Smith made her case for freedom to the parole board by video link from prison. When she began to speak, she started to say she was “very sorry,” then broke down in tears and bowed her head.
“I know what I did was horrible,” Smith said, pausing and then continuing with a wavering voice. “And I would give anything so I could change it.”
The parole board asked Smith about the law enforcement resources used to try to locate her children. In reply, she told the board she was “just scared” and “didn’t know how to tell them.”
“I’m sorry, I don’t know, I know that’s not enough; I know it’s not,” Smith said.
In her final statements, Smith appealed to her Christian faith, saying, “God is a big part of my life.” God had forgiven her for her crimes, Smith said, and she asked the same of the board.
“I ask that you show that kind of mercy, as well,” she said.
After Smith spoke, her ex-husband and father of the children, as well as the prosecutor at her murder trial, were expected to argue that she remain incarcerated.
Smith killed 3-year-old Michael and 14-month-old Alex because a man she was having an affair with suggested the boys were the reason they didn’t have a future together, prosecutors said.
In an interview on NBC’s “Today” show that aired Wednesday, ex-husband David Smith said that 30 years is not enough and that he doesn’t think she will ever be rehabilitated.
“God gives us free will and that was her choice that night — nobody else’s choice. Nobody made it for her,” David Smith said. “She made the choice to murder Michael and Alex.”
A decision to grant parole requires a two-thirds vote of board members present at the hearing, according to the state Department of Probation, Parole and Pardon Services. Parole in South Carolina is granted only about 8% of the time and is less likely with an inmate’s first appearance before the board, in notorious cases or when prosecutors and the families of victims are opposed.
Before Smith testified, she stoically listened to a statement from her attorney, Tommy Thomas. He called her situation one about “the dangers of untreated mental health.” She had several mental health issues as a teenager that went unchecked to produce “horrendous results,” Thomas said.
Thomas discussed the suicide of Smith’s father when she was a child, as well as her own suicide attempts, as contributing factors in the death of her two sons. He also referenced that she had no criminal history before her conviction, making her “low risk” to the public.
“I think she is truly remorseful for what happened, and I think she would do anything in the world to bring these children back,” Thomas said.
Smith has arrangements to work with a licensed mental health professional if released on parole, Thomas said. She also had plans to live with her brother.
Smith made international headlines in October 1994 when she said she was carjacked late at night near the city of Union and that a Black man drove away with her sons inside. The claims by Smith, who is white, played into a centuries-old racist trope of Black men being a danger to white women and stoked concerns about crime that were prevalent in 1990s America and remain so today.
For nine days, Smith made numerous and sometimes tearful pleas asking that Michael and Alex be returned safely. The whole time, the boys were in Smith's car 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. Other bits and pieces of the story did not make sense.
Smith ultimately 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 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.
Smith's lawyers said she was remorseful, was suffering a mental breakdown and intended to die alongside her children but left the car at the last moment.
The 1995 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. Her lawyers worked to save her life, noting that Smith's father had killed himself and that her stepfather was having sex with her along with the owner of the business where she worked.
From prison, Smith can make phone calls and answer text messages, many coming from journalists and interested men. Those messages and phone calls were released under South Carolina’s open records act, something Smith didn’t initially realize could happen. She said the invasion of her privacy upset her along with the public revelation that she was juggling conversations about the future with several men.
Some men know why she is famous. Others are more coy. One told her he was going to use the dates of her birthday and those of her dead sons when he played the Powerball lottery. Others chatted about their lives and sports. Many promised her a home on the outside and a happy life.
Smith also had sex with guards. And she violated prison policies by giving out contact information for friends, family members and her ex-husband to a documentary producer who discussed paying her for her help, according to former prosecutor Tommy Pope.
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