Although
authorities immediately began searching for three-year-old Michael and
one-year-old Alex, they could find no trace of them or of Smith's car. After
nine days of intense national media attention, Smith finally confessed that the
carjacking tale was false and that she had driven her Mazda into the John D.
Long Lake in order to drown her children. Both Susan and her husband, David
Smith, who had had multiple affairs during their on-and-off relationship, had
used their children as pawns in their tempestuous marriage. Apparently, Susan
was involved with another man who did not want children, and she thought that
killing her children was the only way to continue the relationship. Ironically,
Smith's murder came to light because she had covered her tracks too well. While
believing that the car and children would be discovered in the lake shortly
after the search was started, she never anticipated that the authorities might
not be able to find the car. After living under the pressure of the media's
scrutiny day after day, Smith buckled. She was convicted on two counts of
murder and sentenced to life in prison. In a book David Smith later wrote about
the death of his children, Beyond All Reason, he expressed an ambiguous
wish to see Susan on death row because he would never be able to relax and live
a full life with her in prison.
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