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Sharee Miller

Sharee Paulette Kitley Miller (born October 13, 1971) is an American woman who was convicted of second-degree murder and to commit murder for her role in the 1999 killing of her husband, Bruce Miller. A mother of three from , Miller engaged in an online affair with Jerry Cassaday, manipulating him into shooting her husband at his junkyard business before Cassaday died by days later. The case drew national attention as one of the first murders allegedly plotted over the . In January 2001, Miller was sentenced to for the conspiracy charge plus 54 to 81 years for second-degree ; she is incarcerated at the in . In May 2025, while serving her sentence, Miller discussed her manipulation and role in the plot during a prison .

Early life and background

Childhood and family origins

Sharee Paulette Kitley, later known as Sharee Miller, was born on October 13, 1971, in . She grew up in the Flint area. Details about her parents and any siblings remain limited in , with no specific names or backgrounds documented in available accounts. Miller experienced a rough childhood, raised in a trailer park environment that reflected the socioeconomic struggles common in the region. By age 16, she was largely on her own, navigating early independence in this industrial setting.

Pre-marital life and early relationships

Sharee Miller became independent by the age of 16, navigating young adulthood on her own in the Flint area. By 1997, at age 26, she was established as a single mother of three young children from previous marriages, having begun her journey into motherhood in her late teens or early twenties. Her initial romantic relationships resulted in the births of her three children, whom she primarily cared for as a amid financial and personal challenges in Michigan's working-class environment. By the late , Miller was working at a scrapyard in Flint, a position that provided steady employment while she managed the responsibilities of raising her children in her mid-20s. This period marked her transition into more stable routines as a young mother, though it was characterized by the demands of solo without support detailed in available accounts.

Marriage to Bruce Miller

Meeting and wedding

Sharee Miller, then 27 years old and a mother of three from a previous relationship, met Bruce Miller in late 1998 when she was hired as a bookkeeper at his auto salvage yard in Flint, Michigan. Miller, an established businessman in his late 40s, owned the scrapyard where Sharee began working shortly after her hiring. Their courtship developed rapidly despite the 20-year age difference and the initial boss-employee dynamic, with Sharee later stating that she actively pursued the relationship and . Within four months of meeting, the couple decided to wed, reflecting the quick progression influenced by Sharee's existing family responsibilities. On April 23, 1999, Sharee and Bruce Miller eloped in a wedding chapel, forgoing a traditional ceremony in favor of a simple, spontaneous union. The marriage took place in but was rooted in their Michigan-based lives, marking the formal start of their union as they blended households.

Family life and children

Sharee Miller entered her marriage to Miller as a mother of three children from previous relationships, forming a blended in which took on the role of . The couple, who met when Sharee began working at 's auto salvage yard, wed in April 1999 and settled into a household where provided financial stability and support for the children through his business earnings. Bruce, aged 47 at the time of their marriage, owned and operated A&B Auto Salvage, a cash-and-carry junkyard located in Mt. Morris Township, , near Flint. He worked long hours at the yard, often leaving Sharee, then 27, to manage the home and family responsibilities while she pursued part-time work selling cosmetics and occasionally assisting at the . This arrangement allowed the family a of , with acting as a dedicated provider who helped integrate Sharee's children into their daily life. By the late 1990s, the marriage faced strains stemming from the demanding nature of Bruce's work, including frequent break-ins at the salvage yard that heightened security concerns and operational challenges. Sharee later described feeling isolated due to Bruce's extended absences, contributing to personal dissatisfaction amid the couple's efforts to maintain their blended family routine. Financial pressures were also evident, as Bruce routinely carried significant cash—up to $2,000—for business transactions, underscoring the cash-intensive demands of the junkyard.

Online affair and murder plot

Relationship with Jerry Cassaday

Sharee Miller initiated an online affair with Cassaday in 1999 through adult chat rooms on , where she used suggestive screen names such as "Horny 7241" and "IWANTTOBELAID" to engage with men. Posing as a single mother of three with a history of abusive , Miller concealed her recent marriage to Bruce and her life in , where she worked at his auto salvage yard. This deception allowed her to present herself as vulnerable and available, drawing Cassaday into frequent conversations. Jerry Cassaday, a former from , had transitioned to working as a pit boss at Harrah's Casino in , amid personal challenges including a pending , financial difficulties, and a history of and . Married at the time but seeking companionship online, Cassaday was immediately captivated by Miller's flirtatious and empathetic persona, which contrasted with his own marital strains. Their interactions quickly evolved from casual chats to intensely emotional and explicit exchanges, including the sharing of sexual videos and messages that fostered a sense of intimacy. As the relationship deepened, Miller constructed elaborate false narratives about her life to strengthen Cassaday's attachment, such as claims of ongoing from a controlling partner and even a fabricated with his child. Cassaday, who described Miller as the "woman of [his] dreams," expressed profound devotion in their communications, viewing her as an escape from his troubles. This online bond, built on deception and escalating explicit content, transitioned to in-person meetings when Miller visited Reno in July 1999, solidifying their romantic connection.

Development of the conspiracy

As the online relationship between Sharee Miller and Jerry Cassaday deepened in the summer of 1999, Miller began fabricating elaborate stories of abuse by her husband, Bruce Miller, to elicit sympathy and draw Cassaday into her schemes. She claimed Bruce was physically and sexually abusive, involved with the mafia, and had caused her to miscarry multiple pregnancies—including twins—despite having undergone a tubal ligation in 1995 that prevented conception. To bolster these lies, Miller sent Cassaday photographs of herself with simulated bruises created using makeup, portraying Bruce as a violent threat who needed to be eliminated for her safety. These fabrications escalated the affair into a when Miller and Cassaday exchanged s and AOL instant messages explicitly discussing Bruce's murder. In communications from August to November 1999, Miller detailed Bruce's daily routines and work location at his B&D Auto Salvage yard in , while Cassaday expressed willingness to act, influenced by a forged purportedly from Bruce boasting about forcing an . Key exchanges on November 7 and 8, 1999, outlined the logistics of the killing, with Miller providing her cellphone for coordination and meeting Cassaday at a nearby to relay final instructions. Prosecutors later described these messages as of premeditation, admissible under rules for statements against penal interest. Motivated by Miller's manipulations, Cassaday, a former from , traveled approximately 600 miles from Missouri to in early November 1999 to execute the plan. He arrived in the Flint area, armed with a , and used the information Miller supplied to stalk Bruce's movements at the salvage yard. This cross-state journey, documented in emails and Cassaday's later , marked the conspiracy's transition from digital plotting to imminent action.

Murder and immediate aftermath

The killing of Bruce Miller

On November 9, 1999, Jerry Cassaday, acting on a hatched through online communications with Sharee Miller, arrived at B&D Auto salvage yard in Mt. Morris Township, , where Bruce Miller worked and managed the business. Cassaday confronted Bruce Miller in the office trailer and shot him at close range with a , striking him in the neck and upper back, leading to his immediate death. Following the shooting, Cassaday made a brief call to Sharee Miller's —ringing once and hanging up as a prearranged signal that the act was complete—before fleeing the scene and returning to his home in .

Discovery of the body and initial police response

On November 9, 1999, employees at B&D Auto Parts, Bruce Miller's salvage yard in Mt. Morris Township, Genesee County, Michigan, discovered his body slumped behind the desk in the office upon arriving for work. Miller, aged 48, had been shot in the neck and upper back with a 20-gauge shotgun, and the cash drawer was open with his wallet missing, suggesting a robbery. The Genesee County medical examiner ruled the death a homicide shortly thereafter. Sharee Miller, Bruce's wife, was notified by and reported that he had left home the previous evening to check on the business, claiming she had expected him to return but grew concerned when he did not. She later identified the body at the , presenting herself as a grieving to authorities and . However, investigators noted her demeanor as unusually composed, with little visible emotional distress in the days following the discovery. The initial police response treated the incident as a possible gone wrong, given the disarray at the scene and the absence of forced entry, prompting a canvass of employees and review of business records for leads. No immediate suspicions fell on Sharee Miller or her online acquaintance Jerry Cassaday, as the centered on potential workplace conflicts. Genesee County Sheriff's deputies briefly focused on Hutchinson, an employee involved in a financial dispute with Miller over a , before broader inquiries ensued.

Investigation and arrests

Uncovering the online evidence

Following the murder of Bruce Miller on , 1999, investigators initially treated the case as a possible robbery at his salvage yard, B&D Auto Parts, in Mt. Morris Township, , where he was found shot once with a to the neck and nearly $2,000 missing from the premises. Investigators suspected a robbery and questioned associates, including former employee John Hutchinson who owed money to Miller, but no leads emerged. The breakthrough came three months later, on February 11, 2000, when Jerry Cassaday, a guard from , died by self-inflicted gunshot wound in his home in . Cassaday left a addressed to his family, confessing to killing Bruce Miller at Sharee Miller's behest as part of a romantic conspiracy, detailing how she had manipulated him with promises of and escape from her allegedly abusive . The note explicitly implicated Sharee, stating she "helped set it up," and directed authorities to examine evidence in a briefcase he left behind. Although the note's admissibility was later challenged and ruled improper in appellate proceedings due to hearsay concerns, it prompted immediate scrutiny of Sharee's online activities. Cassaday's family turned over the briefcase to local , who forwarded it to authorities; it contained a hard , printed instant messages, emails, and tapes revealing explicit communications between Cassaday (using the screen name "Shareesfool") and Sharee (under aliases like "Jerrysfool" and "sexykitten4onlyu"). Forensic analysis of the hard by investigators uncovered a timeline of their affair beginning in August 1999, including fabricated personas Sharee created to portray herself as a of , a pregnant woman carrying Cassaday's child (supported by falsified sonograms), and even impersonations of Bruce Miller to taunt Cassaday. These digital records showed Sharee escalating her deceptions, such as claiming a miscarriage to deepen Cassaday's sympathy and commitment. The further exposed the murder plot's mechanics through recovered instant messages and emails from November 7-9, 1999, where Sharee provided precise instructions: directions to the salvage yard, a signal (a 5 p.m. phone call from her), details on Bruce's routine, and the Cassaday should use before fleeing to a prearranged . Messages like "Just do it and get the hell out of there" and "Jerry, if this don’t work, he will hurt me bad" illustrated her role in scripting the killing to eliminate Bruce and secure proceeds for their future together. To corroborate the digital trail, police, via a Missouri attorney, subpoenaed additional AOL records in early 2000, confirming the authenticity of the chats and countering Sharee's claim that Cassaday had hacked her accounts or fabricated the evidence. An AOL representative testified that while messages could theoretically be faked, the subpoenaed logs aligned seamlessly with the hard drive contents, linking Sharee's and timestamps to the conspiracy.

Arrest of Sharee Miller and Cassaday

Following the suicide of Jerry Cassaday on February 11, 2000, in his home in , , authorities were unable to arrest him for his role in the murder plot, as his death was ruled self-inflicted based on the suicide note and circumstances discovered at the scene. Cassaday's family turned over a briefcase containing incriminating evidence, including digital communications that implicated Sharee Miller in the conspiracy. Sharee Miller was arrested in in February 2000 and charged with second-degree and to commit in connection with her husband Bruce Miller's death. The charges stemmed directly from the evidence recovered after Cassaday's , which detailed the plot. The arrest profoundly affected Miller's three children, leaving them without both parents and requiring temporary custody arrangements with family members, including placement with Miller's mother. This disruption compounded the trauma from their father's , as the children, then young, were suddenly separated from their mother amid the unfolding .

Trial and conviction

Court proceedings and key evidence

The trial of Sharee Miller commenced on December 12, 2000, in the Genesee County Circuit Court in , marking one of the first high-profile cases involving an alleged internet-orchestrated murder plot. Genesee County Prosecutor David Leyton led the prosecution, emphasizing Miller's role in manipulating her online lover, Jerry Cassaday, into killing her husband, Bruce Miller. The case drew national attention, with broadcasting proceedings that highlighted the emerging role of digital communications in criminal investigations. Prosecutors argued that Miller's online affair and explicit encouragements formed a clear , presenting the trial as a about . Central to the prosecution's strategy was the presentation of instant message logs recovered from Cassaday's computer, which detailed the couple's explicit sexual fantasies evolving into discussions of murdering Bruce Miller. These chat logs, exchanged under screen names Jerrysfool and Shareesfool, included Miller providing directions to Bruce's auto salvage yard hours before the November 9, 1999, shooting, as well as her alleged lies about suffering abuse from her husband to incite Cassaday. Cassaday's suicide note, discovered after his February 2000 death and found in a briefcase with a computer hard drive, sonograms of Miller's purported pregnancy, and sexually explicit videotapes, explicitly implicated Miller in the plot. Additionally, witness testimonies from Miller's family and friends underscored the strained nature of her marriage, portraying it as unhappy and marked by financial disputes, which prosecutors claimed motivated the conspiracy. Forensic ballistics evidence further supported the prosecution, confirming that Bruce Miller was killed by a single 12-gauge shotgun blast to the neck at close range, consistent with an ambush at his Vienna Township business. Although no physical evidence directly linked Cassaday to the scene—no fingerprints, tire tracks, or the murder weapon were recovered—prosecutors relied on the digital trail and Cassaday's co-worker's testimony about his obsessive behavior and suicidal tendencies as corroborating the messages' authenticity. The countered by asserting Miller's innocence, claiming the chat logs were fabricated by Cassaday as after she ended their and that she was unaware of any violent intentions. They portrayed Miller as a of Cassaday's , suggesting her online interactions were mere fantasy without real-world implications. To shift blame, the defense highlighted from the brother of John Hutchinson, a former employee of Bruce Miller who had threatened him over unpaid debts, positioning Hutchinson as a more plausible suspect. Despite these arguments, the prosecution's digital evidence and witness accounts dominated the courtroom narrative.

Verdict, sentencing, and initial appeals

On December 22, 2000, after two days of deliberation, a Genesee County Circuit Court convicted Sharee Miller of second-degree murder as an aider and abettor and conspiracy to commit first-degree murder in the death of her husband, Bruce Miller. The conviction was based primarily on digital communications between Miller and Jerry Cassaday, her online lover who carried out the shooting before taking his own life and leaving a note implicating her. On January 29, 2001, Genesee County Circuit Court Judith A. Fullerton sentenced Miller to without for the to commit first-degree charge. She received an additional consecutive term of 54 to 81 years for the second-degree conviction, exceeding the sentencing guidelines range of 13.5 to 22.5 years due to the trial court's of Miller's extensive role in orchestrating the plot. Miller's direct appeal to the Michigan Court of Appeals was affirmed on June 24, 2003, upholding both convictions and sentences. In September 2005, she filed a petition for writ of in federal court, alleging evidentiary errors, including the improper admission of Cassaday's suicide note as a violation of her confrontation rights under the Sixth Amendment. On August 27, 2008, U.S. District Judge Victoria A. Roberts conditionally granted the writ, vacating the convictions and ordering a within 60 days unless the state appealed, citing the note's admission as unconstitutional .

Prison sentence and conditions

Sharee Miller was sentenced to without parole on January 29, 2001 following her conviction for second-degree murder and conspiracy to commit first-degree murder. She was initially placed at the Robert Scott Correctional Facility in , where she began serving her sentence. Miller was later transferred to the in , with records indicating her presence there from 2008 to 2009 and continuously since 2012. During her incarceration, Miller has engaged in various prison roles and programs, including working as a Prisoner Observation Aide () from July 2014, where she monitored mentally ill , and later as a hobby craft clerk earning $1.54 per day since February 2017. She also served as chairperson of the warden's forum, submitting monthly questions on behalf of and attending meetings to address facility issues. In 2007, while in prison, Miller was diagnosed with (PTSD) and other mental illnesses stemming from past , for which she received from prison staff, including emergency sessions with Dr. Zimar and counseling with Ms. Porter. Prison restrictions have impacted her routine, such as a Class II misconduct ticket for being "out of place," which limited her job eligibility for up to six months, and her removal from the position after reporting suspected mistreatment of inmates, including incidents of hogtying and deprivation of food and water. filed a in 2015 alleging retaliation for her reports, which settled in 2019 with the agreeing to change policy to allow prisoner observation aides to report mistreatment to outside agencies. Despite these challenges, has described a at Women's Huron Valley, noting that inmates provide mutual support: "When one is down we do what we can to bring them up. When one is sick we do what we can to help them." Miller maintains communication and receives visits from her family, including her three children.

Subsequent appeals and rulings

In 2007, following her initial appeal, Sharee Miller filed a petition for a of in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of , arguing that the admission of Jerry Cassaday's at violated her confrontation rights under the Sixth Amendment. On August 27, 2008, the district court conditionally granted the , ruling that the note was inadmissible and ordering the state to either retry Miller or release her within 60 days. The state appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit, which stayed the release pending appeal. On July 15, 2009, the district court denied the state's motion to stay the and granted Miller's motion for , ordering her immediate release on a $20,000 surety bond conditioned on reporting to pretrial services. Miller posted a $100,000 personal recognizance bond and was released from prison on July 29, 2009, after nearly a decade of incarceration. However, Genesee County authorities immediately re-arrested and re-charged her with second-degree murder and conspiracy to commit murder, leading to her on July 22, 2009, and a preliminary that bound her over for trial. On June 22, 2010, the Sixth Circuit upheld the district court's 2008 ruling in Miller v. Stovall, affirming that the suicide note's admission constituted constitutional error and that Miller was entitled to a or release, as the note's prejudicial impact could not be deemed harmless. This decision solidified the basis for her temporary freedom while state proceedings continued. In response, the Michigan Court of Appeals, in an unpublished opinion on July 26, 2012, reinstated Miller's original 2000 convictions, ruling that the federal habeas grant did not preclude state reconsideration and finding no merit in her claims of evidentiary errors or . The U.S. District Court followed on August 2, 2012, by denying Miller's renewed habeas petition and vacating her bond, ordering her return to prison. Miller was taken into custody on August 30, 2012, ending her three-year period of release. Miller appealed the district court's 2012 denial to the Sixth Circuit, which on February 11, 2014, affirmed the decision in Miller v. Stovall, holding that the Court of Appeals' reinstatement was neither contrary to nor an unreasonable application of clearly established , particularly regarding the retroactivity of precedents. On November 14, 2011, the U.S. had granted , vacated the Sixth Circuit's prior judgment, and remanded for further consideration in light of intervening precedent. The Sixth Circuit's 2014 affirmation exhausted her federal remedies on the habeas claims. On April 28, 2016, Miller wrote letters from prison to the family of victim , admitting partial responsibility for his death by acknowledging her manipulative lies and role in escalating tensions with Cassaday, though she maintained she did not directly solicit the . In 2017, Miller filed a motion for relief from judgment in Genesee County Circuit Court, seeking a based on newly discovered and claims of , but on August 28, 2017, Judge Judith A. Fullerton denied the motion, finding it untimely and lacking substantive merit under Court Rule 6.508. This ruling marked the final state-level denial of her post-conviction challenges up to that point.

Recent developments

2025 confession and interviews

In 2025, after more than 25 years of incarceration, Sharee Miller confessed to her central role in conspiring to murder her husband, Bruce Miller, as detailed in a letter to prosecutors featured in the 20/20 episode "Love at First Click." The episode, part of the limited series , aired on May 13, 2025, at 10 p.m. ET on and became available for streaming on the following day. In the , admitted to manipulating her online lover, Jerry Cassaday, into fatally shooting at his salvage yard in November 1999, describing her online relationships as a manipulative "game" that escalated to . She emphasized her full in the , stating she orchestrated the events through lies and encouragement without any expectation of leniency or release, motivated instead by a desire for personal closure and peace. During a prison interview conducted for the episode, Miller reflected on the irreversible harm caused, remarking, "There’s no way for me to change or undo what I did," and expressing remorse for the fates of both Bruce and Cassaday, who died by suicide shortly after the killing. This admission built on her earlier partial acknowledgment in a 2016 letter to authorities but marked her first explicit acceptance of planning the murder.

Ongoing media interest

In 2025, the case of Sharee Miller continued to attract significant media attention, particularly through anniversary programming that highlighted its historical significance as one of the earliest documented instances of internet-facilitated crime. On October 23, 2025, the aired a special episode of titled "20 Year Anniversary: Sharee Miller," which reexamined the events surrounding the 2000 often dubbed the "internet's first murder trial." The program featured interviews with investigators and prosecutors, delving into Miller's online manipulations and the technological context of the late , underscoring how the case foreshadowed the dangers of deception in criminal activity. Podcasts also contributed to the renewed focus, with episodes released earlier in the year that explored the psychological and technological elements of the crime. On April 7, 2025, the MrBallen Podcast: Strange, Dark & Mysterious Stories devoted an episode to "The Internet's First Killer," narrated by John B. Allen, which detailed the online romance that led to the murder of and emphasized the case's role in early history. On October 4, 2025, the Casefile True Crime released "Case 332: ," examining the murder investigation and Miller's online . Later, on October 29, 2025, the released "Murder Online," a 39-minute episode examining how Miller used rooms to orchestrate the , drawing parallels to modern online predation. This surge in coverage reflects a broader public fascination with the case's pioneering status in illustrating the perils of early anonymity and seduction, as evidenced by the specials' emphasis on AOL chat rooms and as tools for manipulation. The enduring interest stems from its position as a for the digital age, with media outlets revisiting it amid evolving discussions on safety and narratives.

Documentaries and television episodes

The case of Sharee Miller, involving the murder of her husband Bruce Miller orchestrated through manipulation, has been dramatized and examined in various pre-2025 television productions. Lifetime's 2006 made-for-TV movie portrays the events as a dramatized account, with starring as Sharee Miller and as her lover Jerry Cassaday, who carried out the killing. The film, which premiered on April 3, 2006, focuses on the seductive relationship and its fatal consequences, drawing directly from the real-life details of Miller's cyber affair and the subsequent murder plot. Oxygen's true-crime series has covered the case in multiple episodes, beginning with the original 2005 installment titled "Sharee Miller," which investigates how police traced the crime to an chatroom after Miller's shooting death appeared as a botched . A 20-year special, aired on May 12, 2024, as Season 33, Episode 17, reexamines the trial as the 's first major murder case, highlighting Miller's manipulative tactics in seducing multiple men online to achieve her goals. The series Forensic Files featured the story in its 2005 episode "Web of Seduction" (Season 8, Episode 34), emphasizing the role of in uncovering evidence from hard drives that linked Miller to the plot, including explicit chat logs and fabricated alibis. ABC's 20/20 devoted a 2022 episode, "You've Got Jail" (Season 44, Episode 14), to the and , aired on February 11, 2022, with interviews exploring the evidence of , including prison calls where Miller reflected on her online exploits, and the trial's focus on digital communications as key proof of her involvement.

Books, podcasts, and other media

Sharee Miller's case has been chronicled in the 2003 true crime book Fatal Error by journalists Mark Morris and Paul Janczewski, which examines her manipulation of online lover Cassaday to her husband, Bruce Miller, portraying her as a pathological liar and schemer who fabricated elaborate stories to ensnare him. The book draws on court records, interviews, and investigative details from the 1999 killing and subsequent 2000 trial, highlighting the role of early communications in the . The case has also featured in audio media, notably a 2022 episode of the Radio Free Flint titled "The First Internet Murder: A Love Triangle and a Computer," hosted by former Genesee County prosecutor Arthur Busch, which discusses the , trial strategies, and the pioneering use of in the prosecution. This episode includes insights from Busch and defense attorney Nickola Lonberg, emphasizing the case's significance as one of Michigan's earliest cyber-related murder convictions. In 2025, the Casefile True Crime released "Case 332: Bruce Miller" on October 5, 2025, which details the murder, Miller's online affair with Cassaday, the investigation, and , framing it as a landmark case in early internet-enabled crime. Contemporary coverage of the murder and 2000 trial was extensive in local outlets, including the Flint Journal, which reported on the shocking revelations of Miller's online affair and the forensic evidence linking Cassaday to the crime scene at Bruce Miller's salvage yard. Later appeals received detailed attention in MLive articles, such as a 2008 report on a federal judge's order for a due to evidentiary issues with Cassaday's , and a 2014 piece on the Michigan of Appeals upholding her life sentence after a protracted legal battle. A 2010 MLive article covered the Sixth Circuit of Appeals affirming the exclusion of the note in retrials, underscoring ongoing debates over its admissibility as .

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