Leaving Is When People Die: What the McKee-Tepe Case Reveals About the Most Dangerous Moment

Leaving Is When People Die: What the McKee-Tepe Case Reveals About the Most Dangerous Moment

The most dangerous moment in domestic violence isn't the abuse. It's the escape. Research consistently shows the period immediately following separation is when lethality risk spikes. The abuser isn't losing a partner — they're losing control. And for some, that loss demands correction. Sometimes years later.

Monique Tepe left Michael McKee within seven months of cohabitation. She filed for divorce. She moved back to Ohio. She did everything we tell domestic violence victims to do. According to prosecutors, eight years later, McKee allegedly drove hundreds of miles to kill her and her husband Spencer in their home while their children slept nearby.

This episode examines the real barriers that keep victims trapped — financial dependence, children as leverage, trauma bonding, the credibility gap — and why the legal system is designed to respond to events rather than the patterns that precede them. Coercive control isn't a crime in most U.S. states. Restraining orders work on people who respect legal boundaries. The system waits for the crisis. And by the time the crisis arrives, it's often too late.

The question was never about Monique. The question is about a system that left her unprotected.

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This publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.

#TrueCrimeToday #MoniqueTepe #MichaelMcKee #SpencerTepe #WhyDidntSheLeave #DomesticViolence #CoerciveControl #LethalityRisk #TepeCase #SystemFailure

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