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Susan Smith prison call Aug. 13
Susan Smith can be heard in a prison call made on Aug. 13 speaking about a letter from the media. (Credit: South Carolina Department of Corrections)
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The former South Carolina prosecutor who successfully put Susan Smith behind bars for infamously killing her two young sons in 1994 by strapping them into their car seats and rolling the vehicle into a lake, says she needs to remain in prison.
Tommy Pope, who led the prosecution against Smith and who now serves in the state Legislature as a Republican, noted that she will once again be eligible for parole in 2026. She was denied in 2024.
“Susan, to me, needs to remain incarcerated as punishment for what she’s done,” Pope told Fox News Digital at CrimeCon in Denver on Sept. 6, noting that she may not pose a danger to society if she were released. “It’s not like she’s going to have two more kids and do the same thing, arguably.”

Susan Smith is serving a life sentence for killing her two young sons in 1994. State Rep. Tommy Pope, who prosecuted Smith, said she needs to remain behind bars. (Getty Images/Reuters)
Smith drew the ire of many when she was arrested for the deaths of the two boys. She previously blamed a Black man for carjacking her and speeding off with her sons. For nine days, she and her husband made public pleas for their return.
Law enforcement launched a massive manhunt for the non-existent suspect.
“Carjackers don’t take kids,” Pope said. “When it first started, she’s blaming a Black guy and I’m thinking, ‘she’s got them stashed somewhere. This is something to do with them being estranged, she and David.’ When it came out that she had done it, it was shocking.”
Since being sent to prison, Smith has been caught communicating with a victim and/or witness of a crime, speaking with a documentary filmmaker, and guards have admitted to having sexual relations with Smith.

Susan Smith, pictured in a recent mugshot at left and at 22-year-old in 1994 at right, has been incarcerated in South Carolina for more than 30 years for the murder of her two sons. (South Carolina Department of Corrections)
Pope noted that Smith knows how to portray herself for her benefit.
“It’s always somebody else’s fault,” he said. “She’s either a victim or a princess.”