None of the men who wrote and spoke to sex-obsessed killer Susan Smith will testify on her behalf as she is released on parole for the murders of her two sons, it has been revealed.
Smith, 53, drowned her sons Michael, three, and Alex, 14 months, in a South Carolina lake in 1994.
She was sentenced to life in prison with the possibility of parole after thirty years. She will argue her case for release Wednesday before the South Carolina Department of Probation, Parole, and Pardon Services.
To be released, Smith needs a majority of at least two-thirds of the panel to approve her application. According to her, she must also comply with conditions prior to her release, including employment, residence, programming and detainees Hof TV.
But Smith has been unable to find a single character witness to testify as a character witness – even as she flirts with four men from her prison cell.
“They all wanted one thing from her,” a relative of Smith told the New York Post. “But they didn’t want to put their full names on the record to say she needed to get out of jail.”
The Post then contacted four men who regularly called and messaged her. Two did not answer reporters’ calls, one hung up and another reportedly groaned when the reporter mentioned Smith’s name.
“I’m not going to stick my neck out for her and then let her run away with another man,” the unknown suitor, in his early sixties, told the newspaper. “I’m not a loser.”
Convicted child murderer Susan Smith (pictured), 53, will make her plea for parole Wednesday in South Carolina
She drowned her sons Michael, three, and Alex, 14 months, in a South Carolina lake in 1994
He said he learned that if he testified on Smith’s behalf, his name and address would become public.
“I don’t need that s*** in my life,” he said.
Meanwhile, the Department of Probation, Parole and Pardon Services has now received more than 130 letters, with family members told the Post that the majority of them are against Smith’s release.
Smith’s ex-husband, David, and former prosecutor Tommy Pope also plan to testify against her release at the hearing.
He told it Hof TV that he has forgiven Smith but does not want her released from prison.
“You have no idea how much damage you have caused to so many people,” he said.
Pope also said Smith’s scandalous prison behavior shows she has learned nothing from her time behind bars.
‘The belief was that she would spend her time thinking about Michael and Alex. It’s clear she hasn’t thought about Michael and Alex,” Pope said Greenville News.
‘She has sex with the guards and now has men who want her on social media when she gets out of prison. She is not focused on remorse for the lives she has taken. I think she should continue to serve her sentence and then serve it.”
Smith reported her two sons missing in October 1994 and she and her husband (pictured) pleaded on television for their safe return.
Smith had reported her two sons missing in October 1994 and told officers that the boys had been taken by an unknown black man during a carjacking.
She cried on national television as her husband begged for their safe return as police began a manhunt for the alleged kidnapper in predominantly African-American neighborhoods.
But soon her story was picked apart and Smith eventually confessed to strapping the two boys into their car seats and watching the car drive into John D. Long Lake in Union County.
It was alleged that she killed the boys after the man she was having an affair with, Thomas Findlay, broke up with him because he didn’t want children.
Smith’s story was quickly picked apart and she eventually confessed to strapping the two boys into their car seats and watching the car drive into John D. Long Lake in Union County.
Smith was eventually sentenced to life in prison, where she allegedly began relationships with guards whom she would later accuse of sexual assault.
She also had a series by violations during her captivityincluding drug use and self-harm.
Then, just weeks before she was eligible for parole, Smith was sentenced to a disciplinary charge for communicating with a filmmaker from behind bars.
She allegedly discussed her crimes and provided contact information to friends, family and victims, including her former husband. The filmmaker also deposited money into Smith’s account, police said.
If her request for parole is denied, she can reapply in two years. Data shows the board grants about 8 percent of parole requests for violent offenders.