Inside Susan Smith’s 30 Years in Prison (Parole Denied, Guard Scandals & Life Worse Than Death) A woman drowns her two babies. The jury spares her from death row, thinking they’re showing mercy. 30 years later, prison guards say that decision might have been the crulest thing they could have done to her. In November 2024, Susan Smith walked into her first parole hearing after three decades behind bars. What happened in that room and what’s happened to her since reveals something most people never think about when it comes to life sentences. Stick with me because by the end of this, you’re going to question everything you thought you knew about punishment. [music] Let me show you what 30 years in a concrete cage actually does to someone. October 25th, 1994. Susan Smith straps her sons into their car seats. Michael, 3 years old. Alexander, just 14 months. She drives to John D. Long Lake in Union County, South Carolina, and she releases the parking brake. The car rolls down the boat ramp. It takes 6 minutes for the Mazda to fill with water and sink. [music] Both boys still strapped in, drowning in complete darkness. Smith doesn’t call for help. She runs to a nearby house and tells them a black man in a tobogen hat carjacked her stole her car with her children inside. For 9 days, she’s all over television, crying, [music] begging for her babies to come home. Search parties comb the entire area. [music] Police pull over black man throughout South Carolina, hunting for a suspect who never existed. November 3rd, 1994. [music] Smith breaks. There was no carjacking. She murdered her own children. Prosecutors say she did it because the man she was seeing didn’t want kids messing up their relationship. She chose him over her sons. The trial takes less than a week. Jury convicts her in 2 and 1/2 hours. Then comes sentencing. Prosecutor Tommy Pope fights hard for execution. [music] He tells the jury point blank, “If a black man did this, you’d expect death. If the father did this, you’d expect [music] death. But the jury votes for life instead. Here’s what those jurors didn’t know. Under South Carolina law, anyone convicted before January 1996 was eligible for parole after 30 years. Smith made the cut off by months. The judge told the jury to interpret life in its plain and usual meaning. They thought she’d die behind bars. They were completely wrong. And that mistake created three decades of psychological torture that’s still playing out today. Look, if you’ve made it this far, you’re clearly not here for surface level content. Most people scroll past stories like this. You didn’t. That says something about you. [music] This channel digs into the cases no one else will touch the way we do. If that’s what you’re looking for, you know what to do. Smith starts her sentence at Camille Griffin Graham Correctional Institution. Within 5 years, everything falls apart. August 2000, she admits to sleeping with a 50-year-old prison guard named Houston Kagel four times on prison grounds. Kaggel pleads guilty, serves three months. A year later, Captain Alfred Row confesses to sleeping with Smith, too. Gets 5 years probation. Think about that. A woman convicted of drowning her children is manipulating the guards meant to supervise her. This isn’t romance. This is Smith using the only power she has left. She gets transferred to Leath Correctional Institution in Greenwood County. She’s been there for more than 24 years now. But the scandals don’t stop….Full Story Comment 👇👇

Unlike death row inmates who know their fate, Smith lives with false hope. She can dream about freedom, imagine life outside those walls, tell herself, “Maybe next time they’ll show mercy.” But that hope is almost certainly a lie. It’s a cruel trick her mind plays to make the unbearable somewhat bearable. She’s 53 years old now.

She was 23 when convicted. [music] She spent more of her adult life in prison than in freedom. If she lives to 73 or 83, she’ll have spent 50 or 60 years behind bars for a crime she committed when she was barely an adult. Every milestone other people experience, careers, marriage, families, travel, just living, will be completely absent from her existence.

Her transformation after the parole denial proves how psychologically damaged this sentence has made her. For years, she kept up a facade because parole seemed possible. When that hope was crushed, the broken, angry, bitter reality emerged. And she has decades more of this ahead of her. I want to be straight with you.

If you’ve watched this far, you’re not a casual viewer. You’re someone who wants to understand the real story, not just the headlines. We don’t cover these cases for clicks. We cover them because they matter. If that aligns with you, don’t sit on the sidelines. Be part of it. The jurors who spared her from execution thought they were being merciful.

They thought life in prison meant time to reflect, to feel remorse, to suffer appropriately. What they actually gave her was something far more devastating. 30 years and counting of waking up every day as the woman who drowned her babies. 30 years of other inmates and guards looking at her with disgust. 30 years of disciplinary infractions, drug use, self harm, and desperate attempts to feel anything other than crushing guilt.

A lot of people believe life imprisonment is more humane than execution. They say death is too easy. Criminals should suffer for their crimes. [music] Taking the quick way out isn’t real justice. But after seeing what 30 years has done to Susan Smith, the question gets more complicated. A death penalty inmate knows their fate.

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