Inside the “Soul-Crushing” Career of a Homicide Death Investigator, According to Barbara Butcher
Share and Follow

In her 20-plus years in the field as a death investigator, Barbara Butcher has seen more than 5,500 crime scenes. That takes a real toll.

“This is soul-crushing work,” the medicolegal expert acknowledged in an exclusive interview with Oxygen.“You’re seeing really strange things.”

Countering that by seeking out “beauty” in life was key to surviving, she explained while detailing her new true crime series The Death Investigator with Barbara Butcher, airing Saturdays at 9/8c p.m. on Oxygen. 

In the gripping new series, Butcher guides viewers through harrowing stories behind some of the most shocking and compelling murders of our times. 

It’s a turf Butcher—who dissected roadkill as a girl and understands that her surname raises eyebrows considering her career— knows well. Butcher reflected when asked how she was able to decompress and unwind after a long day as a death investigator.

Barbara Butcher’s question about her career

“When I first started in my training, I was watching the autopsy [of an] 8-year-old girl who had been raped and smothered,” said Butcher. “Absolute horror.”

So much so Butcher had to speak up at the time. “I said to the pathologist, a woman named Jackie Lee, ‘Dr. Lee, how can you stand this day after day, seeing this evil, this horror, this suffering?’”

The response she got has stayed with Butcher for decades. “She said, ‘Barbara, the only way you’re going to survive the death, despair and destruction that you’re going to see is by filling your life with beauty.’”

Lee’s words of wisdom came like a prescription. “‘Every day when you leave this place, do something creative and beautiful,’” Butcher recounted. “‘Hug a tree, paint something, listen to music, eat good food, cook love and just be part of the creative world, the natural world of beauty.’”

Butcher acknowledged that at the time she was skeptical. “Well, I thought, ‘Oh, that’s some hippie trippy stuff,’” she said. “‘I’m not going to listen to that.’”

But she eventually heeded the advice. “When I finally did, [I] got myself a little country house, a dog, a couple of cats, some trees I could hug,” she shared. “It helped so much.”

And it still does. “That was the only thing that helped me,” she said, adding that she relies on another tool. “And now, of course, a great deal of therapy for PTSD.”

The Death Investigator with Barbara Butcher premieres new episodes every Saturday at 9/8c on Oxygen.

Share and Follow
You May Also Like

Stranger Charged With Murders of 2 Arizona Teen at Remote Camping Site

A 31-year-old Arizona man was arrested this week for the apparently random…

A Body Discovered in the River Unravels a Disturbing Family Mystery

Five days after a body was pulled from New York City’s East…

Police Report: Father Accused of Breaking Newborn Son’s Legs and Ribs in Outburst

Inset: William Page (Outagamie County Jail). Background: The street in Wisconsin where…

$20M Settlement Approved to Family After Torture, Murder of 4-Year-Old California Boy

On Tuesday, the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors approved a $20…

Man Sentenced to Death for Killing Teen Who “Knew Too Much”

Inset: Jaheym Cheeks (Franklin County Prosecuting Attorney”s Office). Background: The area where…

BREAKING: Sentencing Underway in Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs’ Federal Prostitution Case

On Friday, a New York federal judge will sentence Sean “Diddy” Combs…

Dad Severely Injures 6-Week-Old Son in ‘Angry Outburst,’ Doesn’t Understand Why It’s Child Abuse Since It Wasn’t ‘Intentional’

A Wisconsin man has been jailed on child abuse charges after he…

Sister Receives Chilling Funeral Request Just Days Before Tragic Murder-Suicide

Background: News footage of the Birmingham, Ala. neighborhood where LaVentrice Denise Tolbert…