
Beloved father and prominent attorney, Gary Farris, should have been safe on his own land. But in July 2018, he vanished from his family’s rural dream property, and a smoldering burn pile would unravel everything they thought they knew about their...
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Narrator
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Detective
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Narrator
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Chris Farris
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Melody Farris
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Narrator
Sword and scale. Contains adult themes and violence and is not intended for all audiences. Listener discretion is advised.
Scott Farris
Gary is in the barn pile. No, he is in the barn pile. And I said what? Are you ready for some murder?
Narrator
Is that a yes? I can't hear you. Speak up. Here we go.
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Chris Farris
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Melody Farris
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Narrator
On July 5, 2018, in Cherokee County, Georgia, a family goes looking for their missing dad. The address is 2555 Purcell Lane, a dead end gravel road off a two lane highway north of Atlanta, but a long way from the city. The expansive house sits on 10 fenced in acres back from the road past pasture and trees. The kind of semi rural property that could be a small farm or just a place to be left alone. Out here it would be easier to disappear into your own routine or into something worse. The fairest property isn't a commercial operation so much as it is a hobby farm with a pasture, a pond, a barn, apartment and a small collection of animals. A few horses, a few Little milk goats and some chickens. Essentially, this is Melody's dream life. The kind of charmed Southern life she had always envisioned for herself. The kind they sell in magazines, lots of kids, animals and an outdoor space. Her husband, Gary Farris, is a prominent attorney in the Atlanta area, a partner level lawyer whose practice and income are centered in the city, not on the land. By this time, their children have all married, some divorced, and grandchildren often come to stay. Known to the grandchildren as Big Daddy. 58 year old Gary Farris hasn't answered calls or texts for at least a day, and no one knows his whereabouts. His truck is still in the driveway. His CPAP machine, the one he uses religiously every night, is still inside. His wallet and other personal things are in the house. Nothing about it says, I left on my own. Gary's four children are grown, including his son Scott, but Scott just happens to live on the property, working as a farmhand. When his mother Melody, asks him, have you seen your daddy? In her southern drawl, the answer is no. This wasn't entirely unusual. The property is huge and Gary tends to mind his own business. Besides, Scott has mostly been away for the previous few days. But his son Scott goes out to the property with Melody to look for him. The kids are half playing outside, half looking. Melody and Scott separate. They check the house, the barn, the pasture. They call his name. Just as soon as he releases a loud daaad. He hears his own name. It's his mother urging him to come back and check out the burn pile. Scott walks to the back of the property, to a spot where his dad sometimes burns trash and brush. It's obvious Gary has been out here. Scott sees a large burn pile there, and for a few seconds the smoke burns his eyes. The burn pile is blackened, still warm, with chunks of debris fused into the ash. It's early July in Georgia. The air is thick and damp and the heat radiates off the ground. Melody and Scott both stand at the perimeter of the large pile and Melody points out something odd to her son.
Melody Farris
I asked Scott, I said, did you throw one of the goats on there or something? You know, maybe one died, you know, because we have several of them. I said, you throw a goat on there or something? Because it was just something that just looked. It was like one big ball of just, you know. And I said, you throw a goat on there or something? And he went over there and looked and, you know, did. And he said, well, no, but that didn't mean daddy, you know, didn't. Well then he really looked.
Narrator
Scott Stepped closer and looked down. At first it was just shapes in the ash. Charred wood, metal, bone colored fragments. Then his brain caught up to what he was seeing. One of those shapes wasn't just bone colored. It was bone. He realized he was looking at what appeared to be a human skull. He backed away and yelled for the others to get the kids out of there. Whatever this was, they didn't need to see it. Melody still wondered out loud if maybe it was an animal, a dead goat or something. But Scott was sure it was the skull of a human being. He called 911 and I will say
Melody Farris
he actually took a stick and picked up. You could tell it was his face. It was a face, you know, you can see the front. You know, of it. And I said, tell me that that's a goat or a coat or anything. I mean you. He took off. He said, I'm calling 911 now.
Narrator
The skull Scott uncovered was human. And when he poked at it, the remains of a face stared up at him. This was no goat jerky county now
Scott Farris
one location of the emergency. 2155 Purcell Blaine. My father has come up missing and I we just searched the property from small farm and I just found something near a farm that doesn't. There was a huge burning brush. Now there's something to find. It could be him, I don't know.
Narrator
But if anyone would know whether this was a human or animal, it would be Scott Farris.
Scott Farris
Now I'm calling you to say that I just. We've been walking around looking for him and I went with it. The fire is still smaller and I'm ex military. I was deployed to Iraq. I've seen what burned up bodies look like and this looks like a body.
Melody Farris
Okay.
Scott Farris
You said your father. Yes, sir. He just turned.
Narrator
Gary wasn't without health problems, even though Most would consider 58 to be relatively young. He'd been having what his wife called spells, but was refusing to follow through with his doctor visits.
Melody Farris
He's had these spells for years and he talks, he gets very slurred speech, his motor coordination gets very off. He stumbles. His dad had Parkinson's and I had kind of wondered if maybe he had Parkinson's, but they did. I never did personally talk to the cardiologist, but I did talk to his physician's assistant and because Amanda and I went with Amanda to go look at a wedding venue. And so we left before the actual cardiologist came in. But they found that he had a leaking aortic valve and a leaking tricuspid valve. And they wanted him to go back to the cardiologist on Friday. He got out late Wednesday and wanted him to go back to the cardiologist on Friday to be hooked up to a heart monitor for a length of time to see, you know, what all was going wrong with his heart. And he refused to go.
Narrator
Of course, this begged the question, did Scott have a spell, stumble and fall into the fire pit? According to Melody, Gary loved burning fires. But she did not. And for good reason.
Scott Farris
Well, Tuesday
Melody Farris
he started to be burned late Tuesday, started to be burned Tuesday this week. Yes, day before yesterday. And grocery all the time out him. He had set the house on fire two years ago this August, the end of August. And I had gotten so scared of fire after that. He had said it in his office. We think what he did wasn't getting ashtray in there. Don't know. That's where it started. My son and I, Scott were here and it did so much damage. And so since then I had been so just scared of fire around here, just way scary. But he is all the time. Just his thing was starting fires. He sat right at my other house in the woods behind my house. We lived in a subdivision. I had a call from a neighbor one morning at 4:00 clock in the morning. Fire department was there. He had started it like the week before and it had been smoldering and it kind of gotten out of control.
Narrator
Sounds like Gary might have been a little bit of a pyromaniac. Not saying he actually was. I mean, that's a real mental disorder and it's not the same thing as being an arsonist. Pyromania is an impulse control disorder. A person feels drawn to setting fires, fascinated by them and sometimes even relieved by them. Like a coping mechanism, a vice. The way some people reach for alcohol or cigarettes. It's weird, man. And honestly, Gary had reasons to need a vice. He was a high powered attorney with health issues and a big family. He didn't get out much, wasn't a partier, and mostly kept to himself. His family described him as a social introvert and he didn't really drink. So pyromaniac maybe. Or maybe Melody's fire incidents were just isolated moments, nothing more. Either way, his real daily habit wasn't liquor. It was a 12 pack of Mountain Dew. Yeah, 12. He drank 12 Mountain Dews daily. That's gotta be worse than alcohol, right?
Melody Farris
So, you know, it had been, I don't know, maybe six months or so since he had burned it before this burn pile here. Yeah, and I mean it had trees, it had fencing, it had, we had pulled up when we did the fire pit down here, we had an excavator here and they had pulled up a bunch of tree stumps and that kind of stuff. But on the brain pile so it had a of lot fencing and stuff on it. And he said something not long ago that burnt. I said please do not burn it, it's too dry, it's too windy, it's too, you know we always go to excuse don't burn. Well Scott came home. I don't know what time it was when he got hit cuz I called him and I was, I was chasing horses.
Narrator
Gary had started the burn pile on Tuesday, the evening of July 3rd. He forgot to close the gate and the horses got out. Melody remembered chasing the horses and calling for her son Scott to help. She was worried about the fire getting out of control because it was going to burn for a long time. The next day, she says, Scott came up to the house for a credit card and remarked that the fire was still going. Right before Melody left the property, she saw Gary gathering up even more wood to put on the fire. She begged him not to make it any bigger, but he didn't listen. Not only was Melody worried about the fire and the property, she was also worried about his mental health. According to her, he had tried to commit suicide twice before they were married. Keep in mind, they had been married for 38 years, but still he had a family history of all kinds of mental and physical problems. Melody didn't just say Gary was struggling. She told investigators his whole family tree was steeped in mental and physical problems. His sister with both bipolar disorder and schizophrenia, in and out of psych hospitals. His mother on antidepressants and antipsychotic meds, eventually being placed in a memory care facility with what she calls really bad Alzheimer's or dementia. And his father, who had mental illnesses of his own, later dying from Parkinson's disease. Melody claimed Gary would say things like I think I'm getting like my parents. Yet they shrugged as a couple through the good and bad times.
Melody Farris
I know somebody asked me, why have you stayed? And I said I took a love of him.
Narrator
In her mind, she wasn't the unhappy wife looking for a way out. She was the one holding the line while everything around them got harder to manage. The more Melody spoke to officers, the more what she had to say seemed like low key versions of Yellowstone. Not with the shootouts and land wars, but in the way she painted the whole family as locked in constant drama. Everything revolved around Big Daddy and the farm. Growing kids coming and going, relying on handouts from a weary patriarch. Then there was the constant tug of war between who's helping, who's taking and who's just tired of the whole thing. You might have had some conversations in your family that sound pretty similar.
Melody Farris
I told one of the other deputies that was here. I said, we've been having trouble with him taking money ready over $900 a month. He's got a checking account routing him. And I said, gary refuses to talk to him. Refuses to. I said, he sends emails and text messages, that's all he does.
Narrator
She went on to allege that her oldest son, Chris, was unkind, bordering on abusive to his kids, who often stayed at the farm.
Melody Farris
Hesse. Chris, I'm going to stop you from taking money some way, somehow, some. You die to get help. You cannot treat two girls like this. You cannot treat, you know, I said, I beg you, get help.
Narrator
Melody talked about all the expensive trips her son planned. A bachelor party in Panama, a trip out west because a friend's dad died, and yet another leisure trip he was planning before all this happened. But Chris wasn't the only one taking advantage of Gary. According to Melody, Gary was just like,
Melody Farris
you know, it's not like I can, you know, he kept saying, well, I can afford to do it. And I said, gary, that's not the point. I mean, that's like spot that lives above our barn. He hasn't worked since he came back from Iraq except for a very short time. And I can't make him work, I can't make him in a nice. He immediately 35 Saturday. And I said, Gary, he needs to work. He said, well, you don't work, Gary.
Detective
Well, we imagine this place is a full time job, take care of you.
Melody Farris
I mean, it is, you know, and Scott, I mean, and Scott is go to hell. But I mean, like this last week, I mean, he's played golf three days, he's gone to the lake, he's gone. You know, it's just like, come on now, this is Scott that's done all this.
Detective
So he's just enjoying life.
Melody Farris
He is enjoying life to the fullest.
Narrator
Melody gave details of a family under strain, a big property, lots of animals and not enough help. But she said she was working sun up to sundown while her son Scott drifted in and out instead of helping consistently. And Gary's health was getting worse. All of the grown children were mooching off their generous dad, and Melody was trying to reign it all in. And hold it all together. While Gary was trying to keep the peace in a setup like that, it isn't hard to imagine his heart finally giving out. Or him having one of his spells at the wrong time near an open fire. And for a little while, that's exactly what this looked like. A tragic accident on a hobby farm with a burned body where a husband and father used to be. But when what's left of Gary was finally boxed up and sent to the medical examiner, detectives started digging into the burn itself and the digital trail it left behind. What they found in the ashes and in the timeline didn't fit the idea that this was just an accident. Soon the family would dissolve into bickering and finger pointing and blaming each other for Big Daddy's death.
Melody Farris
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Narrator
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Melody Farris
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Chris Farris
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Melody Farris
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Narrator
Yes you can. A five minute quick and easy calorie burning workout. Give it a try. Come join our sweat sesh on TikTok. In Cherokee County, Georgia. Melody and Gary Farris have spent the last five years of their lives on a 10 acre hobby farm. Melodies Dreamscape. Gary worked hard as an attorney and Melody worked on the farm and managed the family. Four grown children with children of their own, including Scott, who lived on the property. The last time Melody saw her husband was on Tuesday evening, July 3, after he'd set a bonfire or burn pile. Melody said he came upstairs that evening, asked if she was making dinner, and she pointed him to the food in the fridge. After that, he went back down to the basement bedroom where he slept alone with his CPAP. On July 4th, both Melody and Scott said they never laid eyes on Gary, and Melody told investigators this wasn't unusual. He kept to himself even on July 4th. It wasn't until the next morning, July 5th, that two of his grandkids wanted to ride the RTV with Big Daddy but couldn't find him. Their daughter Amanda was already there. Their Oldest son Chris showed up soon after, and the adults started searching the house and the property. Scott walked down to the burn pile, looked into the ashes, and saw part of dad's skull. So he called 911. While detectives and medical examiners were sifting through the bones. In the days that followed, detectives continued processing the situation with the family. This is Chris.
Chris Farris
What I want to think is he just had one of his spells and something happened. Had a heart attack and fell in there.
Melody Farris
Just.
Chris Farris
I don't know, man. Just something seems. I don't know, something seems weird to me.
Detective
Well, I will tell you what we do is we handle. Try to handle it as if it's the worst possible scenario, because obviously, if you approach it like that, then when it turns out to be that he had a heart attack and fell in the fire, you've done everything you could.
Chris Farris
Yes.
Detective
What we do is we investigate something like this. We follow the evidence and we gather evidence and we try to get to. The evidence is going to lead us to some sort of conclusion in terms of what happened.
Scott Farris
Right.
Detective
So, you know, he will go. Your father's remains will go to an autopsy. So that is, you know, essentially the next step. We're going to, you know, be documenting outside the inside of the house. That's why it's secured, because. Because this is the house. It's not far from the house. We have to, you know, look at everything and make sure we're not missing anything and do a good job of documenting so that nobody can come and say, you know, if it does turn out that he did fall in the fire, nobody can, and he just had a heart attack. Nobody can say we didn't do a good job and we missed the fact that someone did something bad to him.
Chris Farris
I just want to know what happened.
Detective
That's what we're going to look at.
Chris Farris
I hope to God that it's just an accident. I just hope. I understand, but.
Detective
And we'll do everything we can to get all of you because, you know,
Chris Farris
we all loved him very much, but
Narrator
someone obviously did not love Gary very much, because what the autopsy revealed, after putting all of Gary's burned pieces back together, was a bullet lodged in his rib cage. Unless it was suicide. But if that were the case, then why would you be hearing this story on sword and scale? Once the medical examiner confirmed he'd been shot, detectives took that news back to the family. One of the first calls was to their son Chris.
Detective
Well, I'm going to tell you something, and I just want to make sure you're ready. And then I'm at. I. I just want you to tell me what you think when I say it. Okay?
Scott Farris
Okay.
Detective
The evidence we have obtained on the
Scott Farris
scene
Detective
suggests to us that your father was shooting.
Scott Farris
Wow. Wow, that's a lot. Oh, man. Have you told anybody else this yet?
Detective
There are some other people that are aware.
Scott Farris
I can't believe it, man. I know when I was talking, I was just like I told you I suspected, but I just wanted not to be. But everything in my soul not right with this.
Detective
Well, that would be accurate.
Scott Farris
Whatever you need from. You need from me, let me know, man.
Narrator
When the medical examiner opens the bags from the burn pit, there's no body in the usual sense. Gary has been reduced to charred pieces of bone and scraps of tissue divided into almost 50 bags labeled by quadrant. Gary was 6 foot, 5 inches and more than 300 pounds. The bones are blackened, brittle and cracked from heat with fragments of pelvis, leg bones and skull mixed in with the ash. The soft tissue left is moldy and wet after sitting in its own liquid collected in the bottom of the bags. The only way to be sure it's Gary is by matching the teeth to all his dental records. And there's no guarantee that this bullet killed him. Investigators quickly rule out an intruder. There's no broken glass, no kicked in door, no drawers pulled out or valuables missing. This isn't a burglary gone bad. It's a dead man on his own land at a house that sits by itself at the end of a gravel road. Whoever did this was extremely close to Gary.
Detective
So like the night of the third and the day of the fourth, you were just never even in Cherokee County?
Scott Farris
Never. Okay.
Detective
Can you. If I asked you if there's anyone who would want to hurt your dad, what would you say? Would Scott ever want to hurt your dad?
Scott Farris
No.
Detective
Did they get along pretty well?
Scott Farris
Scott, my brother?
Melody Farris
Yeah.
Scott Farris
I mean, you know, they lived in the same place and they bickered back and forth all the time, of course. But you know, let's be honest. Like, Scott has a pretty good life. He's got his apartment, he's got. I mean, my dad does a lot for him and he loves my dad.
Detective
Who would stand to gain it, who would stand to gain anything if something happened to your dad?
Scott Farris
Honestly, I mean, as far as money goes.
Detective
As far as anything, probably.
Scott Farris
Probably money wise, I don't know.
Narrator
While the kids are still clinging to the hope that this might somehow be a horrible accident, investigators sit Melody back down and tell her what the medical examiner has actually found.
Melody Farris
They've been sifting through the remains in
Detective
the ashes and they have found a
Scott Farris
projectile and some bones.
Melody Farris
Okay.
Detective
Does not appear to be self inflicted. Okay.
Melody Farris
So, I mean, do we know what kind or what?
Narrator
The circle was already pretty small. Gary, his wife, and his grown kids who came and went, but it was growing even smaller. You know how it all comes down to motive and opportunity. The motive seems simple. Money. There you go. Once you rule out a stranger, what you're left with is the ugliest kind of murder. Someone inside the family did it. And the rest of them were trying to decide how much they really want to say out loud. The only two family members who were at or around the property at the time of Gary's murder were Melody and Scott. Once detectives found the projectile in Gary's remains, the search was on for the gun that fired it. On 10 acre farms in rural Georgia, guns are pretty much part of the landscape. There are long guns. A.22. And according to Scott, about two weeks before Gary's death, he saw a small pistol in the basement close to where Gary slept when he was looking for a remote. Because AT&T was there at the house trying to repair the Internet.
Scott Farris
Last one, when I found that.38 special, I said, where in the hell did that come from? And the only reason why I didn't continue to, you know, to ask him about it and everything is I had the AT&T out there and I didn't want to pull the sucker out and, you know, scared the crap out of him. I just shut the drawer back and I was, you know, planning on asking my mom and dad where it came from, but it just slipped my mind. And it was sitting right there. Was it in a holster? Yeah, it was like this old leather, crappy looking holster. And, you know, I just, you know, I saw it and just kind of pulled it out. And you tell it's just a.38 special. Small. Did it look. I don't know how to say this. Old? Yes. Or like a more modern revolver. It did. Did not look brand new. It looked like I had H on it.
Narrator
Now there's a pattern investigators can't ignore. Two weeks before Gary's death, Scott sees a.38 in a drawer in a basement bedroom. After Gary disappears, that gun is gone in the basement room. They later find a second bullet on the floor. When the lab compares that round to the one taken from Gary's ribs, they say both bullets were fired from the same gun. One shot in the house, one shot that ends up lodged in Gary's bones and the gun that ties them both together used to sit in a drawer beside his bed. And it's not there anymore, huh? At this point, detectives note two things for sure. Gary was shot. And whoever pulled the trigger was close enough to know their way around the house. The pool of suspects is basically just the people who live on that land and move through that basement. So they don't just look for bullets and phones. They listen to how the family talks about each other. And when they ask Melody about Scott, she doesn't describe a calm, steady son.
Melody Farris
Does he have any PTSD or anything from. He's always been very hot headed ever since he was a little boy. I mean, to the point that, I mean, he weighed 9:1 when he was born and he was just a handful.
Detective
So you're not protecting either of your
Narrator
sons that you know of?
Melody Farris
No.
Detective
And when.
Narrator
And we're not gonna find any evidence to prove otherwise?
Melody Farris
No.
Narrator
Can you shed any light on any of this?
Melody Farris
No. I mean, I would like to. I don't know. I don't know. I mean, like I said, Scott is very hot tempered. I mean, and he and Gary, I have seen them get into the point that I was just like, okay, y' all just take it down a notch.
Detective
I'd really like to believe that if Scott shot Gary on your property or inside your house and then the body
Narrator
was disposed of in your fire pit,
Detective
that you would probably know about it or find some evidence of it yourself or help clean up or.
Melody Farris
Yeah, no, like I said, I wouldn't.
Detective
You were there.
Melody Farris
Well, I mean, I was, but I left, you know, and I just saw it smoldering. Didn't think anything, you know, okay, it's not blazing. It's not. Whatever, we're good, you know, didn't think, you know, but I kept thinking last night, why did Scott come in here and get so angry last night that. But that's not all that unusual either, for him to just blow up.
Narrator
Scott insists he's not a hothead. He admits he gets angry like anyone. And he admits loud bangs still make him jump. But he pushes back on the idea that he's some kind of ticking bomb.
Scott Farris
My version of PTSD is if I hear a loud bang or something and that I'm just not prepared for. My adrenaline just goes through the roof. My heart is about pounding out of my chest, and I've learned to. I start taking deep breaths and calms me down, but gunfire doesn't bother me. I can still be around that, you know, nightmares have ended and they ended a long time ago. Other than that, no, I don't get violent with anybody. I'm just like my dad and you know, I make friends everywhere I go.
Narrator
By all accounts, Scott and his dad were really likable guys who made friends everywhere they went and they got along well together. When his dad wasn't able to keep up with the farm anymore, Scott was a huge help. It was more Gary and Melody who didn't get along so well. And Melody had her own habit of making friends wherever she went, if you know what I mean. What I mean is that Melody didn't just collect friends, she collected other women's partners, starting with a guy named Ted who'd spent more than 20 years as the boyfriend of Gary's sister. So yeah, Melody's brother in law. Melody was fucking her brother in law. The truth is that Melody and Scott had been together for decades until something pulled them apart. And that something the family would later say was Melody. This was Chris's take on it.
Chris Farris
You know, my parents don't get along, they don't honestly don't really like each other and so the communication, not liked each other.
Detective
This has been going, this is nothing new.
Chris Farris
My, my grandmother, in about a series of three months my grandmother had open heart surgery that went really wrong. She survived, but it put her debilitating at the around a month or two after that my ex wife told me she was leaving. Then through that whole situation my mother had to be in Alabama because my mom said my grandmother's house because she could no longer function on her own. So my mom had to go up there, get her house, deal with the affairs.
Narrator
This was a bit of a double entendre. Melody had to deal with the affairs of grandma and her house, but also had her own affairs.
Chris Farris
So during that period my mom started the affairs affairs started withdrawing a lot of money out of my father's account. I remember him calling me and say, your mother just took $50,000 out of my account that I had set aside to pay taxes with. So I'm scrambling to find out what I'm gonna do. She spent a lot of money.
Narrator
Everybody was spending old big Daddy's hard earned money and nobody seemed to be bringing in any of their own. According to Melody, Scott was constantly taking the debit card for cash. But Scott would say his dad knew about every penny and it was considered compensation for helping on the farm. Melody would say that Chris was abusive to his kids and constantly took vacations at the expense of Gary Big Daddy. But Chris would answer that his dad didn't have a problem with it. In fact, he was going to go with Chris on vacation shortly before he died. And Melody wasn't happy about it.
Melody Farris
The last thing that Chris had done was booked a vacation to the beach that they're supposed to be leaving Saturday. I think it's Saturday. And Gary had said, I'm going to go with him. Instead of him just taking the money, like what he usually does, I'm gonna go with him. And he said, are you gonna go? And I said, no, I'm not going. It's Gary he keeps taking. I mean, it's serious money. I mean, it's not. It's serious money. I mean, like I said, it's anywhere from 8, $900 a month, plus the girl's airline tickets.
Narrator
To hear Melody tell it, even plane tickets for her granddaughters were one more example of everyone spending Gary's money. But the truth was that trips with the kids weren't exactly what had nearly blown this marriage up years earlier.
Chris Farris
I mean, I told him he needed to find somebody else, you know, because she talks so bad about him to everyone to make him out to be such an awful person. And now, granted, she does that to a lot of people, too. My mother has issues, basically. He was in a tough situation. He didn't want to break the whole family up. My dad's a very conservative, traditional person, you know, and I don't know all the ins and outs, and when you're a kid, you don't want to hear that kind of stuff about your parents, no matter how old you are. But there was definitely a lot of. Lot of problems. A lot of issues and a lot of problems.
Detective
Okay. Have you ever known there to be any domestic violence or anything?
Chris Farris
Never.
Detective
Is there any substance abuse going on, any. Anything other than her cheating and money issues? Do you know any names of anyone she had an affair with or. You just know.
Chris Farris
She had a Ted Wiley and then some guy named Rusty. I think his last name's Barton. And I don't know that that was an affair that actually happened. That's just something we suspected because she would tell my daughters things, you know, big Daddy, this is Satin. That. And then she would, like.
Scott Farris
She would.
Detective
Oh, bad mouth.
Chris Farris
Yeah, badmouth him. But she'd be on the. She would have, like, always on her phone, always talking to somebody. Ends up getting a tattoo right here that says xoxo. And my daughter said, well, that's who. When she calls people, that's. It says XOXO on her phone. And the. Like, my Brother told me today. He's like, yeah, she's got a whole nother cell phone.
Narrator
According to Chris, Gary tried his best to avoid divorce for a while. They even moved away and tried to hit the reset button. When that didn't work, Gary bought Melody's dream farm, where he ultimately died.
Chris Farris
He thought buying this would fix everything. He did for a while. And then things started happening again. So it's been an on and off thing.
Detective
And then has anybody ever actually, actually filed for divorce? Did you know?
Chris Farris
I think my dad filed, but he withdrew it.
Scott Farris
Okay.
Chris Farris
Because I remember him calling me and telling him he was gonna take her back. And I told him, you know, I mean, I told him not to buy this place because it's not gonna fix it. I mean, I told him he needed to find somebody else.
Narrator
Scott backed up Chris's statements about his parents marriage in a separate interview.
Scott Farris
Why do you think they reconciled and never divorced? Why don't you think your dad followed her with it?
Narrator
My dad loved her.
Scott Farris
He didn't like conflict. He didn't like to argue. He, you know, he always tried to find the easiest way out of any kind of conflict. And that's part of why he. I mean, I knew he loved Guanter. He was the one. I mean, I think at one point he said something to either Chris or somebody. I just heard that he tried to get her to go to marriage counseling and she wouldn't do it.
Narrator
By the time detectives were done listening to everyone, Melody, the two sons, and the two daughters, Emily and Amanda, they'd heard every angle on this family. The affairs, the money, the move, the dream farm Gary bought to try to hold it all together. Emily and Chris were pretty clear. They think their mother is capable of this. Amanda, the youngest, was still defending Melody while planning her wedding with her. Scott also thought his mother might be capable of it. But he was a person of interest, too. He was the son who lived on the farm and stood to gain the property if Gary were to be gone. None of this told them who actually pulled the trigger, though on paper, it looked bad for Melody. But Scott, with his temper, his time on the farm, and his proximity to the missing gun still seemed like the most dangerous wild card. So detectives stopped asking about feelings and went Back to the three days that mattered most. July 3rd, 4th and 5th. To see what evidence said about who was there when Gary died. At first, the family wanted to believe this was an accident. Gary had one of his dizzy spells, maybe a heart attack, and fell into the fire. Poof. Burned quickly and gone Just like that. But finding the bullet immediately rules that out. And the body burning quickly in a fire, well, that's just not how it works, kids.
Detective
Bodies don't burn like that. You don't burn on bodies. You just don't throw them on a burn pile. That's unusual. The amount of effort needed to burn a body is significant. Go.
Melody Farris
I know that. I wouldn't know. I mean, that was just. I know that he burned one, okay?
Detective
I'm telling you, bodies just don't burn in fires.
Scott Farris
Or.
Detective
I mean, they just don't go away.
Scott Farris
We're all water. You can't burn water.
Detective
Incinerators are designed to burn for a very long time in an exceedingly high heat. That is not reaching a regular bonfire. It's not reaching a brush fire. It's barely reaching. It's not even really reaching a house fire. House fires where houses collapse on people, we still find more of those people than we did of your husband.
Melody Farris
Okay, then how did he work?
Detective
It was outside your bedroom window. I was hoping maybe you could shed some light on it.
Melody Farris
All I saw was I never went down there.
Narrator
But someone did, because someone would have needed to make sure the body itself kept burning until the job was done. And Melody was on the property all day long on July 4, the 5th, is when they all went searching for Gary and found what Melody claimed to be a goat.
Melody Farris
I mean, when we were all down there the other day, I mean, everybody, me and Amanda and Scott and Chris, even, you know, Addison and Cameron, I think we were all circling around Scott. Actually, when we were discussing that about the goat, I said, do we have a goat to die? Did you put one in the burn pile and did your daddy put one on, you know, whatever? Because all I saw was two legs. What I thought was two legs sticking up.
Narrator
Melody wasn't just playing along.
Detective
So that fire, it had to be tended to for a while.
Melody Farris
I just told Gary, I said, you've got to keep an eye on that.
Detective
Someone had to go back repeatedly.
Melody Farris
And do what to keep it burning. I did not do it. I did not do that. I mean, when I tell you that fire was massive. It was massive. And he had a bunch of. Like I said, there was fencing and boards and all kinds of woefully insufficient
Detective
for the type of heat and the amount of the burn and everything else about it. Woefully insufficient.
Narrator
Woefully insufficient. It sounds like feedback on a failed science project, but what he's really saying is her version wouldn't come close to doing this a Fire like the one she describes doesn't erase a 300 pound man. Someone had to stay with it and continue feeding the fire.
Melody Farris
That's all I know. That is all I know. That's all I know. That was on it. I know that.
Detective
What can you tell me about the blood in that. What can you tell me about the blood you found?
Melody Farris
I don't. I did not know that there was any blood. I mean, how much blood are we talking?
Detective
We found blood. Do you know anything about the blood?
Melody Farris
I did not know anything about the blood. Nothing.
Detective
And the entire time you were there because this is where. And see if this makes sense to you and I'll let you try to explain how this could happen. Something happened to him. How did he die?
Melody Farris
I didn't know.
Detective
You were told. You were told how he died, weren't you? What happened?
Melody Farris
Well, we just assumed when Scott said this. This is human remains on this fire.
Narrator
But you know what they say about assumptions, right? It's an old Benny Hill joke.
Detective
Have you been told how we. How he died, what we found?
Melody Farris
He told me that there was a. A shot or whatever. A slug in the red.
Detective
Okay, so what does that indicate to you?
Melody Farris
A gunshot wood.
Detective
Okay.
Melody Farris
I mean, that's like. I mean, I told Amanda. I mean, we told her last night here. And that's when I found out about. It was when we came here and it was like. How do you wrap your head around this? I mean, I'm thinking he just got caught up in a fire.
Detective
Because what we have is gunshot wound, burned up body, all of which time, a long period of time. And you were the only person at the house, so that's why I was hoping. I know. You keep saying you didn't. You don't know anything and you didn't do it and you keep saying that.
Melody Farris
No, I did not.
Detective
I didn't, but you. But the problem is, is there's almost no way in this world that you didn't see something, hear something, or know something and someone is shot, moved, and burned and burned and burned and burned 30ft from your bedroom window.
Narrator
Of course Melody knew how he died. It was absurd for her to sit there and claim she didn't or she forgot or whatever. But this wasn't the detective's first rodeo in Cherokee County, Georgia. And Melody's role in Gary's death was becoming more and more suspicious. Or sus, as the kids say these days.
Detective
The I don't know anything does not make sense. It doesn't jive, it doesn't match the evidence. And it just doesn't work.
Melody Farris
But I don't know the time frame. I mean, I know when I saw him.
Detective
You realize, though this makes no sense.
Melody Farris
I.
Scott Farris
Do.
Detective
You realize that I have had hundreds of conversations with people that have lost loved ones, people who have had loved ones shot and we didn't know who did it, people that have had loved ones who they have done something bad to. I have had these conversations with people on both ends of the side, both sides of the spectrum. I've had countless ones. People tend to act certain ways, whether they want to or not, but I'm
Melody Farris
honestly telling you, I don't know.
Detective
And the problem is that just doesn't fit. It's absolutely impossible that you don't know. I'm not saying. I'm saying it is absolute. The evidence we have, it is absolutely impossible.
Narrator
By now, detectives had made it clear her I don't know act doesn't match what they're seeing. A body burned to fragments, bullets in the bones, blood inside the house. A fire that, in their words, would be woefully insufficient unless somebody kept coming back to feed it. They've pointed these things out to Melody, but she doesn't know yet that they've tread Gary's cell phone moving back and forth between the house and the burn pile on the very day Melody said she never saw him. To add to this, Scott says he searched for his dad's wallet the day they found the body. He always kept it on him or in his room, never in the car. Scott searched the car twice over and found nothing. Yet later that day, it was in Melody's hands. When he asked her where she found it, she said the car. Detectives were onto Melody's lies, so they changed tact. At this point, if she won't talk about the night he died, maybe she'll say more than she means to about how she really felt about him.
Detective
Didn't anybody know I like him?
Melody Farris
Oh, I can say probably all the kids, they loved him. They didn't necessarily like him. I mean, that's what I have always said. I love him.
Detective
How do you feel about him?
Melody Farris
Well, I love him to death. I don't necessarily like him. I did not like the person that he had become.
Narrator
Did you catch that? She said she loved him to death. Huh. Figure of speech. During the investigation, Chris and Scott both found themselves going back over the little things they'd brushed off at the time. The meals she made for Gary, the way he'd get sick afterwards, the spells everyone talked about and nobody really named they Started to ask themselves not, did she really love him to death, but was death the version of him that she preferred?
Chris Farris
My daughter, when she landed, called my mother and asked, can we have that? Remember the sleepover? Can we have the sleepover? They wanted to do it the third. And she said tonight would not be a good night. That's what I know for a fact. Other than that, other facts, I'll tell you what else I know, and I don't know. When I was in. When my dad was in the hospital, was it April? I came in there, you know, I walk in and I was like, what's the deal for my dad? He's like, oh, I'm okay, I'm okay. Like, no, you're not okay.
Scott Farris
What's the deal?
Chris Farris
He said, well, you know, I just keep having these spells. And I was like, well, what's going on? He said, well, your mama says my blood sugar, because she has this test
Scott Farris
kit, blah, blah, blah.
Chris Farris
And I was like, okay. I go to the doctor and I
Narrator
say, what's up with this blood sugar?
Chris Farris
She tells me. She's like, I run marathons and your dad has better blood sugar than I
Scott Farris
do,
Chris Farris
so don't say anything. Let me finish. So I was like, oh, okay. Now she could. This, like, number one. Can you, like, this whole blood sugar thing, Where'd that come from? You know? And why does Melody Ferris have a blood sugar test kit? And how can she. And then I asked the doctor that. She tells me that. So then my dad. I'm sitting there and she goes. He goes, well, about a week ago, I was sitting in the theater and your mother comes down and hands me a tray of freshly baked cookies. And he said, I ate them. And he said, I probably shouldn't have because she doesn't even have the time to even talk to me. And when she does talk to me, she's yelling at me and screaming at me. But I was like, well, they look good. So I ate them. And he said they started burning my mouth and burning my throat. And he said, then I started feeling bad after that. So I called my sister and I called my best friend, and I told him that. And so I said. And he was just like, oh, I think she's trying to poison me or something and just laughing it off. And I thought, oh, my God, you know, like, nah, I mean, come on, you know, maybe. But he said, well, then a few weeks before that, she brought home a pasta dish and the same thing happened. I said, so I just went to the doctor and I said, look, I Said they have a farm, they have a lot of stuff going on out there with pesticides. And I was like, maybe y' all should run the toxicology thing on him. That might not be a bad idea. Just try not to be like, holy shit. He just told me that he thinks my mom might try to poison him. You know, I didn't. You don't want to just tell the doctor that and set off something that doesn't need to be set off. But now, thinking back on it, I wish I would have said something a little bit more.
Narrator
One of Melody's final acts of hospitality towards Gary was caught on tape. It appeared Gary knew that. That he was being poisoned, but maybe nobody believed him. This is the voice of Gary after he's discovered a shattered plate right outside his bedroom just hours before his disappearance.
Scott Farris
What happens when you leave a plate, forget to take it upstairs? A minor temper tantrum, of course. I had supper tonight and it was. Was six for me, so I'm sure I'll be feeling poorly here within minutes, but we'll see.
Narrator
When the two brothers were interviewed together for hours, their memories became clearer and clearer.
Scott Farris
Within this past year, the fighting between the two of them just got, you know, worse and worse. And the comments. My mother, my dad never talked, said anything negative to me about my mother, except for just like her going out and spending so much money on stuff like that and all. But he never, you know, you know, said anything other than that negative way. But my mother, on the other hand, man, I can't tell you how many times I've heard her say, I can't wait till the day I don't have to live with him. I wish she would just have a heart attack and die. And yeah, she definitely tried to turn all of us only to each other. She has said stuff about him, she has said stuff about Emily. So she's just trying to, you know, basically stir the pot up with us. She's been doing that ever since all this happened. She's been trying to get me to turn against him and my sister Emily. And I guess she's been, you know, vice versa with Amanda. I mean, trying to get Amanda turned on all of us. And, and that's not really. I mean, that's. That's kind of crap my mother would do. I mean, pretty much, yes, she loved drama.
Chris Farris
It's been always really weird. My mom would treat like strangers and people she recently knew or even like her pets a lot better than her family.
Narrator
It wasn't that Melody couldn't show emotion. It's that every emotion began and ended with her. And the only thing she ever seemed to feel for Gary was resentment. Resentment that he'd seen through her hedonistic version of marriage. She didn't just want to have her cake and eat it too. She wanted to eat hers, take his, and still complain that there wasn't enough frosting.
Scott Farris
Family members, you know, passed away. She'd been more upset. But when I get home with when I discover his body, his remains, and even the paramedic says, yes, those are human remains. She had zero emotion. None. No crime, no nothing. But yet when Rebel the horse gets put down a couple months after we find him, she's bawling her eyes out.
Narrator
The more the brothers spoke about their mother, the more they realized they just may have been raised by a sociopath. Protein packed meals in 10 minutes. TikTok's got millions of them. Could you whip one up in under eight? Probably. But hey, it's not a race. Grab the recipes on TikTok and start cooking.
Melody Farris
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Narrator
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Melody Farris
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Scott Farris
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Melody Farris
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Narrator
Download TikTok and check it out.
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Narrator
On July 5, 2018, on the Ferris family's 10 acre farm off Perfect Purcell Lane in Cherokee County, Georgia, Gary Farris, a 58 year old Atlanta attorney, is missing. His truck is there and his CPAP and personal items are inside. Also inside are blood droplets leading from the kitchen to Gary's basement room. His wallet ends up in the hands of Melody, who says she's found it in Gary's car. The same car Scott had already checked twice. The timeline matters. Gary's last confirmed day is July 3, when he's been working around a burn pile behind the house. Melody claims she last saw him that night and never checked on him the next day. That next day is July 4th, and Scott isn't on the property. But Melody is. And by the morning of July 5, the family searches until Scott is called to the burn pile and recognizes human remains. He calls 911. At first it looks like a terrible accident. Then the autopsy destroys that. Gary was shot with a bullet lodged in his remains. Investigators say a burn pile would have been woefully insufficient to destroy a body of that size unless someone kept tending it. Gary's cell phone pings from the house to the burn pile and back to the house. But investigators know that Gary has already been shot and set ablaze. So the case collapses to the people with access and time. And the spotlight lands where it's been sitting all along the house. The burn pile and Melody. Only a few missing pieces were left in this puzzle. One of these was the missing pistol that Scott had seen in the basement before Gary's death. Another one was the question of how Gary's body was moved from the house to the burn pile.
Detective
We found other things in the basement
Melody Farris
light
Detective
other things in the basement that are significant. We know how long it took to. We know lengths of time things took. We know that moving somebody that's 300 pounds and 6 foot 4, that's bigger than I am, that is a significant feat. We are putting layer upon layer upon layer later on this picture. And right now, the only thing you're saying, bear with me for a second. The only thing you are saying is that you don't know anything about anything about anything. That does not. And you know what? That I will tell you that does not make sense to me from a very. Just simply based on the information that I know that does just simply not make logical sense in any way, shape or form.
Narrator
Regardless of how the body was moved or where the pistol was, this case was prosecutable. Melody was arrested on June 18, 2019, nearly one year after Gary's death. During this time, she continued to have her affair with Rusty. Remember Ted, the first guy she had an affair with, the guy who had been her sister in law's lover for 20 years. Well, Rusty followed a similar pattern. Melody liked to keep it in the family, I guess. Rusty was the stepson of Melody's cousin, Martha Jane. Gross.
Scott Farris
Yeah, this Rusty guy, he just came in the picture when Martha Jane had.
Chris Farris
I had some suspicions about it before my sister's wedding because Emily called me a few months before and said, Melody's showing up in Nashville. This Rusty guy driving daddy's Mercedes or daddy's whatever car, I don't remember what car he had at the time and just, you know, acting really funny. And then she invited him to my sister's wedding in Franklin, Tennessee and was dancing with him and acting extremely too friendly.
Narrator
Rusty took a while to come forward with crucial information, but fortunately, he had a conscience. What Melody told him left no doubt and would be used in the trial.
Scott Farris
Also, I wanted to let you know what I told your lawyer, that I'm
Detective
putting my name on the line, too, because that's how confident I am in you. You and about what you're going to tell us. Okay.
Narrator
That would be an interest to us,
Scott Farris
not the time or anything about what happened. I think there was only one conversation. That is what you're looking for. Okay.
Chris Farris
Okay. Okay.
Scott Farris
And it was the last conversation.
Detective
Okay. And it would be safe to say it wasn't much talking after that.
Scott Farris
No, no, that was the end of the conversation. Okay.
Melody Farris
So.
Detective
And it's at the last time you was with her?
Narrator
No, no, but it's.
Scott Farris
Talked to her.
Chris Farris
Yeah, I've talked to her.
Scott Farris
Talk to her every seal. I talked to her every day. But again, every day was just.
Chris Farris
Yeah, every day.
Detective
So when that. Let's talk about that conversation. That, that, that you feel.
Scott Farris
So probably the last minute of the last conversation. She said, gary is in the burn pile. No, she said, he is in the burn pile. And I said, what? And she said, he's in the burn pile. And I said, do not say another word and do not tell me anything. I do not need to know.
Detective
Okay.
Scott Farris
And that is everything. If I'm going to give an ounce, I'm going to give a pound. That was all of it. That was all. That was everything that she said that had impacted anything to do with whatever happened.
Detective
That's pretty. I mean. And I don't know what happened.
Chris Farris
Yeah.
Scott Farris
I don't know when happened or what happened.
Detective
And here's the thing. At the time that that statement was
Narrator
made, you gotta remember, he wasn't even reported as missing by the time the trial took place in October of 2024. Melody's defense tried to shove the spotlight back onto Scott, the son on the property, the hothead with supposed ptsd, the one they argued had access and opportunity. More importantly, they pulled a statement of Chris saying he preferred.38 caliber ammunition, which they located on his premises. But that narrative contradicted the very finding that changed everything. Scott had never owned a.38 caliber pistol or revolver. He had only seen one in the basement. In a twist, a woman came forward to say her gun matching the murder weapon had come up missing in the weeks prior to Gary's murder. It was Melody's cousin, the stepmother of Melody's lover, Rusty. And turned out Melody had spent a few weeks at her house Helping to take care of her. One last question lingered in the minds of the jury. How did tiny Melody move big Daddy's body? The answer was a tractor. A tractor with a big bucket attached. Melody knew how to drive the tractor, and Scott knew this because he had taught her. The tractor was moved on Tuesday night and the RTV was moved in the middle of the night.
Scott Farris
Because the reason why I remember that is tractor being there is because there was a cat that I've never seen before. And it was sitting right there on the. On that implement on the back of the tractor. And that's when I walked out and saw the cat. Yeah. So I knew the tractor was there on the third. After that, I don't. Until the fifth, when you physically walk out there and saw it. Yeah. Where I. I didn't think even to look. So the only way I knew that it was down here is because I went looking for my dad and saw it was parked there. And that's when I walked down there and put my hand on the hood to see if it was still warm.
Narrator
When detectives cornered Melody on this, all she had were flimsy excuses and a panicked voice.
Detective
And on that property when you were there, something that did not happen in the blink of an eye, something that took time, something that took people, something that took moving. The tractor was moved from Tuesday night and Gary could not have done it. The RTV was moved in the middle of the night and Gary could not have done. Things were done. Things happened.
Melody Farris
Was moved in the middle of the night.
Narrator
You said you parked it in one
Scott Farris
spot and woke up.
Melody Farris
That was during the day.
Detective
Yeah, that was. And that was the next. But the tractor wasn't. And here's the thing, even.
Melody Farris
But at the end of the day, I just assumed that Scott can come in. You did.
Detective
And I'm telling you that we can find evidence to prove that that is not how it went down and that
Melody Farris
is not what happened now. I don't know. I mean, I was with a man in jail and Cameron.
Detective
Okay, but the night of the 3rd, the only person there until 11:30
Melody Farris
with me.
Detective
Yes. And then after that, you were still there. His body was burned in that fire pit. Unquestionable. You saw it with your own two eyes. 11:30, that fire is still going.
Melody Farris
Yeah.
Detective
In that time frame, you don't have. Nobody came through the woods and was sitting there tending to this fire for. For time.
Melody Farris
But Scott was on that property at that point in time, too.
Narrator
Scott found his father in the burn pile and called 911. Melody watched that and later tried to make him out to be a murderer. It's one thing to lie to the police and it's quite another thing entirely to hand your own child to the wolves and call it self defense. What a bitch.
Scott Farris
I was like gloves are off. I mean you try to throw your own child under the bus. Straight up lied to the police and I confronted her are valid. So she's like, I never said that. I'm like it says in the police report.
Narrator
By the time Melody Farris trial wrapped up in late 2024, the prosecution had presented a 18 day case, calling dozens of witnesses and more than a thousand pieces of physical, digital and forensic evidence. On November 4, 2024, a Cherokee county jury found her guilty on all five charges. Malice murder, felony murder, aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, concealing the death of another and making false statements. The verdict came after several days of deliberation following closing arguments at her sentencing hearing the next day, the Superior Court judge sentenced Ferris to life in prison with the possibility of parole after 30 years for the murder conviction and an additional five year term for related charges to run concurrently. The judge also barred her from contact with certain family members. As part of the court order, the prosecutor read a letter from Gary's daughter Emily as part of the victim impact statement. She said that since Gary was taken, her family was living inside a unbearable void. Not sometimes. Every day. They'd lost the laughter, the warmth, the steady presence that held them all together. And now even the happy moments felt contaminated because he wasn't there to share them. But the worst part wasn't only that he was gone, but it was who did it. The betrayal of realizing the suffering came from the person who should have cared for them the most. Their own mother. And as the prosecutor read her words, Chris sat in the background, breaking down openly sobbing, wiping tears from his face. Scott conveyed an expression of hurt so deep it was impossible to ignore, while Melody just sat there, resolved to finish what she started one way or another. In the moments that preceded her statement, she spoke to the judge in a calm and steady voice. But the second she began reading, she suddenly and dramatically, uncontrollably became tearful.
Melody Farris
In July 5, 2018, six years, five months ago today, again, the worst nightmare that I could have ever imagined. Not only my world, but my family's world was absolutely destroyed at the hands of one person. I've had six plus years of being told not to talk. Don't say that. Take legal advice. I couldn't walk out of this courtroom today. And drop over dead I want to make sure that my children, my grandchildren, and Gary's family, and to be honest, at this point in time, the entire world who has viewed this. I have waited for years to make this statement to everyone. I want the world to know who did this. I have always heard that the courtroom is the last place you're gonna get the truth. And has that ever been proven to be the truth in this case? Not only did I not do this. I know you did. I know Scott killed his father.
Narrator
Melody's sentencing statement wasn't a defense. It was a mirror, reflecting exactly who she was all along. Melody wanted her dream life. The farm, the family, the image. Oh, and, you know, all the lovers. But it was all powered by Gary. How inconvenient for her. And the moment that he stopped fitting the role she needed, she treated him like an obstacle. Just like all narcissists do when confronted with the consequences. She never once showed empathy, accountability, or concern for what her children had already lost. She minimized, argued, lied, and blamed when the case threatened her. She didn't protect her family. She used them first as cover, then as human shields. A normal person hearing her daughter's grief and seeing her son sobbing like this would stop the charade. They'd realize all the hurt they'd caused, all the people around them that loved them, that they supposedly loved. It would be an awakening, a moment that would define their lives. Suddenly realizing what they had done and accepting the responsibility and asking for forgiveness. Melody didn't do that. Let's put it that way. Even in the end, with nothing left to win, she chose the move that hurt her family the most. Because protecting herself mattered way more than taking responsibility for her own actions. Well, hope you enjoyed that. I'd tell you to go on over to our website or download our app to get more, but then some asshole will you send. I'm begging, so just do whatever the you want. I really, really don't care. Stay Saf. Yes, you can. A five minute quick and easy calorie burning workout. Give it a try. Come join our sweat sesh on TikTok.
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Chris Farris
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Melody Farris
Liberty. Liberty.
This episode of Sword and Scale explores the chilling murder of attorney Gary Farris, whose charred remains were discovered in a burn pile on the family’s rural Georgia hobby farm in July 2018. Through uncensored interviews, 911 calls, and investigative narration, the episode peels back the layers of a dysfunctional and drama-filled Southern family, culminating in the conviction of Gary’s wife, Melody Farris, for his murder. The case exposes family secrets, infidelity, financial parasitism, and manipulation—highlighting how the worst monsters, indeed, can hide in plain sight.
Setting: Hobby farm in Cherokee County, Georgia—remote, private, and ideal for both idyllic living and hiding dark secrets ([02:54]).
Gary Farris, 58, goes missing. Truck, CPAP, wallet, and other belongings left behind. No signs he left willingly or planned an escape.
Family members searching: His son Scott (who lives on the property) and wife Melody discover a still-warm burn pile. Melody initially wonders:
“Did you throw one of the goats on there or something?” ([06:28], Melody Farris)
Grim discovery:
“At first it was just shapes in the ash... One of those shapes wasn’t just bone colored. It was bone. He realized he was looking at what appeared to be a human skull.” ([06:58], Narrator)
Troubled marriage: Melody and Gary’s 38-year marriage marred by health issues, mental illness, and mutual dissatisfaction. Melody describes “spells,” possible Parkinson’s, heart trouble, and Gary’s history with fire (somewhat obsessed) ([09:37]-[12:00]).
Family money issues: Melody accuses son Chris of “taking money,” while Gary enables adult children.
“We've been having trouble with him taking money ready over $900 a month... Gary refuses to talk to him.” ([16:43], Melody Farris)
Infidelity: Melody described as having multiple affairs, including with her brother-in-law and cousin’s stepson. Family openly discusses her cheating as a stressor and possible motive for murder ([36:14], [40:00]).
Resentment and drama: Melody depicted as martyring herself, working sunup to sundown, while resenting her husband and children “mooching” off Gary ([18:20]).
“She loved him to death. I don’t necessarily like him. I did not like the person that he had become.” ([51:54], Melody Farris)
Initial theories: Family floated that Gary had another spell or heart attack, fell into the fire, and burned up ([23:05]-[23:33]).
“I hope to God that it's just an accident. I just hope.” ([24:30], Chris Farris)
Autopsy reveals murder: A bullet found lodged in Gary’s ribs indicates homicide ([24:42]-[25:26]).
“The evidence we have obtained on the scene suggests to us that your father was shooting.” ([25:26], Detective)
Murder weapon: A .38 revolver, previously seen by Scott in the basement, is missing. A second bullet matching the one in Gary is found in the house ([30:15]-[31:15]).
No evidence of break-in or outside intruder: Only inner circle suspects remain.
Melody’s narrative is evasive and inconsistent. Detectives confront her about holes in her story:
“A fire like the one she describes doesn’t erase a 300-pound man. Someone had to stay with it and continue feeding the fire.” ([46:23], Narrator) “It's absolutely impossible that you don't know. I'm not saying. I'm saying it is absolute. The evidence we have, it is absolutely impossible.” ([50:17], Detective)
Brothers’ suspicions:
“She had zero emotion. None. No crying, no nothing. But yet when Rebel the horse gets put down a couple months after we find him, she’s bawling her eyes out.” ([58:03], Scott Farris)
Possible poisoning: Chris recounts Gary’s suspicion that Melody may have tried to poison him before:
“He goes, well, about a week ago, I was sitting in the theater and your mother comes down and hands me a tray of freshly baked cookies. And he said they started burning my mouth and burning my throat... I think she's trying to poison me or something and just laughing it off.” ([53:22]-[55:27], Chris Farris)
Trial outcome: Melody is tried in fall 2024. Prosecution’s case is strong with digital, forensic, testimonial, and circumstantial evidence.
Verdict:
“On November 4, 2024, a Cherokee county jury found her guilty on all five charges. Malice murder, felony murder, aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, concealing the death of another and making false statements.” ([71:19], Narrator)
Victim impact: Daughter Emily’s letter speaks of the “unbearable void” left by Gary—pain increased by the fact that the perpetrator was their mother ([72:22]).
Melody’s final words, even after conviction, are to blame her own son:
“Not only did I not do this. I know you did. I know Scott killed his father.” ([75:04], Melody Farris)
(06:28) Melody Farris:
“Did you throw one of the goats on there or something?”
(highlighting her initial denial and deflection)
(08:56) Scott Farris:
“I'm ex military. I was deployed to Iraq. I've seen what burned up bodies look like and this looks like a body.”
(24:42) Detective:
“...the autopsy revealed, after putting all of Gary's burned pieces back together, was a bullet lodged in his rib cage.”
(31:15) Scott Farris:
"Last one, when I found that .38 special... it was sitting right there..."
(51:54) Melody Farris:
“Well, I love him to death. I don't necessarily like him. I did not like the person that he had become.”
(53:22-55:27) Chris Farris:
“I think she's trying to poison me or something and just laughing it off.”
(58:03) Scott Farris:
“She had zero emotion. None. No crying, no nothing. But yet when Rebel the horse gets put down...she’s bawling her eyes out.”
(65:44) Rusty (lover’s testimony):
“She said, gary is in the burn pile. No, she said, he is in the burn pile. And I said, what? And she said, he's in the burn pile.”
(75:04) Melody Farris (sentencing statement):
“I have always heard that the courtroom is the last place you're gonna get the truth... Not only did I not do this. I know you did. I know Scott killed his father.”
| Timestamp | Segment / Content | |-----------|-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------| | 02:54 | Overview: Setting, Missing Gary, discovery of burn pile | | 06:28 | Melody: "Did you throw one of the goats..." | | 08:56 | Scott’s 911 call and military background | | 12:00 | Gary’s fire obsession, mental and physical health | | 16:43 | Financial issues, family strain, "taking money..." | | 23:05 | Family attempts to rationalize tragedy as accident | | 24:42 | Autopsy reveals bullet, homicide suspicion | | 30:15 | .38 revolver mentioned, bullets discovered | | 36:14 | Family discusses Melody’s affairs and money issues | | 43:53 | Detective: bodies don’t burn easily in bonfires | | 53:22 | Chris recounts possible poisoning | | 58:03 | Scott: Melody’s lack of emotion vs. animal grief | | 65:44 | Rusty testifies about Melody’s confession | | 68:09 | Use of tractor to move body; physical evidence of movement | | 71:19 | Conviction and sentencing of Melody | | 75:04 | Melody's sentencing statement, blaming Scott |
Sword and Scale delivers the episode with a signature blend of hard-nosed narration, unfiltered family interviews, law enforcement candor, and dark empathy for the victim. The episode’s tone ranges from acerbic sarcasm when describing Melody’s manipulations (“What a bitch.” [70:41]) to mournful reflection on the rupture such a crime causes in a family.
The closing summation captures the emotional heart of the story:
“Even in the end, with nothing left to win, she chose the move that hurt her family the most. Because protecting herself mattered way more than taking responsibility for her own actions.” ([75:04], Narrator)
| Evidence | Significance | Links To | |-----------------------------|------------------------------------------------|--------------------------------| | Burned remains in fire pit | Clearly homicide, not accident | All family on property | | Bullet lodged in ribcage | Death by gunshot, not natural causes | Melody most present | | .38 revolver disappearance | Murder weapon, traced to Melody’s cousin | Melody, via cousin’s house | | Phone pings | Movement aligns with Melody, not absent Scott | Melody | | Use of tractor | Required to move body, Melody could drive | Melody | | Testimony/confessions | Melody confessed to Rusty | Rusty, court testimony |
Episode 352 exposes the darkness lurking beneath a picture-perfect Southern family: unspoken resentments, rampant self-interest, and finally, murder. With methodical, forensic detail and searing first-person accounts, the episode not only recounts a sordid crime but also the devastating fallout that occurs when the monsters aren't strangers, but members of your own family. The truth emerges, piece by chilling piece, with justice ultimately served—but with wounds that may never heal.