Snapped: Women Who Murder - Sarah Mitchell
Episode Date: September 29, 2024When a firebomb attack destroys the home of two sisters, Oakland police turn to the neighborhood for answers. The high-profile case takes an odd turn once detectives realize they have a homic...ide on their hands and the culprit is much closer to home.Season 30 Episode 14Originally aired: January 2, 2022Watch 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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Stevie and Sarah Allman were sisters cut from vastly different clothes.
She represented all of the good things in people.
And I think her sister represented some of the worst things in people.
She was grounded. She was financially secure.
Whereas her sister's life had always been haphazard and unstable.
And when a brazen crime is unleashed on their childhood home, all hell breaks loose.
The hole was engulfed in flames. It was completely torched. She was burnt really bad.
The aftermath will lead investigators on a desperate search for answers.
She was frightened at the threats that they were receiving from the drug dealers.
She was nowhere to be found.
We were all in shock. Someone was asking, where is your sister? Where is your sister?
But the trail leaves them dead in their tracks.
I was told we were going there to look for a body.
They determined that not only was she dead,
but that she had also been dismembered.
In a tale of sibling rivalry, it seems one was an angel.
I had a terrible feeling that something very bad
was going to happen.
I thought she was gonna be dead.
While the other, a devil in disguise.
I think it was good versus evil.
She thought about it before she did it,
and she planned it, and then she executed her plan.
This is what horror movies are made of.
Frightening.
This is what horror movies are made of. Frightening.
Oakland, California. A city in the Bay Area well known for its acceptance and diversity, but in the late 1990s drugs had flooded the streets of this once proud community.
In the 90s we had a very large epidemic of shootings.
The city had a lot of gang activity going on, a lot of drug activity going on.
Oakland is a beautiful city, especially around Lake Merritt, but Oakland could be like any
other big city.
You have your ins, your outs, your ups and downs, and you're good and you're bad.
And on the evening of July 1, 1997, East Oakland resident Monica Boyette gets a glimpse of
the bad when she hears a frantic knock at her door.
A lady came to my door and told me that she needed help.
Monica recognizes the woman as one of the Allman sisters who live nearby.
I could not tell which one of the sisters it was.
She was bur burnt really bad.
She said someone threw something in her window.
That's when Monica looks down the street
to see the woman's home ablaze.
You could hear people, it's a fire.
It's a fire.
People were saying that.
The house was fully in flames when the fire department arrived.
I had came home from work
and I noticed a bunch of fire trucks out there
and the home was engulfed in flames.
It was completely torched.
There would not have even been an attempt
to go into the house to try and save anyone
because it was so fully engulfed in flames.
to the house to try and save anyone because it was so fully engulfed in flames.
As firefighters rushed to extinguish the inferno,
paramedics tend to the woman's wounds.
She had first and second degree what they say
are deflective burns on her hands, her arms, and her legs.
I don't believe they concluded that there were
any life-threatening injuries, but that
she did need immediate medical attention.
The woman identifies herself to first responders as 52-year-old Stevie Allman, the owner of
the home that she shares with her sister, 47-year-old Sarah Mitchell.
Stevie stuns authorities when she claims the fire was the result of drug dealers throwing
fire bombs through her window.
She alleged that several individuals surrounded the house and fire bombed the house.
The assumption was that drug dealers had attempted to burn her out of the house.
All police know is that Stevie Allman has been injured,
but we don't know why drug dealers would want to attack her.
First responders attempt to calm Stevie down
as she is loaded into the ambulance.
But just as the doors close,
surrounding neighbors make a terrifying realization.
We were all in shock.
Someone was asking the lady that came to my home, where is your sister?
Where is your sister?
Stevie says her sister, Sarah, is in a different state and had only recently moved out. As the ambulance pulls away, the Allman sisters' childhood home
is left in ashes.
California natives Sarah and Stevie Allman
moved to Oakland, California at a young age
with their mother and seven siblings.
They had been in Oakland since the 1950s and grew up in that house that they were living
in.
With her father out of the picture, Stevie was tasked with helping her older sister,
Leota, look after their younger siblings, including Sarah.
The girls grew up in an environment where there's a single parent.
The father disappeared and that their mom raised them.
So the kids were relied on a lot to help out everybody else.
And that Stevie was one of those people that was relied on
at an early age to help out the family.
There was a special bond between Stevie and her sister
who is five years her junior, her name is Sarah. It wasn't
uncommon for people to mistake them for twins. Though she always looked up to
Stevie, Sarah quickly became accustomed to walking in her older sister's shadow.
Stevie was a very sweet person, one of the absolute rocks of that family.
By the early 1970s, the Almond children had left the nest, with the exception of Stevie.
Stevie stays in the home with her mother, and she has a good job working for a local family business.
working for a local family business. Stevie Ammon was known to be very industrious,
a very hard worker, and this was a company
that made utility trucks, and Stevie was one
of that family's most valuable employees.
After nearly 20 years with the company,
Stevie's dedication was recognized with a sizable bonus.
Stevie Ammon was one of the two employees that they gave over $100,000 to as part of
her reward and her having been such a hardworking, dependable employee.
While the other Almond children had established lives of their own, Stevie and Sarah remained close, proving that even with family opposites attract.
Even though Stevie and Sarah were very close and looked alike,
that's about where it ends in terms of their individual characters.
Stevie was the hard worker. She was grounded. She was employed.
Whereas Sarah lived a more frivolous lifestyle,
did not hold down jobs.
By her 30s, Sarah found herself divorced
with three young kids and a new last name, Mitchell.
Sarah would meet a man, move in with him,
live with the man, and it would fall apart. And then she'd wind up back living with Stevie and her mother.
In the early 90s, Stevie and her mother
welcomed Sarah and her kids back with open arms.
The kind of arrangement that they had
was that Stevie worked at her company,
and Sarah, who did not work, was responsible
for keeping the house clean and doing all the cooking.
After a few years, Sarah's kids grew up and moved out,
while she remained with her sister and mother.
Then, in 1994, the matriarch of the family passed away
and left the home to her children.
Once Stevie and Sarah's mother died, there was a big decision to make, what to do with
that beloved home that they lived in.
It was bought by their mother, had so many memories.
Stevie could not stand apart with it, so she bought it outright. Stevie agreed to pay her siblings for their shares of the home
and became the sole owner.
And she allowed Sarah to remain in the house.
But while the house hadn't changed much,
the city of Oakland had.
Mid to late 90s, Oakland was basically
crime-infested with a lot of drug dealers.
Drugs were cheap then, so crime was pretty rampant.
There was a lot of drug wars going on and other crimes related to drugs, burglaries,
carjackings, robberies, homicides, everything.
That's when the two sisters decided they would no longer be passive observers.
Officers that were community policing officers
worked closely with the community
to solve neighborhood crimes.
So we asked the residents to be our partners in this.
They were our eyes and ears
for the Oakland Police Department.
But on July 1, 1997, it seems the sisters' noble efforts to protect the neighborhood
may have put them in the line of fire.
Firefighters have just extinguished a massive fire at the East Oakland home of Stevie Allman
and Sarah Mitchell. The framework of the house was still existing,
but for the most part, the fire was extensive.
The homeowner, 52-year-old Stevie Allman,
has been transported to the hospital with multiple burns.
Stevie claimed that the home had been firebombed
by drug dealers, retaliating for Stevie filming their illegal activities for police.
Stevie said that her intentions were to have them arrested and they would be out of the neighborhood and the neighborhood would be peaceful again.
She said there were hooded individuals running into the yard. We're looking for three to four individuals.
Coming up, as detectives round up local drug dealers,
new information comes to light.
They said if she ever got in the way of our business
or she ever caused us problems, it was easier
to just put a bullet in her head.
And a shocking twist turns the case upside down.
They said, well, why is she filing a missing persons
report on Steven Yaman?
And Steven Yaman's in the hospital.
The spotlight shifts now to this person
that was in the hospital that is supposed
to be the anti-drug crusader, who is now not
the person she says she is.
On July 1, 1997, a fire has destroyed the childhood home of Stevie Allman and Sarah Mitchell.
With Sarah currently unaccounted for, Oakland arson investigators are speaking to Stevie,
hoping to find out who targeted their home.
This case has now gone to the arson unit,
and the first thing they want to do is go to the hospital
and get a statement from their victim, Stevie.
Stevie's theory is that local drug dealers attacked her home.
She responded that drug dealers firebombed the house and threw Molotov cocktails into the house
and that she ran through the front door
and suffered burn injuries to her arms and legs.
She was filming dope deals and prostitution
and from my understanding understanding she wanted to try
to put an end to it.
What she saw, she reported to the Oakland Police Department.
Stevie says she recognized the men that threw Molotov cocktails as the same men she videotaped
dealing drugs.
Stevie goes on to explain that once the drug dealers discovered they were being filmed,
they began threatening the Allman sisters.
Stevie reveals to police that actually,
she and her sister had received several threats
over the last couple of months.
Stevie told the officers that Sarah had become frightened
at the threats that they were receiving from the drug dealers
and that she had moved out and no longer wanted to live there
out of fear of being retaliated against.
She indicated that Sarah had moved to Sparks, Nevada
with her new boyfriend.
According to Stevie, not long after Sarah left, the drug dealers made good on their threats.
Now that detectives have heard Stevie's account,
they ask for Sarah's contact information
to hear her version of events.
We were trying to contact her to piece together
some of the details that we were finding a
little confusing.
They inquired, could Stevie give them the phone number to call Sarah?
Stevie said her address book had been burned in the fire.
Armed with only Stevie's statement for now, detectives begin their search for the alleged arsonists.
We were looking for individuals in black hooded attire, you know, that had set the house on
fire.
I notified all the beat officers out there to start giving me identifications of all
known dope dealers in the area.
On July 3rd, the hospital releases a statement to the press on Stevie's behalf.
In the statement, Stevie said that her intentions in filming these people were to get them out
of the, to have them arrested and they would be out of the neighborhood and the neighborhood
would be peaceful again.
The meat of it was essentially her role in the community and Neighborhood Watch and being careful as members
of the community and not wanting the bad guys, if you will, to take over. And she was tired of it.
The community was just very distraught, very upset, very concerned,
and I believe they rallied together quite well to support her.
She started getting donations and people asked if they could donate money and
so we managed the processing of any monetary gifts that came through to her.
The story had blown up into a national story to the point where Stevie Ammon was
receiving phone calls from the White House and the drug czar. And so the
pressure on the Oakland Police Department to solve the case was tremendous.
To aid in the efforts, the Governor of California offers a $50,000 reward
for anyone with information on the arsonists to come forward.
There was a lot of high activity on our part from law enforcement
to pick
these people up for warrants. If they see them doing a deal in the street they'd
get picked up for for sales of narcotics. I think the majority of the drug dealers
that they spoke to didn't even know what the Oakland Police Department was
talking about when they asked about videotapes. They were matter-of-factly about it. Said if she ever got in the way of our
business or she ever caused us problems, it was easier to just put a bullet in her
head as opposed to taking the chance of getting hurt or injured with a firebomb.
While the alleged dealers acknowledge they're not above violent retribution, they insist they know nothing about the fire.
That, quite frankly, is unusual because normally someone is going to tell us something.
But in this case, with a high dollar reward, with a lot of national attention on this case, we're getting no information,
which to me means we're not turning up the right stone.
which to me means we're not turning up the right stone. Detectives turned back to the Arson Report,
looking for any evidence they may have missed.
They found several items that were inconsistent
with the house or the room being firebombed.
There was glass on the outside of the house as opposed to the inside.
Which was inconsistent with the statement that a ball top cocktail was thrown inside.
Detectives begin to think that the arsonist was not a drug dealer at all, but perhaps
someone who held animosity towards the Allman sisters.
Getting back in touch with Stevie Allman
could be the key to finding out what happened.
However, in the week following the fire,
they struggled to connect with her or her sister, Sarah Mitchell.
Nobody knew where the other sister was at.
Nobody knew where Sarah was at.
And that was something that I was going to have to find out from Stevie.
A number of times I tried to speak to her, but each time I went up to the hospital,
doctors were telling me she's been sedated, she couldn't speak.
There was all kind of circumstances which meant that I couldn't get to Stevie and talk to her myself.
With Stevie on tight medical supervision, detectives are forced to wait for information.
But on July 7, 1997, they received surprising news from the Santa Cruz Police Department.
Leota, a sibling of Stevie Ahman, had filed a missing persons report on Stevie Ahman.
They said, well, why is she filing a missing persons report on Stevie Amund.
They said, well, why is she filing a missing persons report
on Stevie Amund?
And Stevie Amund's in the hospital.
Oakland detectives head to Santa Cruz
to inform Stevie and Sarah's sister,
Leota Belleville, about what's transpired.
And they are met with a shocking accusation.
The first thing Leota told the detectives was
that the person in the hospital is not Stevie Ahmert,
and that is Sarah Mitchell.
Coming up, the investigation reveals bad blood in the family.
Weeks before, I'd had a terrible feeling
that something very bad was going to happen to Stevie.
I wanted to know where she was.
I just asked Sarah over and over.
And detectives begin to suspect a dubious cover-up.
Nobody would have somebody's identification and money
like that belonging to Stevie unless
Stevie wasn't around.
My suspicion on this was that she had killed Stevie.
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It's been one week since the home of Stevie Allman
was set ablaze, and detectives have
just learned the woman they thought was Stevie may actually be Stevie's sister, Sarah Mitchell.
The spotlight shifts now to this person that was in the hospital that is supposed to be
the anti-drug crusader, who is now not the person she says she is.
Stevie and Sarah's older sister, Leota Belleville, says she immediately knew something was amiss
when she saw the fire on the news and reports were dubbing Stevie a crime crusader.
Stevie would never have built drug dealers. She wouldn't have even acknowledged them.
She would have just looked the other way. She wouldn't do anything.
Lyota told us that it was not Stevie Allman that was in the hospital, but it was in fact Sarah.
Lyota says she received a phone call from Sarah while she was in the hospital and that Sarah had a believable reason for
posing as Stevie. Sarah didn't have any insurance, so Stevie did.
And so she was going to use Stevie's name
and let the insurance pay for it.
Leota goes on to share a disturbing premonition
she had about Stevie.
I wanted to know where Stevie was.
Why did you want to know where Stevie was?
Because weeks before, I'd had a terrible feeling that something very bad was going to happen to Stevie.
I mean, I thought she was going to be dead. And I wanted to know where she was. I just asked Sarah over and over.
Sarah Mitchell responded, Stevie's in Lake Tahoe. And a little bit later in the conversation,
the sister asked Sarah Mitchell a second time,
but where's Stevie?
And Sarah responded that Stevie's in Reno.
I said, something's wrong here.
And I said to her, you told me Stevie was in Tahoe,
and now you're saying she's in Reno. I want to know where Stevie is.
At that point, Sarah Mitchell basically ended the conversation with her sister.
Given Stevie and Sarah's relationship over the last few years,
Leota fears something terrible has happened.
Stevie had been long frustrated by Sarah being lazy,
not willing to work,
always looking for someone to take care of her,
and just not being a real productive person.
And that was at the heart of the bad blood
that had been going on between Stevie and Sarah.
When their mother died,
Leota says the relationship between Stevie and Sarah
only grew more fraught
when Sarah began impersonating Stevie and cashing her checks.
I know that it's happened several times
where Sarah has pretended to be Stevie.
Stevie still allowed Sarah to live there with her in that house and I don't know why.
Leota says Stevie had recently expressed interest in leaving Oakland, which only caused further
friction between her two sisters. Stevie began having discussions about wanting to sell her house and go somewhere to retire.
And then Sarah, of course, questioned, well, if you sell the house, what's going to happen
to me?
And Stevie, of course, responded that she was not responsible for taking care of Sarah for the rest of her life.
Armed with this new information, detectives call the hospital for an immediate interview
with the woman claiming to be Stevie Allman.
I found out from the hospital itself that she had been released.
from the hospital itself that she had been released. So they did an all points bulletin on finding her
and they eventually found her in the city
right next door to Oakland.
And she was in a hotel in the city of Alameda.
They brought her in for questioning.
For the purpose of this interview,
you say that now we're're recording it and that we need
to get your full name.
My full name?
For the purpose of, yeah.
Stevie Viola Almond.
The woman claiming to be Stevie sticks to her original story, but detectives aren't
convinced.
The first thing I noticed was the burns on the front of her arms, the front of her legs.
But it was only on the front, meaning to me
that she was well aware of where the fire was at.
She wasn't engulfed in the fire.
Okay, now there were definitely somebody in the front yard,
somebody in the backyard.
There may have been three, but I believe there were four
because of the way everything hit at one time.
Detectives change course
and press the woman about Leota's allegations.
We received a report from Scotts Valley PD
and it's in regards to a missing person
and it was initiated by Leota Belville.
No, Leota knows better.
She just was hysterical that night.
She's the oldest.
She's got some problems.
She was adamant that she was Stevie Ommen
and that her sister, Leota, never
knew what she was talking about.
In the past, have you ever assumed Stevie's identity at any time?
Or have you ever assumed Sarah's identity?
Has there been any confusion?
People will call me Sarah.
People will call me Stevie, Ms. Ballman.
That's about as far as assuming anything.
You're not Sarah?
No, I'm Stevie.
Detectives ask for identification. As she opens up her purse,
investigators spot two sets of IDs.
She had a lot of identification on her
that belonged to Sarah,
and she had Stevie Allman's identification on her. So at that point, I'm also confused as to who I'm talking to,
whether I'm talking to Stevie or Sarah.
Plus, she had also a lot of checks in her purse of donations
that were written to Stevie Allman.
Police obviously ask her,
why do you have two sets of identification?
She said that they often carry each other's identification,
which made no sense to me,
inasmuch as she said that Sarah was off with her boyfriend in Nevada,
meaning doesn't she need that identification for her own self?
It reached a point in the interview and it became clear to the detectives
that she was never going to admit that she was Sarah Mitchell.
What we're probably going to do, Phoebe, is just for all intents and purposes,
and just to clear it up, we're just going to have you fingerprinted.
Just roll your fingerprints. Okay.
I told her that we'd like to get her fingerprinted
so that I could find out who I'm talking to.
At that point, she didn't really want to talk much anymore.
It only takes police 45 minutes to receive the fingerprint match results
and determine which Allman's sister is sitting in front of them.
The fingerprint return said that she was Sarah Mitchell.
It pretty much vindicated a lot of my suspicions.
We knew that she was Sarah, and now where was Stevie?
Coming up, an elaborate scheme is laid bare.
What they found was that all of the bank accounts
had been cleaned out.
And detectives unearth a chilling discovery.
He opened the freezer and saw what looked like an elbow.
It was just disbelief.
Just never seen anything like this before in my career.
Just total shock.
Oakland detectives have just determined that 47-year-old Sarah Mitchell has been posing
as her sister, Stevie Allman, prompting the question,
if this is Sarah, where is Stevie?
She was very nervous.
When we came back into the room and approached her
about knowing that she was Sarah, she denied it.
She completely shut down.
She wouldn't answer any questions.
And all questioning stopped once she demanded a lawyer.
At that point, Sergeant Hughes arrested her for forgery.
With Sarah in a cell and an APB out for the real Stevie Allman, detectives hold Sarah
Mitchell on charges of forgery and providing a false name to police.
They went and looked at Stevie Allman's bank accounts, and what they found was that all
of the bank accounts had been cleaned out.
So they wanted the video of those transactions.
And on every single one of those transactions, they found Sir Mitchell had withdrawn all
the money.
While there were physical similarities between the sisters, investigators believe they were
distinct enough to identify the woman in the footage as Sarah and not Stevie.
She was cashing checks that were issued to Stevie Allman that she wasn't entitled to cash.
There were other incidents that Sarah was posing as Stevie,
I think attempts to try to get retirement checks,
and she was trying to do a total identity switch.
To detectives, this can only mean one thing.
My early suspicion on this was that she had killed Stevie.
And because nobody would have somebody's identification
and money like that belonging to Stevie,
unless Stevie wasn't around.
On July 15, 1997, two weeks after the Allman home went up in flames,
detectives secure a search warrant for the property.
In 1997, I was one of the senior crime scene investigators in our unit.
The day I was asked to respond with the investigators,
I was told we were going there to look for a body.
So we would search it from top to bottom and turn it inside out if we had to.
While much of the home was destroyed, some items survived the fire.
I entered the house and it was severely burnt. You could smell the
charred wood and the room was coal and very dark. There was no electricity and
as I walked in they brought me with their flashlights and guided me to the kitchen area,
which was just past the living room.
Two of the investigators went into the kitchen and they walked over to the freezer.
And so using a flashlight, he opened the freezer and saw what looked like an elbow protruding out from the garbage bag.
I reached inside of the freezer box and I was able to grab a hold of what I believe was her arm
and I tried to feel for a pulse, but there was nothing. She was, she was deceased.
It was clear that it was female, but obviously it would take the coroner to do an actual identification.
It wasn't confirmed yet, but it was my assumption that it was Stevie. the coroner to do an actual identification.
It wasn't confirmed yet, but it was my assumption that it was Stevie.
The entire freezer is moved to the coroner's office for an autopsy.
I was there as we un-taped the freezer box, and then as the body was removed, I think there was at least two bags.
As they open the bags, authorities are met with a gruesome sight.
It was at that point they determined that not only was she dead but that she had also been dismembered.
She had been cut in half from the waist up, and then the lower torso from her waist down to about above her knees, and then the last part that came out was the legs.
We had four body parts all together.
It was just disbelief, and just never seen anything like this before in my career.
This is what horror movies are made of.
Frightening.
The damage to the head was the obvious cause of death.
Seeing the results of the autopsy
was that Stevie Allman died of blunt trauma, blunt trauma
to the head, where she received numerous
blows, maybe as many as 20 blows, likely with a crowbar, but an instrument like that caused
her to die.
Because the remains had been well preserved, investigators feel confident with the preliminary
identification of the body as Stevie Allman.
Back at the home, CSI's look for clues amongst the wreckage to piece together how the crime
unfolded.
They went into the front bedroom, which is the room that was Stevie Allman's bedroom,
and they went in and placed the lumina
on the floors and the walls,
and the room lit up like a Christmas tree.
So that confirmed that
Stevie Ahman had been murdered in that bedroom.
Authorities find more grisly clues in the bathroom.
I did see the tub that had the skill saw marks on the porcelain tub,
which is where she had Stevie's legs draped over the side of the tub and cut the legs off.
Despite the condition of the burned home, authorities are able to recover blood samples, as well as several possible murder weapons.
I can tell you there were quite a few things that they asked me to recover.
A skill saw, a hammer, some knives.
There was probably close to 40 pieces of evidence collected.
On July 23, 1997, Sarah Mitchell is officially charged with the murder of her sister, Stevie Allman.
We was totally shocked. We didn't realize we had a murderer right here in our own neighborhood.
I mean, if she'd have killed her sister, she'd have killed me.
She'd have killed you.
She'd have killed anybody.
Coming up, Sarah's deception causes an uproar in the community.
Here you are, a woman who had blamed the drug dealers
for something so horrific that you yourself had done.
But prosecutors face an uphill battle
to bring an alleged killer to justice.
The defense strategy was to focus on the fact
that we did not have any direct evidence,
that throughout the case, the prosecution
has failed to put one witness on the stand that saw anything. ["Walking Dead"]
Oakland detectives have arrested 47-year-old Sarah Mitchell
for the impersonation and murder of her older sister,
Stevie Allman.
It was shocking to hear something like that would happen,
especially right next door to me.
We just felt duped, period.
Everyone was angry at that point,
because here you are a woman who had blamed the drug dealers
for something so horrific that you yourself had done.
In November of 2000,
Sarah Mitchell's much anticipated trial gets underway.
I spent quite a bit of time establishing
the relationships between Sarah Mitchell and Stevie Ahmet
so that the jury could understand
how someone can do this to their own sister. between Sarah Mitchell and Stevie Ammon so that the jury could understand
how someone can do this to their own sister.
We focused on the actual evidence
in terms of who had access to Stevie Ammon,
that they could walk into her room at night
and beat her to death.
And then you close the case down with the motive.
And in this case, it was a financial gain motive
that was the reason behind this whole case.
We focused on voluminous numbers of photographs
of Sarah Mitchell in the bank,
withdrawing her sister's money.
Prosecutors theorize that on the night of June 30th, 1997,
while Stevie was sleeping,
Sarah walked into her sister's bedroom
with horrific intentions.
According to prosecutors,
she sneaks into her sister's bedroom
in the middle of the night.
She's armed.
She begins bludgeoning Stevie's head
and over and over again.
Then she drags the body from the bed
across the floor into the bathroom,
where she proceeds to cut her sister
into pieces with a saw.
I don't understand the mentality
how a sister could kill another sister.
It's such a dramatic and gruesome way.
It's beyond me.
I can't explain it.
According to prosecutors, the evidence
against Sarah is overwhelming.
You show the jury what happened that night.
What was the instrumentality that was used?
The dismemberment of the body, the attempt to cover up the blood spatter that was all
over the walls and the floor in the bedroom by firebombing the house from the inside and then claiming drug dealers
through a Molotov cocktail.
And then you show the jury the photo of the glass
outside the house as opposed to inside the house.
Ultimately, the state's case was enough
to convince the jury.
And on November 21st, 2000, Sarah Mitchell is found guilty of murder.
I believe the ultimate verdict in finding her guilty was appropriate considering the
evidence that was stacked up all around them and around her.
She thought about it before she did it,
and she planned it, and then she executed her plan.
And therefore they found that she premeditated the murder,
which is first degree murder in California.
At her sentencing hearing on December 4th, 2000,
surprisingly, Sarah's family pleads for her life.
They had been hurt enough,
and to take the life of the second sister
would just be another stab in the heart.
Her family, from what I understand,
did not want the death penalty,
and now she's left to live her
life behind bars. Sometimes maybe death isn't really a punishment but life behind bars is.
Anyone in their right mind, right, would not think to do something so horrific if, you know, your sister is actually
taking care of you, providing for you, has a home for you, and taking care of your every
need.
And then you turn around and this is how you repay them.
At the end of the day, I think it just boils down to money, jealousy, pure just greed and evil.
And though Stevie's life ended tragically, the crime will never overshadow her memory.
She cared for her mother, she cared for her siblings.
She was just a person of high integrity, hard worker.
I mean, she represented all of the good things in people.
And I think her sister, Sarah, represented some of the worst things in people.
Sarah Mitchell is housed at the Central California Women's Facility, serving a life sentence
for the murder of her sister.
Her next hearing for parole eligibility will take place in January of 2027.
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