The detective kept the paper flat against the metal table with two fingers, as if the page might curl up and hide the words if he let go.
The room smelled like disinfectant, old coffee, and the plastic tang of hospital tape. Khloe sat across from him with a white bandage wrapped high around her neck, her hair rough and uneven around her face, dried blood still trapped beneath one thumbnail. She could not answer out loud. Every question had to cross the table in silence.
He turned the paper slightly toward the others in the room.

He didn’t do it. I did it.
Below that, in a different slant, written harder, deep enough to leave grooves in the page:
How long will my prison sentence be for killing her?
No one in that room could look at the handwriting without also seeing the child-sized body that had just been taken down a corridor under cold fluorescent light.
And no one could ignore the name that never stopped hovering over every answer.
Benyamin.
Before the blood, before the ambulance lights painted the driveway in red and blue, before a jury ever sat in a box and listened to phone calls from jail, there had been another version of the story. Not a happy one. Just quieter.
Khloe was still a teenager when she met him, seventeen and already bruised by a life that had taught her to leave before anyone could leave her first. Home had never settled around her like safety. It had edges. Cold rooms. Interrupted trust. Men who seemed older, stronger, surer. By the time Ben entered her life, he did not have to break down a locked door. The door was already half-open.
He knew how to sound like certainty.
Witnesses later described him the same way over and over: calm, intelligent, magnetic. The kind of man who could talk about order while someone else gave up pieces of themselves to keep the peace. He was nearly twice her age. He had theories about health, power, sin, obedience. He spoke in systems. That was part of the trap. A damaged life can mistake rigid structure for rescue.
At first, the rules must have looked like purpose. No waste. No toxins. No outside corruption. No weak thinking. No modern poison. The world beyond him became dirty, loud, compromised. The world around him became pure only if everyone surrendered enough.
That surrender grew teeth.
There were restrictions on phones, on money, on movement. Jobs came and went because ordinary life did not fit the sealed logic of the group. People moved from place to place. Asheville. Maine. Georgia. Florida. Homes became temporary, but his authority did not. The rituals got stranger the deeper one looked: darkened rooms, long meditations, blacked-out windows, isolation recast as cleansing. Even the body was no longer private. Even discomfort was turned into doctrine.
And under everything ran his view of women: less stable, less capable, less fit to lead.

That belief did not always arrive as a shout. Sometimes it arrived as a dirty shirt thrown across a room.
Sometimes it arrived in the flat certainty of another man explaining under oath that men regulate their emotions better than women do.
Sometimes it arrived in the way every path out curved back toward him.
Then Hannah was born.
If there was ever a chance for the spell to crack, it was there.
The baby brought ordinary needs that no ideology could polish into purity. She needed feeding, changing, warmth, sleep. She needed vaccinations Khloe wanted and he opposed. She needed legal existence in the world, and he reportedly did not even want her to have a birth certificate. A child has a way of exposing whether a belief system can survive contact with helplessness.
According to testimony, something in Khloe began to split wider after the birth. Her mother noticed it. The child no longer seemed fully present. Khloe herself moved through fear that no one else could see but everyone around her could feel. She believed sin could pass into Hannah through breastfeeding. She talked about photographs downloading people back into earlier moments. She carried grief, paranoia, exhaustion, and the old fractures in her mind like lit wires pressed together.
There were glimpses of resistance. She tried to leave more than once. On one occasion she flagged down a passing driver. Other times she slipped away long enough to contact her mother. But escape was never just a matter of opening a door. The child tethered her there. Leaving meant the possibility of losing Hannah, and that threat could pull harder than any lock.
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The pressure kept building in rooms that looked ordinary from the outside.
By the time December 8, 2020 arrived, the house in Georgia held the stale air of a place where too many people had spent too long bending around one man’s gravity. That morning did not announce itself as history. It looked like another day of movement and preparation. The group was getting ready to leave. Voices moved through the house. Things were being gathered. A day in motion.
Then came the scream.
Jason Spillers would later describe hearing it and running upstairs. Ben was already there. Blood was everywhere. Khloe was wounded on the bed. Hannah was in catastrophic condition. Ben was trying to revive the baby, mouth to mouth, chest compressions against a body that had almost no blood left to give. Jason focused on Khloe, pressing against the wound in her neck, trying to stop what he could stop.
He said she whispered one thing to him.
Stop. I’m supposed to die.

In the hospital, surgeons worked under lights so bright they flattened color. A doctor later described Hannah as empty of blood. One wound had reached her spine. Even survival would have meant a life marked forever by that damage. But survival never came.
The child died at thirteen months old.
The case might have settled into a narrow shape right there: mother kills child, mother survives, mother is charged. But the evidence that followed refused to stay small.
There were the handwritten admissions in the interview room. There were the internet searches on Khloe’s phone: killing someone to save them, how to snap a neck, killing because the world was fake, religious forgiveness, the 12 Tribes community. There were statements about black magic being used on Hannah. There was the long mental health history, the diagnoses, the self-harm, the periods of instability stretching back years. There was a woman whose mind was clearly disordered.
And there was also a man who remained untouched by handcuffs.
Police did not charge Ben with killing Hannah or attacking Khloe. The physical evidence, as presented, pointed to Khloe taking a knife from the butcher’s block, locking herself in the bedroom, and carrying out the attack. The law likes clean lines when it can get them. Knife. Room. Wounds. Admissions. Case.
But trials are where the mess returns.
When hers began in November 2024, the courtroom became a place where competing versions of reality were dressed in formal language and set side by side. Prosecutors argued she was jealous, controlling, enraged by the idea of not having her husband to herself. The defense argued she was in the grip of delusion so severe that the act could not be measured by ordinary logic. The jury heard from witnesses, doctors, relatives, people from the orbit of that household. They heard about the cult-like environment. They heard about obedience, humiliation, fear. They heard about a mother who could no longer tell the difference between saving her child and destroying her.
They also heard things that made the case colder instead of clearer.
During a jail call with her mother, Khloe discussed a pandemic-era loan and transferring the money to Ben. Even after everything, the attachment remained. Jail records showed hundreds of calls to him after her arrest, more than six hundred over a little more than two years, with blocked numbers circumvented through other inmates’ accounts. Whatever held her to him had not disappeared with the police tape.
That detail cut against the simple image of a woman finally awakened to her abuser. It suggested something knotted, humiliating, unfinished. Control does not always snap when a crime occurs. Sometimes it keeps breathing.
In court, Jason testified in an orange jail uniform of his own, burdened by his own criminal case. Even that added another layer of contamination to the proceedings. Nearly every person who stepped near the facts seemed to bring more damage with them. No one entered clean. Not the witnesses. Not the adults in the house. Not the belief system. Not the aftermath.
Graphic crime scene photographs were shown. Jurors saw blood where a child should have slept. They heard about the baby’s injuries in precise, clinical language that made the room go still. They heard Khloe’s own words from the interview and from calls. They listened long enough for any fantasy of a simple answer to wear out.
The defense asked the jury to see madness. The prosecution asked them to see intent.

In the end, they saw both, but only one mattered enough under the law.
They found her guilty of malice murder and first-degree cruelty to children. Mentally ill, yes. Legally insane, no.
That verdict landed in a courtroom, but it echoed beyond it. Because a guilty verdict against Khloe did not settle the larger unease trailing behind the case. It did not answer what responsibility belongs to a person who spends years shaping the closed world in which another person breaks. It did not answer how far coercion must go before it becomes criminal in its own right. It did not answer why a child could be born into a system so rigid and still remain legally adjacent to its architect rather than protected from him.
Ben walked away from the center of the story in the only way that matters in criminal court: uncharged.
That does not mean unchanged.
By the time the verdict came down, his name had already fused itself to the public memory of the case. In the minds of people who followed it, he remained the man in the corner of every frame: older, composed, doctrinal, present at the house, present in the years before, present in the calls after. A husband. A leader. A gravitational force the law had not converted into a count on an indictment.
Khloe, meanwhile, moved fully into the machinery she had asked about on paper that first night. Prison time was no longer abstract. Bars, schedules, state custody, legal motions, sentencing exposure—those would replace the makeshift theology and household commands that had governed her life before. The blade had cut through one form of captivity only to leave another in its place.
None of that touched Hannah.
She remained where the system always leaves the smallest victim: at the center of everything and unable to speak inside any of it.
Thirteen months old. No testimony. No future tense.
Just photographs, medical language, and the memory carried by strangers who had to describe the last sounds of attempts to save her.
After the trial, after the arguments quieted and the crowd thinned from the courthouse hallways, what stayed with people was not the legal wording. It was the image pattern the case kept returning to.
A young woman writing with a damaged throat.
A man untouched by prosecution.
A baby in a hospital that could do nothing.
Late one evening, long after the hearings ended, one of Hannah’s photographs was still sitting in a file among the stacked papers and exhibit lists—a child with the loose, unguarded face of someone who had not yet learned danger had entered the room. Outside, winter pressed against the courthouse windows. Inside, the fluorescent lights hummed over polished floors and empty benches. When the clerk finally shut the folder, the sound was soft, barely louder than a page turning.
Then the room went still, and Hannah’s name remained there in the dark like a crib left waiting.