Family: Woman with five dead spouses obsessed by cash
CHARLOTTE ,
“She told me that people of our stature have insurance policies on each other,” he said. “That way, if something happens to you, you take care of me, and if something happens to me, I take care of you. It was all too suspicious. So I got out of there any way I could, as soon as I could.”
As he and everyone else who came into Betty Neumar’s orbit have learned, he apparently had good reason.
The 76-year-old
No motive has been discussed, but records and interviews with relatives and police officials paint Neumar as a domineering matriarch consumed by money.
Said Al Gentry, who pressed
She collected at least $20,000 in 1986 when Harold Gentry was shot to death in his home. A year earlier, she had collected $10,000 in life insurance when her son died.
She also had a life insurance policy on husband No. 5, John Neumar, who died in October. The official cause of death was listed as sepsis, but authorities are investigating whether he was poisoned.
Betty Neumar is being held in a
To the outside world, family members said, she was Bee — a friendly woman who operated beauty shops, attended church and raised money for charity.
But Carstensen saw another side: fist fights at family functions, use of obscenities and belittling of relatives, how she would act “one way in public — especially church — and another behind closed doors.”
Police in
Law enforcement authorities told The Associated Press they have struggled to piece together details of Betty Neumar’s life because her story keeps changing. But interviews, documents and court records provide an outline of her history in
She was born Betty Johnson in 1931 in Ironton, a hardscrabble southeastern
In December 1951, she claimed in court papers that Malone abused her. It’s unclear what happened to that complaint or when the marriage broke up. Their son, Gary, was born March 13, 1952.
Malone remarried twice. He was shot once in the back of the head outside his auto shop in a small town southwest of
Records from
Three years later, Neumar married Gentry. Five years after he died, she married John Neumar.
It was while living with him in
She told them they would receive up to $100,000 for every $100 they put toward the legal expenses of a rich European family that had died with no heirs.
Word spread, and people brought money to her beauty shop near Belvedere, S.C., near the
Months later, more than 200 antsy investors met with Betty Neumar at the
“We were rather stupid. I know,” said Mary Miller, an investor who lost $500. “But we believed her. We trusted her.”
It appears they weren’t the only ones.
John Neumar was worth more than $300,000 when he and Betty married in 1991. But nearly 10 years later, they filed for bankruptcy and listed more than $206,000 in debts on 43 credit cards. It’s unclear where the money went.
“Before he met her, he always saved his money,” said John K. Neumar. “That’s what he taught us. So it was a big surprise when I found out he was having financial trouble. It wasn’t like he bought anything. She just took all his money.”
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