WOMEN WHO KILL: PART TWO
Mothers Who Kill: Susan Smith
While Susan Smith long held the title for the most famous murdering mother, she lost it to Andrea Pia Yates in 2001.

On October 25, 1994, Smith drove to John D. Long Lake outside Union, South Carolina, to contemplate a letter written to her by her married lover: he did not want to see her any longer. She claims she attributed this to the fact that she had two children by another man, her former husband, which her lover did not want around. To Smith's mind, there was only one thing to do.
She parked on the gravel boat ramp and thought about what to do while Michael, 3, and Alex, age 14 months, were asleep in the back. She had to kill them both, she believed, and then herself—or so she claimed. Smith put the car into neutral and felt it move toward the water. She got out, hesitated, and then reached into the car to release the emergency brake. The Mazda, lights still on, rolled forward into the water. Alex and Michael were securely strapped in. It would all be over in moments.
Smith watched as the car floated and filled with water. Finally it went under and she ran to a nearby house, screaming that a black man had accosted her at a traffic light and taken her car with her sons inside. It wasn't long before investigators figured out what she had done, found the car, and brought the two small bodies out of the water. Smith was convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison.


- Savage Mistress
- Women in Teams
- A Thirst For Violence
- Serial Killers
- Killing Through Others I
- Killing Through Others II
- Killing Through Others III
- The Trunk Murderess
- Murder or Self-Defense?
- Black Widows I
- Black Widows II
- Mothers Who Kill: Susan Smith
- Mothers Who Kill: Andrea Yates
- Deep Depression
- Trial & Sentence
- Maternal Stress Disorders
- Murder Mystery
- Dangerous & Remorseless
- Murder by God's Command
- Parallels
- The South Side Slayers
- Obsessed with Babies
- Similar Cases
- **New Chapter: Desperation is No Excuse
- **New Chapter: A Long Way from Normal
- Bibliography






























