I Came Home to Find My Wife Collapsed on the Floor, Barely Breathing. My Sister-in-Law…
Seeking Professional Help
I replayed the footage five times. I saved it to three different drives, downloaded it to my phone, and emailed it to myself.
My wife’s sister, the woman we’d trusted, who Emily had helped through two divorces, who we’d lent money to. She’d assaulted Emily, forced her to sign something, then waited for her to get worse before calling for help.
No, she hadn’t called for help. I had.
I called Marcus Reeves at 9:47 p.m., our lawyer: estate planning, family law, 23 years practicing in Bellevue. I’d used him for our will and house purchase.
“Marcus, I need you tomorrow morning early, and I need you to bring someone from the police department, someone who handles domestic violence cases.”
“What happened?”
“Emily was assaulted. I have video. I need to make sure this is handled correctly.”
“Is Emily okay?”
“She’s in the hospital. She can’t speak, she’s traumatized.”
“Who did this?”
“Her sister.”
Silence on the line.
“I’ll make calls tonight. We’ll be there at 8:00 a.m.”
A Night of Vigil
I didn’t sleep. I sat at the hospital with Emily all night.
She drifted in and out of consciousness. Sometimes she’d squeeze my hand, sometimes she’d cry, but she couldn’t talk.
Dr. Wong came by at 2:14 a.m. during her rounds.
“Any change?”
“No. She’s scared. Can’t speak, just broken.”
Dr. Wong sat down.
“Mr. Mitchell, I’ve seen this before. This level of trauma, it’s not from a fall or an accident. This is psychological. Someone hurt her, scared her so badly that her body shut down.”
“I know who did it.”
“Do you have proof?”
I pulled out my phone and showed her 30 seconds of the Nest footage: Karen grabbing Emily, forcing her hand onto the papers. Dr. Wong’s face went hard.
“That’s assault. You need to report this.”
“I’m meeting with a detective in the morning.”
“Good. Because whatever happened to your wife, it was deliberate, and whoever did it knew exactly what they were doing.”
The Investigation Begins
Wednesday, November 15th, 8:03 a.m., Marcus arrived with Detective Lisa Warren, domestic violence unit, Seattle PD. Twenty-six years on the force, gray hair, sharp eyes—the look of someone who’d seen every variation of family cruelty.
We met in a private room at the hospital.
“Mr. Mitchell, walk me through everything.”
I did: coming home, finding Emily, Karen’s story, the deleted footage, the hidden camera.
“Do you have the footage?”
I handed her a USB drive.
“Three hours of continuous recording. Shows the assault, shows her deleting the Ring footage, shows her waiting for me to come home.”
Detective Warren plugged the drive into her laptop and watched in silence. When it finished, she looked at Marcus.
“This is felony assault, coercion, possibly elder abuse if there’s a vulnerability factor.”
“Emily just had surgery,”
I said.
“She’s vulnerable, on pain medication. Karen knew that.”
“Then this is aggravated. What were the papers she forced Emily to sign?”
“I don’t know, I haven’t seen them.”
“We need to find out. Mr. Mitchell, do you have access to Emily’s bank accounts, property records?”
“Yes, we’re joint on everything.”
“Check them now.”
I pulled out my phone and logged into our bank account. Our savings account, $47,300 as of Monday, November 13th, now showed $3,200.
Forty-four thousand one hundred dollars transferred out yesterday, November 14th, 1:47 p.m., to an account registered to Karen Diane Mitchell.
“She stole $44,000,”
I whispered. Marcus leaned over.
“Check the property records.”
I logged into King County’s property database. Our house, purchased 2018, valued at $680,000, had a new entry dated yesterday.
Notice of transfer: partial interest transfer to Karen Diane Mitchell, 25% ownership stake. She took a quarter of our house.
Breaking the Silence
Detective Warren’s expression was ice.
“She forced Emily to sign financial documents. That’s fraud, coercion, theft, and assault. Mr. Mitchell, I need to speak with your wife. Is she able to communicate?”
“She hasn’t spoken since yesterday.”
“Let’s try.”
Emily was awake when we entered her room, groggy but alert. She saw Detective Warren’s badge and started crying.
“Mrs. Mitchell,”
Detective Warren said gently.
“I’m Detective Warren. I need to ask you some questions. If you can’t speak, just nod or shake your head, okay?”
Emily nodded.
“Did your sister Karen hurt you yesterday?”
Nod.
“Did she force you to sign papers?”
Nod, tears streaming now.
“Did she threaten you?”
Nod.
“Did she tell you not to tell anyone?”
Nod.
“Can you write down what she said?”
Detective Warren handed Emily a notepad and pen. Emily’s hands shook; she wrote slowly, letters shaky.
She said if I told anyone she’d say I was crazy from the medication, that nobody would believe me, that I’d lose everything. More writing.
She said I owed her, that I’d had everything my whole life and she’d had nothing, that it was my turn to help her. She grabbed my arm, twisted it, pushed me, made me sign. Said if I didn’t sign she’d hurt me worse.
Emily’s hand fell. She was crying too hard to write more.
Detective Warren photographed the note.
“Mrs. Mitchell, this is evidence. You were coerced under duress. Those signatures aren’t valid, and your sister committed multiple felonies.”
Emily looked at me and mouthed,
“I’m sorry.”
“For what?”
She gestured to the note and wrote,
I should have fought back.
“No.”
I took her hand.
“You survived. That’s what matters.”
