Murder of Michele MacNeill

Birthday February 1, 1956

Birth Sign Aquarius

DEATH DATE 2007-4-11, (51 years old)

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1956

Michele met Martin MacNeill (February 1, 1956 - April 9, 2017) at an activity for LDS young adults.

1957

Michele Marie MacNeill, née Somers, (January 15, 1957 – April 11, 2007) was an American homemaker and model.

Michele was married for nearly 30 years to the physician Martin MacNeill and was the mother of eight children.

Michele Marie Somers was born in 1957, the daughter of Milton and Helen Somers.

Michele grew up in Concord, California, where she played violin, acted, and was a cheerleader and homecoming queen.

She was a straight-A student, and an active member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church).

1973

Martin had joined the military in 1973 at the age of 17.

1975

He was placed on disability leave for mental health reasons in 1975, and received veterans' benefits for years.

1976

Michele was an exchange student in Switzerland, a model, and Miss Concord in 1976.

1978

Michele eloped with Martin, and the couple was married on February 21, 1978.

Four months after the marriage, Martin served a six-month jail sentence for forgery, theft, and fraud.

1994

In 1994, Martin was accused of having sexual relations with a patient at the BYU Health Center and threatened suicide.

2000

According to police reports, Martin MacNeill threatened to kill himself and Michele with a butcher knife in August 2000, after Michele caught him looking at pornography.

2005

In 2005, Martin threatened to commit suicide once more when Michele caught him looking at pornography again.

Martin had at least two affairs in the 2005–2007 time frame: one with Anna Osborne Walthall, and another with Gypsy Willis.

2007

She died in Pleasant Grove, Utah, on April 11, 2007, while at home recovering from cosmetic surgery performed eight days earlier.

At her husband's request, the operating surgeon prescribed four medicines for her recovery; two of the drugs, Diazepam and Oxycodone, would not normally be prescribed to his patients.

Michele had been concerned during her recovery that Martin was having an affair and that she had been given medication by him inappropriately.

Her daughter Alexis, a medical student at that time, then took responsibility for giving Michele her medicine.

Michele recovered sufficiently for Alexis to return to school but Michele died the following day.

Initially, police and autopsy reports concluded that Michele died of cardiovascular disease, but after being pressed to review the toxicology report, the state's chief medical examiner found that the combination of medicines in her body could have contributed to cardiac death.

In 2007, the MacNeill family lived in a gated community in Pleasant Grove, Utah, and were active in their LDS congregation.

Michele was the mother of eight children: Rachel, Vanessa, Alexis, Damian, Giselle, Elle, Sabrina, and Ada—the latter four of whom were supposedly adopted from Ukraine.

However, although Ada MacNeill was adopted by Michele and Martin, Ada is actually the daughter of Vanessa MacNeill, and Michele and Martin's biological granddaughter.

Martin MacNeill was the medical director of Utah State Development Center in American Fork, Utah.

Martin had served as an LDS bishop (lay leader of a congregation).

He was formerly a physician practicing in Pleasant Grove, had served in the military, and had received a law degree, though he did not practice law.

Investigators later determined that Martin had falsified university transcripts to enter the California medical school where he earned his degree in osteopathic medicine, and also falsified his later application to J. Reuben Clark Law School.

He was reputedly dissatisfied with his marriage, made statements about wanting a divorce, and had extramarital affairs—including a relationship with Gypsy Willis—before and after the death of his wife.

Martin and Michele had been married for 29 years, 2 months, and 10 days at the time of her death.

In February 2007, Michele confronted Martin repeatedly about her suspicions that he was having an affair.

2010

On January 16, 2010, MacNeill's 24-year-old son, Damian Alexander MacNeill, committed suicide.

He was a law student at New York Law School at the time.

Prior to Damian's death, the Utah County Attorney's Office sent a letter to New York Law School stating that "investigators in the Utah County Attorney's Office deemed him [Damian] to be a very dangerous individual who possessed homicidal impulses and discussed the 'joys of killing,'" and that "Damian was present in Pleasant Grove on the date of his mother's death."

According to Rachel MacNeill, Michele MacNeill

heard Martin threaten to commit suicide many times.

2013

During the trial, which began on October 17, 2013, Chief Prosecutor Chad Grunander stated, "It was an almost perfect murder, [MacNeill] pumped her full of drugs that he knew would be difficult to detect once she was dead."

Martin MacNeill was convicted of Michele's murder and obstruction of justice in a widely publicized case involving marital infidelity, sexual abuse, and outward religious devotion.

Martin MacNeill was sentenced to 17 years to life.

2017

He committed suicide in prison in April 2017.