Melanie McGuire The Suitcase Killer

Melanie McGuire is a killer from New Jersey who would murder her husband and put his body into a suitcase

According to court documents Melanie McGuire and her husband William McGuire were having marriage problems. Melanie who worked as a nurse in a fertility clinic would drug her husband who she would then shoot dead

After William McGuire was dead Melanie McGuire would chop up her husbands body and placed the parts in a suitcase which she would then throw into the Chesapeake Bay

Melanie McGuire would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to life in prison.

Since being in prison Melanie McGuire has reverted back to her maiden name and is now known as Melanie Slate

Melanie McGuire Now

melanie slate now melanie mcguire today
SBI Number:000319833C
Sentenced as:Slate, Melanie 
Race:White
Ethnicity:Unknown
Sex:Female
Hair Color:Brown
Eye Color:Brown
Height:5’3″
Weight:130 lbs.
Birth Date:October 8, 1972
Admission Date:July 19, 2007
Current Facility:EMCF
Current Max Release Date:N/A
Current Parole Eligibility Date:May 20, 2073

Melanie McGuire Videos

Melanie McGuire Case

In May of 2004, a dark green Kenneth Cole suitcase was found bobbing in the still-frigid waters of the Chesapeake Bay. It contained a pair of legs that had been severed at the knee.

Days later, a second dark green suitcase washed up on the shores of nearby Fisherman Island. It contained the head and torso of a man later identified as Bill McGuire, a 39, year-old husband and father of two from New Jersey.

Five days after that, a boater near the Chesapeake Bay Bridge Tunnel found a third suitcase matching the others containing more of the New Jersey Institute of Technology employee’s body parts.

He had been shot multiple times, the medical examiner determined.

In June 2005, his wife and the mother of his two sons, Melanie McGuire, 31, was arrested and charged with first-degree murder.

On July 19, 2007, the former nurse was convicted of killing him, cutting his body up, stuffing it into three suitcases the couple owned and throwing them into the Chesapeake Bay.

Melanie McGuire admitted to having an affair with a doctor at the fertility clinic where she worked. She said she was unhappy in her marriage.

Prosecutors argued that she killed her husband so she could be with her paramour.

She steadfastly maintained her innocence then, something she still does today.

In a new episode of ABC News’ 20/20 on Friday, starting at 9 p.m. ET, McGuire speaks exclusively to co-anchor, Amy Robach, as she fights to overturn her conviction.

“Do you still insist that you’re innocent?” Robach asks.

“Absolutely,” replies McGuire in her first on-camera interview since she was sentenced to life in prison on July 19, 2007.

During the interview, McGuire, now 47, who was nicknamed the “suitcase killer,” says circumstantial evidence is what landed her in prison for life.

In the exclusive clip above, Robach asks McGuire about the gun she bought two days before her husband’s shooting death.

“You say your husband asked you to purchase the gun, but you purchased a gun just two days before your husband went missing,” says Robach.

“Of course, it’s a coincidence,” says McGuire. “However, he was on me for a while about that, about trying to get that. And if something was happening, if he was in some sort of trouble, that may very well have been the reason why he was so intent on getting it.”

McGuire has said that her husband was a gambling addict and was killed over money he owed.

When Robach asks her why she’s bringing attention to the case again, when it has caused her husband’s family and her sons so much pain, McGuire replies, “I’m doing this because there’s a murderer walking around.

“The killer is out there and it’s not me.”

She adds, “After all these years, I still feel hurt. I still feel bothered. Like, how could somebody think that I did that?”

During the interview, she tells Robach she’s hesitant to hold out hope that she could one day be released from prison.

McGuire talks about her troubled relationship with her husband, which was riddled with infidelity and constant arguments, and her affair, which prosecutors claim was the catalyst for her to kill her husband.

She says she regrets not testifying during the trial.

She also tells Robach about her hope that the new podcast Direct Appeal, hosted by criminology professors Dr. Amy Schlosberg and Dr. Meghan Sacks, could help exonerate her.

The episode also features secretly recorded conversations during a police sting between McGuire and the doctor with whom she was having an affair.

https://people.com/crime/suitcase-killer-melanie-mcguire-says-she-is-innocent/

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