In the Sheriff's office, the polygraph
is conducted between the test's office, the polygraph is conducted between the test
subject and the polygraphist.
And then we get the report afterwards.
She ultimately killed.
She was confronted by the polygraph
examiner that she was lying.
Detectives are eager to confront Rebecca as well.
If you're not involved, you pass the test.
If you are involved, you fail it.
It's real, simple, real, real, simple.
You would not fail that polygraph at all.
You're delivering with health information.
Who do you protect?
I'm not protecting anybody.
Detectives press Rebecca about her relationship
with her former coworker, Randy Parks.
How often do you think the owner of Randy?
I have not heard him say this for the last 20 days.
I have never been to the home with him.
But you know we get crush on him.
How do you know him?
The star of the age he lives in the corner. I'll see you later. It's time for the hearing to begin.
There's only one thing you may need to find.
It's time for the truth.
You're obviously trying to protect him.
I don't know.
I was trying to get him to do a hearing after my mom.
Then detectives turn the tables.
Did you pray to the victim for that person to have that look at her?
The last person to see homicide victim alive
was the first one to see him dead,
which is pretty simplistic,
but I mean, that's who you're looking for.
So at this point,
we've got a little more interest than Rebecca,
because we've yet to locate anybody
that saw Mike anytime after she did.
The Michael, we're getting along. You're the last one to see him. like any time after she did. and I'm telling you, you can't hurt your mom. It's a great decision to discover it all.
Detectives release Rebecca after a tear-filled interview.
When detectives track down Randy for questioning,
he seems calm and cooperative.
When told me today, your name came up in this investigation.
It's a search for the truth and the facts.
I'll tell you this.
We've cleared three or four people,
and there are some people that we're unable to clear
or have in the clear jet.
The people we have cleared, obviously,
are not suspects, but everybody else remains.
So does that mean I read it?
Do you bet you?
You describe your relationship that you and Rebecca have?
Um, well, I thought we were pretty good friends.
You know, she was called this from Michael.
I can understand Dr. Brewer.
Did she want anything for me?
Absolutely not.
What about you with her?
No. One of the things that came out with Randy was that, you know, he was happily involved
in a relationship.
However, according to Randy, Rebecca had expressed animosity towards her husband, Mike.
Back in the arms, she said, you know, I wish she would just go away and die.
She didn't have that to end. I had it. She made it come into you. It's right.
If I asked you if you shot my...
If you said, try to say no.
I asked you if you wanted to present no
for shot Michael Long to send, could say no.
If I asked you those questions,
I'll tell you how to get by passing.
Which would be one of the tape-marked cherry.
Man, I didn't do enough, so. He could not wait to come in walk the tape on. Share it. Man, I'm doing nothing, so.
He could not wait to come in for the polygraph.
I mean, it was like, yeah, let's go do it right now.
That evening, investigators received
Randy's polygraph results.
He passed or wasn't a problem.
There was nothing to indicate.
Any deceptive behavior.
Randy was completely forthright with us.
We cleared him out.
Based on Randy's polygraph results, detectives believe he had no involvement in Mike's murder.
But they're not so sure about the person who pointed the finger at Randy.
Now we're starting to talk about the grieving widow is becoming a suspect. MUSIC
Coming up, new evidence exposes a chain of lies.
When confronted about the phone call on the night
that you went missing, she said, all right,
I wasn't being honest.
And autopsy results reveal a bizarre twist.
He had, at some point, been frozen solid.
MUSIC He had, at some point, been frozen solid.
After failing a polygraph exam, 28-year-old Rebecca Smith has landed herself on detectives radar
during the investigation into the murder of her husband, Mike.
There had certainly been marital issues.
She had indicated to, I believe, some of her husband, Mike. There had certainly been marital issues. She had indicated to, like, some of her friends,
where else was that she had planned on divorcing Michael Smith
of victim at some point in time.
She had indicated that she wanted him dead.
She wished they would just go away and die.
Were Rebecca's statements serious threats
or the harmless venting of an angry wife?
Detective Sapina, the Smith's phone records, serious threats, or the harmless venting of an angry wife.
Detective subpoena, the Smith's phone records,
and sift through the list of calls
made around the time Mike was last seen.
Investigators find a call on December 10th
to the home of Rebecca's grandparents.
The phone records indicate there was a call to Mary Jane's house
made from the Marital home of Mike and Rebecca.
Police reach out to Rebecca's grandmother Mary Jane Jordan.
We interviewed, you know, the grandmother, she's all young, Mike called that night, 830,
in the evening, looking for Rebecca.
Mary Jane says when she asked Rebecca about the call the next day,
Rebecca told her Mike was on the road to Florida.
That was verified by firm records
that the call was made from their home in Berkeley.
Certainly, he was not on a bus at 630,
the evening when he made a phone call at 830, leave me.
On January 9, 2003, Oakland County Sheriff's
detectives
summoned Rebecca back to the station
to address the discrepancy.
So we called to 8.29, because she looks right at the clock.
Do you know what they call Virginia's room?
There's no resistance.
Why?
When confronted about the phone call on the night that he went missing, she said,
all right, I wasn't being honest. He came back that night.
But I didn't want to tell my grandfather because Mike was supposed to be out of my life.
Rebecca says when she learned they were being evicted in November of 2002,
her grandfather agreed to pay for another apartment on one condition.
My grandfather made a big, big speech about it
after when we had sign the laws,
literally, it's relieving the apartment office.
You know, life will never set foot in this house.
Rebecca says she'd agreed to her grandfather's terms,
but she secretly convinced her husband to go to rehab
instead of ending the relationship.
She wanted to make her marriage work.
You know, she wanted her boys to have their dad in their life. She wanted to make her marriage work.
You know, she wanted her boys to have their dad in their life.
She wasn't divorcing him.
She wasn't doing any of that.
Rebecca says that after she dropped Mike off
at the bus station on December 10th,
he found his way back to their house.
He can't admit that he came back
as a display of grandparents.
That's it, isn't it?
This is not about disciplining your granddad.
Is that everything?
No, it's not.
Tell us what happened.
Let's get through it.
She admits that she lied and then comes up with a second story there.
There was the next date that she drove him to the bus stop
and then he was going to take off back to Florida. Rebecca, you know what I would hopefully carry this. And I'm
gonna have to ask something, you guys. Yeah, but you've got to see, you're not telling us anything that
got her anymore trust and you were doing the exchange to those facts that said taking to the
bus two thing that you took into the bus once in a while. We attempted to verify that, and all of a sudden it was able to determine that that's a lie as well,
because there was no ticket to his ever sold, and the victim was never seen in the bus station on the 10th or on the 11th.
So, the greeting will, lies to the police, who are trying to find out who killed her husband.
I know I've made myself look like s**t.
And I made myself look guilty.
You made yourself another one's suspect.
And this is what you've done.
Look at it from her point of view.
I know.
I know.
Let's do this.
We just give you another polygraph Tuesday.
All right. We just give you another polygraph Tuesday for a run.
To test Rebecca's new story, another polygraph is scheduled for January 14th,
and she is released.
That same day, detectives receive a comprehensive report
from the medical examiner's office.
There were two bull oons, one of the heart,
and one of the liver on the right side.
And based on their assessment, either of those
would have been lethal wounds.
A unique discovery by the medical examiner
shed some light on the circumstances of Mike's murderer.
One distinctive feature that we discovered
through the investigative process was that he had,
at some point, been frozen solid.
Mike was that murder there at the scene because of the condition of the body.
We had believed that there had been done several days prior, and ultimately the body was stored,
and then transferred to some type of refrigerated atmosphere, and then transported from that to the ditch itself.
I was refrigerated atmosphere and then transported from that to the ditch itself.
On January 10, 2003, investigators
execute a search warrant at the home Mike and Rebecca
lived in just before his disappearance.
In Mike and Rebecca's bedroom, there was a closet.
And the doors were off the closet.
The dimension of the closet was something like 20 inches
by 60 inches.
Mike's measurements in that fetal position
were about the same as that closet.
Like, please.
Our working theory was that Mike had been in that closet
for a period of time.
A crime lab came in and did some testing
and they'd actually discovered some blood
in the seams between where the tongue and the groove meet. We cut the floor out and sent it off
to the state police crime lab.
Investigators are eager to speak to Rebecca again,
but when the time comes for her scheduled polygraph,
Rebecca doesn't show.
A lawyer representing Rebecca calls police the following day and tells them that Rebecca will not be speaking to them again.
She knew she was getting into real hot water and probably the best advice that anybody could give her was to lawyer up.
You can't ask for any further questions, so they concentrate on the investigation and know other aspects of it. When police revisit the phone records from Michael and Rebecca's
home, they discover an outgoing call to a 1-800 number
dialed on December 20th.
The day Mike's body was identified.
Investigators soon connect the 1-800 number
to a life insurance company.
They obviously went to the insurance company
and verified that through their reviews people there. The life insurance policy that They obviously went to the insurance company and verified that through their reviews
with people there.
The life insurance policy that she had on him was a $200,000 policy.
On the 20th, she makes a call to the insurance company to put a claim in before she even
calls the victim's mother to advise the mother that Michael Smith had been killed.
During their conversation with an insurance agent,
detectives learned that December 20th
wasn't the first time Rebecca called.
She called in October to find out the status of the policy.
And the insurance company told her,
well, it's basically lapsed, but if you make a payment,
you can get it caught up.
That's what she made a payment.
So now we start talking about hope.
There's a big flag. There's a motive.
In addition to the discovery of Mike's insurance policy,
investigators soon receive forensic evidence
that further solidifies their suspicions of Rebecca.
A blood and the floorboards are sent to the crime lab
for purposes of DNA analysis.
It did testing.
The blood came back through DNA as my splutter.
Coming up, investigators worked to unravel
the ceaseless schemes of their adversary.
All right, honey.
Expect a lot of familiarly cheesed there.
One day, let me take care of it from there, OK?
It was pretty macaballion.
And a killer's deception is dissected in court.
She had a proclivity for anger management.
She wanted to get rid of him.
And...
...
...
...
...
By early 2003, Oakland County detectives have zeroed in on Rebecca Smith, as the prime suspect in the murder of her husband, Mike Smith.
Investigators believe Rebecca killed her husband after several years of spousal resentment, whaled over her.
The fact that the victim in this case had certainly had haven't alcohol issue, as well as the financial issues
where all of a sudden she's going to be losing her home.
I think that I'll led to a certain amount of frustration.
I'm not sure if I can get it right.
Feeling confident in their case, detectives pass it
to the state for an indictment.
I was determined at that point in time
that there was insufficient evidence to go forward
with a criminal charge.
Without an indictment, investigators reach an impasse.
It gets to a point where our argument is not going to get you better.
You know, we got what we're going to get.
We're not going to get a videotape of we're doing it.
What I wanted was the truth to come out.
That's all I wanted was the truth.
And if they felt that they needed some time,
then I already kind of just prepared my sale to do that.
For the next four years, family members
and investigators keep close tabs on Rebecca.
It was grueling, you know?
She got it life insurance policy,
and it was very frustrating.
We were a little disappointed when she got it.
Has everybody caused you bought a house?
She never went out.
Never had very many friends,
unless they came over to the house
and watched X-Files with her.
She was always on some of us,
making sure we were OK.
Until 2006, when a turnover in elected officials
brings fresh eyes to the case.
There was a new administration that
came into office in several cases where
they had looked at again, this being one of them.
It was determined that there was
sufficient eviscus for it, and a warrant
was issued for open murder against Rebecca Smith. It was incons that there was a fish at Evisco, Ford, and a warrant was issued for open murder against Rebecca Smith.
It was inconsistencies.
It comes down to the totality of the information.
The very story she told the people about the relationship.
All I ever wanted was the person that did this
to be held accountable.
And now this is happening.
It's really happening.
As Rebecca awaits her trial at the county jail,
her phone calls are monitored as part of standard practice.
On July 6, 2007, Rebecca asks her sister Rachel a cryptic question.
Anytime I send it to them, check the back of the letter,
because I always write something on the back there.
I don't trust the numbers around here.
I wonder why you already thought it's okay.
That's exactly what I was.
All right honey, expect a letter from you like two stair one thing
and I can take care of it from there, okay?
After this suspicious exchange, authorities
begin to monitor Rebecca's mail on July 9, 2007.
They soon intercept letters Rebecca sent to her sister
and a friend.
When she's in jail, she's asking them to basically pretend
that they are the killer and to write a letter to the court,
to the media, and also
to her lawyer to indicate that somehow they're out there, that they're the real killer.
That was basically a gift from the defendant to the prosecution.
I think it clearly indicated shoulder in ten.
I just couldn't believe she'd done that.
I totally thought there's nothing that made her look more guilty than that.
Ultimately, Rebecca, I think, was charged with obstruction of justice on top of the murder
church.
Rebecca's trial begins on October 26, 2007.
Prosecutors tell the jury they believe the murder occurred on December 10th, 2002.
He was in bed asleep. It appeared like she walked in the bedroom
and shot him in the chest and in the stomach.
My theory is that Rebecca then moved the body to a closet
in the bedroom of the Marlowe House where they were living at the time.
And then at some point, we're back
and moved the body to another location where the body froze.
And then on the night of December 19,
we're back up, drove the body to Springfield Township,
stopped in the shoulder of Oak Hill Road
and pushed the body down into the ditch.
Prosecutors say that the motive was simple.
She was just tired of struggling.
She just tired of them with her family.
I don't know if them losing their apartment maybe for the umpteenth time was more than she could bear.
If he were to be eliminated, that eliminates her problem with him and also eliminates the financial issues.
And it goes along with her statements that she just wish she would go away and die.
However, the defense claims that although the marriage wasn't perfect,
Rebecca would never turn to violence against Mike.
My mom still loves him.
Still has a picture of him,
pinned up right next to where she sleeps.
She doesn't hate him at all.
I think back to remembers him and thinks of him
as just a confused lost soul.
And I think she wanted to save him,
but he didn't want to save himself.
As for the damning letters from Jail,
the defense says that those are just the work of a desperate,
but ultimately innocent mother.
She wanted to get granted bail so that she could get out
and see us before she went away.
And I believe that.
My mom cared very dearly for me and my brother.
On November 6th, 2007,
after two days of jury deliberation,
Rebecca learns her fate.
The jury came back with a verdict of a second degree murder.
The court then sentenced her above the sentence in guidelines to 30 to 60 years
on the Michigan Department of Corrections.
To some, Mike wasn't the only casualty.
I don't think anybody could ever know what that could do to a kid.
Not just to lose a parent in such a violent way,
but at the hands of their other parent.
I don't think that it gets anywhere worse than that.
My mother being taken for the murder
devastated me much more than the murder and my father.
It was the most devastating green
that ever happened to me.
I hated me much more than the murder and I found her. It was the most devastating thing that ever happened to me.
The Bible tells me that I must forgive,
that vengeance is mine.
He'll take care of it.
So I'm going to say, I forgive Rebecca for what she did.
I believe justice was served, and that was all that I wanted to happen.
After Rebecca's incarceration,
her sons were raised by her grandparents.
Rebecca will be eligible for parole in 2032.
She will be 57 years old.
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