Elizabeth Haysom

Birthday April 15, 1964

Birth Sign Aries

Birthplace Salisbury, Southern Rhodesia (now Harare, Zimbabwe)

Age 59 years old

Nationality Canada

#18025 Most Popular

1964

Elizabeth Roxanne Haysom (born April 15, 1964 in Salisbury, Southern Rhodesia ) is a Canadian citizen who, along with her then boyfriend, Jens Söring, was convicted of orchestrating the 1985 double murder of her parents Derek and Nancy Haysom in Bedford County, Virginia.

Born in April 1964, Elizabeth attended boarding schools in Switzerland and England (Wycombe Abbey), then enrolled at the University of Virginia.

It was there she met 18-year-old Jens Söring who quickly became her boyfriend.

1985

On the morning of April 3, 1985, when Söring was 18 and Haysom was 20, the bodies of Derek and Nancy Haysom were discovered.

They had been slashed and stabbed to death in their home in the Boonsboro neighborhood of Lynchburg, Virginia.

Both Derek and Nancy were almost decapitated.

The couple's bodies were not discovered until days after the murder.

During the timeline of the murder, Haysom had rented a car.

She and Jens drove to Washington, D.C., to establish an alibi.

Haysom and Söring were not initially suspects in the Haysoms' murders, and Haysom organized all the details for her parents' funerals.

Within a few weeks, authorities had checked the records for the rental car the pair used and found that the total mileage during the rental far exceeded the single round trip to Washington, D.C. that they claimed to have taken.

The Virginia police turned their focus to the couple, who then fled the country.

1986

Six months after the murder, having been to a number of countries, Söring and Haysom went to England, where they were arrested on April 30, 1986.

1987

Haysom served 32 years of a 90-year prison sentence at the Fluvanna Correctional Center for Women in Troy, Virginia after pleading guilty to two counts of accessory to murder before the fact in 1987.

In 1987, Haysom, then 23 years old, pleaded guilty to two counts of accessory to murder before the fact and was sentenced to 90 years in prison – one 45-year sentence for each murder, to be served consecutively.

1990

Söring pleaded not guilty, but was found guilty at his 1990 trial and sentenced to two consecutive life terms for first-degree murder.

1995

Haysom, incarcerated in the Fluvanna Correctional Center for Women in Troy, Virginia, first became eligible for parole in 1995, and submitted a parole request every three years thereafter.

Haysom's sentence was subject to mandatory parole; she would have been released automatically in 2032, 45 years after her conviction.

2016

Killing for Love ( The Promise), a feature documentary film, premiered at the Munich International Film Festival and was released theatrically in October 2016.

Till Murder Do Us Part: Soering vs. Haysom, a four-episode true crime documentary limited series, was released on Netflix on November 1, 2023.

2019

She and Söring were paroled on November 25, 2019, more than 30 years after they were first convicted of the deaths of Haysom’s parents in 1985.

Elizabeth Haysom's parents were Nancy Astor Benedict Haysom, an artist, and Derek William Reginald Haysom, a steel executive who served as president of two Nova Scotia crown corporations (Sydney Steel and Metropolitan Area Growth Investments).

Derek and Nancy had a combined total of five children from previous marriages.

On November 25, 2019, Virginia Governor Ralph Northam announced that both Haysom and Söring would be released, but not pardoned, and sent back to their respective home countries.

Jens Söring, Haysom's accomplice, was also granted parole in November 2019 and was deported to his home country of Germany after his release.

The Haysoms' murders have been profiled by 20/20, The Investigators, Geraldo Rivera, The New Detectives, City Confidential, Wicked Attraction, Deadly Women, On the Case with Paula Zahn, Snapped: Killer Couples, and Southern Fried Homicide.

2020

After more than 30 years in prison, Haysom was released from prison to the custody of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and then deported to her home country of Canada in January 2020.

U.S. Representative Ben Cline issued a statement condemning her release as a cost-cutting attempt by the state of Virginia, and not based on merit.

Adrianne L. Bennett, then chair of the Virginia Parole Board, asserted that the decision to grant Haysom parole was also justified by her young age at the time the crime was committed.