Stella was born on August 7, 1943, into a financially struggling family that lived in a trailer in Colton, Oregon. Determined to escape poverty, she sought a better life but became pregnant at the age of 16, giving birth to her first daughter, Cynthia, in 1959. After moving to California, she embraced a party-focused lifestyle and eventually married Robert Warren Strong in 1964. The couple had a second daughter, but the marriage was plagued by Stella's financial mismanagement and criminal behavior, including convictions for financial fraud in 1968, child abuse in 1969, and forgery in 1971. The marriage ended in 1971 after she served a six-month jail sentence.In 1974, Stella met Bruce Nickell, and the two were married by 1976. By 1986, the couple was living in a trailer in Aberdeen, Washington, alongside Stella's mother, her eldest daughter Cynthia, and Cynthia's two children. The family faced severe financial difficulties, including the impending repossession of their trailer. Desperate for money to pay off the debts and fulfill her dream of opening a tropical fish store, Stella devised a lethal, calculated plan.Bruce had a $31,000 life insurance policy through his employer, and Stella forged his signature to secretly take out an additional $20,000 policy on his life. Crucially, the employer's policy included a clause that would pay out an additional $105,000 in the event of an accidental, random death, bringing the total potential payout to $176,000. After a failed attempt to poison Bruce with foxglove seeds, Stella was inspired by the 1982 Chicago Tylenol murders. On June 5, 1986, she laced Excedrin capsules with cyanide; Bruce took the medication for a headache and quickly died.However, doctors initially ruled Bruce's death as being caused by ruptured lungs, completely missing the poison. To ensure his death was classified as an accidental poisoning so she could collect the full insurance payout, Stella laced several more packages of Excedrin with cyanide and placed them on the shelves of local stores to make it look like the work of a random killer. Tragically, this resulted in the death of 40-year-old Susan Snow on June 11, 1986.Following Susan's death, investigators discovered cyanide in her system and in the Excedrin bottle she had used. Stella then contacted authorities, claiming her husband had taken the same medication, which prompted a re-examination of his body that confirmed cyanide poisoning. During the investigation, authorities found small green crystals mixed with the poisoned pills, which were identified as Algae Destroyer, a product used in home aquariums. A local pet store clerk identified Stella as a frequent purchaser of this specific product, remembering her because she carried a distinctive ringing bell in her purse.The definitive break in the case came when Stella's daughter, Cynthia, approached the police. She informed them about her mother's five-year plan to secure the insurance money, her research into toxic substances, and her previous attempts to poison Bruce. Cynthia ultimately received a significant financial reward—over $100,000—from the medication's manufacturer for her testimony. Fingerprints linking Stella to library books about cyanide further cemented the case against her. On May 9, 1988, Stella was convicted and sentenced to life in prison. Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/missing-pieces--6886558/support.