Mary Lynn Witherspoon
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Mary Lynn | |
---|---|
Born | Mary Lynn Witherspoon August 14, 1950 |
Died | November 14, 2003 | (aged 53)
Nationality | American |
Occupation | School Teacher |
Years active | 1975-2003 |
Mary Lynn Witherspoon (1950–2003) was a school teacher in Charleston, South Carolina, and died in 2003. Her ex-boyfriend's son, Edmonds Tennent Brown IV, had stalked and obsessed over her for 22 years. He broke into her home after being released from prison then raped and killed her.
Early life[]
Mary Lynn was born in 1950, and had a sister, Jackie Olsen, who was a few years older than her. She was a French teacher at Charlestowne Academy.
In 1981, Mary Lynn met Edmonds Tennent Brown III, who was an attorney. After a while, his son, Edmonds Tennent Brown IV, began growing obsessive and jealous of Mary Lynn.
Death[]
On November 14, 2003 in the early morning, after 23 years of stalking Mary Lynn, Edmonds broke into Mary Lynn's home as she was getting ready to leave for work. He pushed open the door, knocked her on the floor and dragged her upstairs to her bedroom where he raped her, strangled her, and left her in her bathtub where the police later found her.
Arrest of Edmonds Tennent Brown IV[]
Later the same day police waited outside the home of Mary Lynn for Edmonds to arrive and arrested him.[citation needed] In 2004 Brown plead guilty to Mary Lynn's murder and was sentenced to life in prison without parole.[citation needed]
Legacy[1][2][]
In 2005, South Carolina introduced a law that was named after her, calling it "Mary Lynn's Law."[3] and the V.I.N.E was said to have failed her, and companies such as those immediately updated their systems, including immediate notification to the victims when prisoners are released.
On April 14, 2013, The Crime and Investigation Network's Look Who's Stalking program televised an episode that documented Mary Lynn's story.[4]
On April 12, 2016, Discovery ID's Obsession: Dark Desires aired an episode based on the tragic story of Mary Lynn. Mary Lynn was "interviewed" but later revealed to be an actress as the interviewee. It ended with a short monologue (speech) given by her sister of the days, weeks, months, after Mary Lynn's death.[5]
References[]
- ^ "Fatal attraction". msnbc.com. 2007-03-15. Retrieved 2018-04-21.
- ^ "South Carolina inmate convicted in killing seeks sex change". Retrieved 2018-04-21.
- ^ South Carolina "Mary Lynn's Law, 2005
- ^ "Episode #1.3"
- ^ Obsession: Dark Desires on iMDB, "There's Something About Mary Lynn"
- 1950 births
- 2003 deaths
- American murder victims
- Female murder victims
- People murdered in South Carolina
- 2003 murders in the United States
- Incidents of violence against women