Weekend Herald

Daughter out of prison after killing

Woman talked boyfriend into murdering her abusive mother

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Gypsy Rose Blanchard, a Missouri woman who persuaded an online boyfriend to kill her mother after she had forced her to pretend for years that she was suffering from leukaemia, muscular dystrophy and other serious illnesses, has been released from prison on parole.

Blanchard was released overnight from the Chillicoth­e Correction­al Centre, said Karen Pojmann, spokeswoma­n for the Missouri Department of Correction­s.

Blanchard was granted parole after serving 85 per cent of her original sentence.

Blanchard’s case sparked tabloid interest after reports emerged her mother, Clauddine “Dee Dee” Blanchard, who was slain in 2015, had essentiall­y kept her daughter prisoner, forcing her to use a wheelchair and feeding tube.

It turned out Gypsy Blanchard, now 32, was perfectly healthy, not developmen­tally delayed as her friends had always believed.

Her mother had Munchausen syndrome by proxy, a psychologi­cal disorder in which parents or caregivers seek sympathy through the exaggerate­d or made-up illnesses of their children, said her trial lawyer, Michael Stanfield.

“People were constantly telling Dee Dee what a wonderful mother she was, and Dee Dee was getting all of this attention,” he said.

Through the ruse, the mother and daughter met country star Miranda Lambert and received charitable donations, a trip to Disney World and even a home near Springfiel­d from Habitat for Humanity.

Stanfield said Gypsy Blanchard’s mother was able to dupe doctors by telling them her daughter’s medical records had been lost in Hurricane Katrina.

If they asked too many questions, she just found a new physician, shaving the girl’s head to back up her story.

Gypsy Blanchard, who had little schooling or contact with anyone but her mother, also was misled, especially when she was younger, Stanfield said.

“The doctors seem to confirm everything that you’re being told.

“The outside world is telling you that your mother is a wonderful, loving, caring person.

Prison is generally not a place where you become happy and healthy.

Mike Stanfield , lawyer

“What other idea can you have?” Stanfield said.

But then the abuse became more physical, Stanfield said. Gypsy testified her mother beat her and chained her to a bed.

Slowly, Gypsy also was beginning to understand that she wasn’t as sick as her mother said.

“I wanted to be free of her hold on me,” Gypsy testified at the 2018 trial of her former boyfriend, Nicholas Godejohn of Big Bend, Wisconsin, who is serving a life sentence in the killing. She went on to add: “I talked him into it.”

When she took the stand at his trial, prosecutor­s already had cut her a deal because of the abuse she had endured. In exchange for pleading guilty in 2016 to second-degree murder, she was sentenced to 10 years in prison. The first-degree murder charge she initially faced would have meant a life term.

“Nick was so in love with her and so obsessed with her that he would do anything,” Godejohn’s trial lawyer Dewayne Perry argued in court, saying his client has autism and was manipulate­d.

Prosecutor­s, however, argued he was motivated by sex and a desire to be with Gypsy Blanchard, whom he met on a Christian dating website.

According to the probable-cause statement, Gypsy Blanchard supplied the knife and hid in a bathroom while Godejohn repeatedly stabbed her mother. The two ultimately made their way by bus to Wisconsin, where they were arrested.

“Things are not always as they appear,” said Greene County Sheriff Jim Arnott as the revelation­s began to emerge.

Even Gypsy’s age was a lie. Her mother had said she was younger to make it easier to perpetuate the fraud, and got away with it because Gypsy was so small: just 150cm tall.

Law enforcemen­t was initially so confused that the original court documents listed three different ages for her, with the youngest being 19. She was 23.

Greene County Prosecutor Dan Patterson described it as “one of the most extraordin­ary and unusual cases we have seen”.

Stanfield recalled the first time he met Gypsy, she got out of breath walking the 69 metres from the elevator to the room where he talked to her. He described her as malnourish­ed and physically frail.

“I can honestly say I’ve rarely had a client who looks exceedingl­y better after doing a fairly long prison sentence,” Stanfield said.

“Prison is generally not a place where you become happy and healthy. And I say that because, to me, that’s kind of the evidence to the rest of the world as to just how bad what Gypsy was going through really was.”

Gypsy Blanchard later said it wasn’t until her arrest that she realised how healthy she was.

But it took time. Eventually, she got married while behind bars to Ryan Scott Anderson, now 37, of Saint Charles, Louisiana.

The bizarre case was the subject of the 2017 HBO documentar­y Mommy Dead and Dearest, the 2019 Hulu miniseries The Act and an upcoming Lifetime docuseries The Prison Confession of Gypsy Rose Blanchard. Daytime television psychologi­st “Dr Phil” McGraw interviewe­d her from prison.

The novel Darling Rose Gold draws upon the story for its premise and Blanchard’s own account, Released: Conversati­ons on the Eve of Freedom is set for publicatio­n next month.

Amid the media storm, Pojmann, of the Correction­s Department, said no in-person coverage of her release was allowed “in the interest of protecting safety, security and privacy”.

 ?? ?? Gypsy Rose Blanchard, who convinced her boyfriend to kill her mother, has been released from prison after serving 85 per cent of her 10-year sentence.
Gypsy Rose Blanchard, who convinced her boyfriend to kill her mother, has been released from prison after serving 85 per cent of her 10-year sentence.
 ?? Photos / AP ?? Gypsy Rose Blanchard speaks with her attorneys Clate Baker (left) and Mike Stanfield before a court appearance in 2016.
Photos / AP Gypsy Rose Blanchard speaks with her attorneys Clate Baker (left) and Mike Stanfield before a court appearance in 2016.

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