During our divorce trial, my husband showed no emotion as he sought to end our 20-year marriage. Moments before the judgment was read, my 8-year-old niece stood up and asked the judge to show a video of what she had witnessed at home, shocking everyone in the courtroom.

“Emily’s testimony in your divorce case documented planning conversations that match information we found in other cases. We need her to identify voices on recordings we’ve obtained and confirm details about the financial planning meetings she observed.”

That evening, I sat down with Emily to explain that the detective wanted to interview her about Grandpa Robert’s activities, but this time as part of a criminal investigation rather than our family’s divorce case.

“Emily, it appears that Grandpa Robert and Sharon weren’t just hiding money from me. They may have been helping other men hide money from their wives, too.”

“Like a business for stealing from grandmas?”

“Something like that. The police think they taught other husbands how to move money so their wives couldn’t find it. And then they got paid for helping with the stealing.”

Emily processed this information with the moral clarity she’d always brought to adult misconduct that didn’t make sense by any reasonable standard.

“So Grandpa Robert wasn’t just mean to you, he was mean to lots of grandmas.”

“That’s what the police are trying to figure out.”

“Then I want to help stop them from being mean to more grandmas.”

Three days later, Detective Rodriguez arrived at our house with recording equipment and photographs that would help Emily identify people she’d seen during Robert’s planning meetings. Emily approached the interview with the same matter-of-fact precision she’d brought to her original court testimony.

“Emily, I’m going to play some audio recordings, and I want you to tell me if you recognize any of the voices.”

The first recording was clearly Robert’s voice, discussing asset transfer strategies with someone who spoke with Sharon’s distinctive tone and phrasing.

“That’s Grandpa Robert and Sharon talking about moving money to different banks so wives can’t find it,” Emily said.

“Emily, how can you be sure it’s Sharon?”

“Because she talks really fast when she gets excited about money stuff, and she always says ‘absolutely’ when she agrees with things. Plus, I saw her talking to Grandpa lots of times.”

Detective Rodriguez played several more recordings, each documenting conversations about hiding assets, creating false financial records, and coaching husbands on how to present their wives as incompetent or mentally unstable during divorce proceedings.

“Emily, in these recordings, do you hear them talking about other families besides yours?”

“Yes. They mention names like Margaret and Patricia and Susan. Sharon says she’s helping their husbands protect their investments from wives who don’t understand business.”

“Did you ever see other men come to your house for meetings with Grandpa Robert and Sharon?”

“Yes. I remember three different men who came for meetings. They all looked worried and they all had wives they said were causing problems by asking questions about money.”

Detective Rodriguez showed Emily photographs of men who were suspected of participating in the fraud scheme. Emily identified two of them as visitors to our house during the months before Robert filed for divorce.

“Mrs. Gillian,” Detective Rodriguez said after Emily’s interview was complete, “your granddaughter’s testimony corroborates evidence we’ve gathered from bank records, hidden recording devices, and financial documents seized from Mr. Stevens and Ms. Patterson’s offices.”

“What kind of evidence?”

CONTINUE READING...>>

To see the full instructions for this recipe, go to the next page or click the open button (>) and don't forget to share it with your friends on Facebook.