• #341
Lucy has made life hell for her sisters and continues to do so. And she still has absolutely nothing to support her wild stories.
How do you know this? In what way has she created hell for them? Do you mean because she has made the allegations public?

I'm asking seriously. I'm always the first to admit if I've been wrong, when I am. Actually I consider that to be one of my better character traits! But I need facts. Or at least specific examples of why you have come to that conclusion.

I look at her original page and see just the opposite. It wasn't helpful to her case that she allowed at least one of the sisters to devolve publicly; IMO that should have remained private. And she should not have engaged. But when someone has been hurt and bullied for so long, especially by a close sibling, especially with huge issues such as these, it's often hard to react in an adult manner. In this case it was a pretty steep learning curve but it seems to me that she has learned her lessons well!

She DOES have corroborating witnesses to the surrounding circumstances of the allegations, almost every time. It's just the actual murders and disposals that remain unwitnessed.

Would you expect otherwise?
 
  • #342
By any chance, cause there are a lot of pages, has anything come back in soil testing for lime? That speeds up the decomposition of the human body and if he waited till it was all bones, he could have dug up the bones to prevent them from being found if anyone confessed to these murders. Some food for thought on how this happened.
 
  • #343
In new documentary series My Killer Father: The Green Hollow Murders, Lucy Studey, one of Donald Studey’s daughters, claims she knows where the bodies are buried. Like, literally — they’re in that stone water well right over there, she says. Lucy says she was there when Don dumped bodies and covered them in lye to expedite the decomposition.

Another of Don’s daughters says he was a good guy and this is all a “big, fat” lie (the kind that doesn’t eat away human flesh and bone). Don is dead now himself — as of 2013, actually — and the only bones recovered from his alleged mass-burial site thus far have been from animals. So who is the crazy one? No, seriously, we’re asking because the answer remains a mystery.

Perhaps not for long. My Killer Father: The Green Hollow Murders, a three-part series that premieres in full on Paramount+ on Tuesday, April 28.

At best, Don Studey was suspiciously surrounded by death. Three of his five wives apparently killed themselves, officially, a 60 percent suicide rate. In the 1970s, when the murders allegedly began, the suicide rate in Iowa was like 12 in every 100,000 people, or about 0.00012 percent. So, statistically, being married to Don was, at best, a severe mental-crisis hazard.

 
  • #344
Could someone please watch the documentary and then come back here and let us know your impressions?

I find it suspicious that several of his wives died. Additionally I remember when reading this thread originally not being sure whether the search of the property in this case was truly sufficient. IMO.

Maybe someone who watches can comment with their opinions?
 

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