Released After 20 Years in Prison – Elderly Woman Returns to Her House. Who She Finds Inside Shocks Her
A Truth for the Record
Diane insisted she was a survivor and refused to apologize.
“Get it on record. All of it. I want the world to know.” Margaret turned to Jessica.
Jessica had been recording the entire conversation on her phone.
“Diane Marie Ellis, also known as Diana Wilson, Diana Mitchell, Diana Wells, and Diana Hartley—this conversation has been recorded and will be submitted as evidence.” Jessica said formally.
“You have just confessed to first-degree murder, fraud, perjury, and conspiracy. Whatever time you have left, I suggest you spend it with a good lawyer.” Jessica added.
Diane’s face went pale.
“You can’t prove any of this. It’s my word against yours.” Diane stammered.
“It’s your words, Diane. Recorded on tape. Admissible in court.” Jessica smiled grimly.
Margaret walked toward the door.
“Goodbye, Diane. I hope whatever time you have left is worth what you paid for it.” Margaret said without turning around.
On the drive away, Jessica asked if Margaret was okay.
“No. But I will be.” Margaret said.
Jessica tried to reassure Margaret that Diane’s actions weren’t her fault.
“I know. But she’s right about one thing—I never thought about it. I never considered how it might have felt for her.” Margaret said.
“That doesn’t justify what she did.” Jessica said.
“No, it doesn’t. But it explains it. And I think—I think I needed that. I needed to understand why.” Margaret replied.
“I spent 20 years in prison because I loved my sister more than I loved myself. I’m not going to spend the rest of my life hating her. She’s already taken enough from me.” Margaret said.
“You’re a better person than I am. I’d want her to suffer.” Jessica said.
“She is suffering. She’s dying alone in a beautiful house full of things that can’t love her back. That’s punishment enough.” Margaret replied.
“Besides, I have something she’ll never have.” Margaret added.
“What’s that?” Jessica asked.
“People who care about me. Real people. Not marks, not victims, not sources of money or status.” Margaret smiled.
Jessica promised to get the conviction overturned and recover Margaret’s money.,
“I don’t care about the money.” Margaret said.
“I know. But you deserve it anyway.” Jessica replied.
Finding Freedom and a New Family
Back in Tennessee, Jessica worked to expedite the exoneration review.,
“How long will it take? The exoneration?” Margaret asked.
“Six months, maybe less.” Jessica smiled.
David Chen met them at the airport when they landed in Nashville.
“How did it go?” David asked anxiously.
“I got what I needed. She confessed to everything. We have it on tape.” Margaret said.
“It’s over then? It’s really over?” David asked with relief.
Sarah was waiting on the porch when they pulled into the driveway.
“You’re back! Thank God you’re back. I’ve been going crazy waiting to hear what happened.” Sarah cried.,
“I’m back, and I’m okay. Really.” Margaret said.
Inside, Margaret told them everything about the confrontation. Sarah was crying openly.
“She blamed you. She destroyed your life because she was jealous of you, and she still found a way to make it your fault.” Sarah said with anger.
“That’s who she is. That’s who she’s always been. I just didn’t see it.” Margaret said quietly.
“What happens now?” David asked.
Jessica explained the legal steps and the murder investigation. Sarah looked at her belly.
“I know this is selfish, but what happens to us?” Sarah asked.
“Nothing happens to you. You bought this house in good faith. I am not going to take that away from you.” Margaret said firmly.
“But it’s your house. Legally, morally, it’s yours.” Sarah argued.
“It was my grandmother’s house. Then it was my mother’s house. Then it was mine. And now—now it’s yours. That’s how it should be.” Margaret corrected her gently.,
“Margaret, we can’t just—” Sarah started to say.
“Yes, you can, and you will. I don’t need this house anymore. I don’t need the memories it holds. What I need is to start over.” Margaret’s voice was kind.
“But where will you go?” Sarah asked.
“I don’t know yet. But that’s okay. For the first time in 20 years, I get to choose.” Margaret smiled.
The story soon broke in the national news. Margaret agreed to an interview on the porch of her old house.,
“I’m not angry anymore. Anger takes too much energy, and I’ve already given Diane 20 years of my life. I’m not giving her anymore.” Margaret told the journalist.
“Do you forgive her?” The journalist asked.
“I don’t know if forgiveness is the right word. I understand her. I understand why she did what she did, even if I can’t justify it.” Margaret finally said.,
In April, the exoneration came through. Margaret stood in the same courtroom where she had been convicted.,
The judge offered a formal apology on behalf of the state.
“Miss Ellis, your conviction is hereby vacated. You are exonerated of all charges. This court finds you fully and completely innocent.” The judge struck the gavel.
Two weeks later, Diane died alone in Scottsdale. Margaret didn’t go to the funeral; there wasn’t one.
The civil settlement awarded Margaret nearly $800,000 from Diane’s estate.,
“What are you going to do with it?” Sarah asked one evening.
“I’m going to buy a house. Something small, something simple. Somewhere I can start over.” Margaret said.
Margaret bought a small cottage in September. Sarah’s baby was born in May, a little girl named Rose.,
“You’re her grandmother now, in every way that matters.” Sarah told her.
Margaret Ellis was finally happy. On the one-year anniversary of her release, she sat on her porch and watched the sunset.
She had lost so much, but she had gained the truth and her freedom.
Margaret Ellis had survived, and in the end, that was the real victory.
