Here is the message I take from The Greed Grab. Molly had no job, brought no money into the marriage. But this is a woman who has a fixation with ...what she perceives to be rightfull hers...her "possessions." Even the bed in the room where she killed her husband. "THis is all mine!" Most wives would not even want the bed in a divorce!
Imagine what someone with this strange personality disorder would have been feeling if she faced Jason being able to move back to Ireland without her?
I think this ties in with her weird FB posts about the children happily getting ready for school,having ice cream...as if their Father was expendable. Well he was, to Molly...this way she had the kids, the money and the stuff. Now would everyone please leave her alone so she could live happily ever after.
Your post brings me back to what I was thinking last night. There must be an really painful moment for someone who commits a crime a heinous crime such as this for potentially 2 motives children, money, one doesn't come without the other in this case. Imo, when you are convinced you did something and you were right for your own reasons and no consequences coming because "how dare he" "everyone will agree" home run,
And then the cards start to fall and the opposite happens, you lose not only your provider, his children your home but your income and the status that brings. That's why imo if the jury don't convict whenever that penny dropped that's the moment she started her sentence. No qualifications, possibly branded, no children and if true living with disturbing mental health issues, it's a sentence in itself. Not including the scene of the man who so obviously loved her at one time dying on the floor with horrific injuries. And imo you feel love when it's around, Imo she knew it was there but didn't know how to deal with it.
I can't find sympathy, I can't find any reasoning but I'm satisfied that win or lose this case someone so fond of the material things would feel as bereft and in as much pain as if someone else lost someone they loved.
For what it's worth imo this moment happened when reality entered the room that night, when paramedics come LE, the bubble her parents may have kept her in most of her life, excusing her protecting her, burst, she would be judged and there would be consequences, something I think she never had to face in her life.
Imo her parents never answered her back, can you imagine a father pulling a future son in law aside saying this is how we deal with a crisis, just dont question it , go along with it. It will pass? Maybe JC wasn't raised like this, maybe he listened never having had to deal with something like this , there may never have been a consequence for her behaviour, maybe this night there was and it was alien to her, someone saying no, stop, I've had enough, I'm leaving, it may have enraged someone who never heard the word NO before.
That imo goes back to her parents and how they may have fostered this unrealistic environment where do what you like and no one will question it because how dare they I personally know a lot of parents like this I'm a parent myself and its in the forefront of my mind how I teach my children to have empathy for others and there is consequences in many forms when you don't in life. Did you ever hear the saying I've created a monster? Did TM?
Jason says no - Jason's dead
LE charge - it's a conspiracy
Tracey testifies - she's a liar
Judge says no - it's a conspiracy
Media writes a negative story - it's a lie
Minor retracts a positive statement and tells the truth - he's an accuser, he is lying.
Pattern anyone?
All just my thoughts not facts In anyway.
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