Warning: The following contains disturbing descriptions of violence. Reader discretion is advised.
Over the last 50 years, men have committed murder 10 times more often than women. Men are far more likely to be serial killers, mass shooters and family annihilators. Shedding blood, it would seem, is a gendered pursuit.
But just because a woman's fingerprints aren't at the crime scene doesn't mean her fingerprints weren't on the plan. Over the years, there have been numerous women who have manipulated their male partners to kill at their bidding. A&E looks at some cases where men have killed for the women they loved.
Nicholas Godejohn
Gypsy Rose Blanchard didn't look like a killer. She looked like a sickly little girl.
Gypsy Rose suffered a litany of ailments, starting at birth: epilepsy, sleep apnea, chromosomal disorders, leukemia, muscular dystrophy. She underwent extreme intervention measures in doctors' attempts to make her well: At various points she was on a feeding tube, confined to a wheelchair and prescribed medication that crumbled her teeth inside her mouth. And then, when she was 23 years old, a murder turned the whole story upside down.
Her mother, Clauddine "Dee Dee" Blanchard, was stabbed to death inside of their home. Gypsy Rose was nowhere to be found, but a Facebook post on Dee Dee and Gypsy's shared page said, "THAT B---- IS DEAD."
Gypsy Rose had met a young man, Nicholas Godejohn, on a Christian dating website. She confided to him that her illnesses were all fake—either feigned or medically induced by her mother's poisoning, a psychologically sadistic pattern of "caregiving" known as Munchausen syndrome by proxy (MSbP).
Mary Sheridan, a professor emerita of social work at Hawaii Pacific University and an expert in MSbP, says that Gypsy Rose is already a unique case because the young woman was aware of the abuse she was suffering.
"The majority…of cases occur in children who are way too young to understand what's going on," Sheridan says. Those who do figure out that they've been sickened by their parent often feel "a great deal of anger or hurt."