Current:Home > ContactGypsy Rose Blanchard says she and her husband have separated 3 months after she was released from prison -Wealth Pursuit Network
Gypsy Rose Blanchard says she and her husband have separated 3 months after she was released from prison
View
Date:2025-04-16 12:37:20
Gypsy Rose Blanchard announced on her private Facebook that she and her husband Ryan Anderson have separated three months after she was released from prison for her role in the murder of her mother. The announcement came just weeks after Blanchard deleted her highly-followed TikTok and Instagram accounts.
Blanchard was convicted of second-degree murder for the death of her mother, Clauddine "Dee Dee" Blanchard, who was stabbed to death by Gypsy Rose's then-boyfriend Nick Godejohn in 2015, a crime that inspired the Hulu mini-series, "The Act." Godejohn told police he committed the crime at Gypsy Rose's request when she learned that after a lifetime of being told she had several debilitating illnesses that required constant care, it was all a lie and she was a victim of child abuse. After pleading guilty, Godejohn was sentenced to life in prison.
Gypsy Rose, who was sentenced to 10 years, was released from prison after seven years on Dec. 28.
It was during her sentence that she met her husband, Ryan Anderson, a special education teacher from Louisiana. The pair wed in July 2022.
But on Thursday, she announced the two have broken up.
"People have been asking what is going on in my life. Unfortunately my husband and I are going through a separation and I moved in with my parents home down the bayo," she wrote on her private Facebook account in a statement obtained by People magazine. "I have the support of my family and friends to help guide me through this. I am learning to listen to my heart. Right now I need time to let myself find... who I am."
In an interview with Entertainment Tonight in January, Blanchard said she felt a connection with Anderson when he started contacting her while she was in prison. She said she was immediately attracted to the fact that he lives in Louisiana, where she is originally from.
"I wrote him a letter back and we became friends, and of course more than friends, and then now we're married," she said.
Immediately upon her release from prison, she told ET she and Anderson moved in together and were "learning about each other." They had also discussed having kids, but were unsure of when they wanted to do so.
"With us getting married [while she was still in jail], she was able to come live with me straight out of prison," Anderson told ET. "So, that was important. It's what we both wanted."
"We're just trying to take it day by day," Gypsy Rose added. "We're just trying to start off the marriage on a good foot before we bring kids into this situation right now."
Earlier this month, Gypsy Rose – who was determined to have suffered from a form of abuse that involves a guardian inducing illness for sympathy, leading to her decision to kill her mother – deleted her social media profiles that had amassed millions of followers.
She first deleted her Instagram account, which according to Entertainment Tonight had at one point more than 7.8 million followers. After deleting that account, she posted a series of TikToks saying she is doing her "best to live my authentic life and what's real to me."
"And what's not real is social media," she said, calling it a "doorway to hell."
"It's so crazy, I can't even wrap my head around what social media is," she said. "...And with the public scrutiny as bad as it is, I just don't want to live my life under a microscope."
Then she deleted her TikTok as well. People magazine learned that she deleted those accounts "at the advisement of her parole officer, so she won't get in trouble and go back to jail."
- In:
- Missouri
- TikTok
- Crime
- Louisiana
Li Cohen is a social media producer and trending content writer for CBS News.
veryGood! (7315)
Related
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Interest Rates: Will the Federal Reserve pause, hike, then pause again?
- Utilities companies to halt electricity cutoffs after AZ woman died from heat extreme
- Cara Delevingne Reflects on Girlfriend Leah Mason's Support Amid Sobriety Journey
- Tarte Shape Tape Concealer Sells Once Every 4 Seconds: Get 50% Off Before It's Gone
- Justin Chang pairs the best movies of 2022, and picks 'No Bears' as his favorite
- Ammon Bundy ordered to pay $50 million. But will the hospital ever see the money?
- An original model of E.T. is sold at auction for $2.56 million
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- Crime writer S.A. Cosby loves the South — and is haunted by it
Ranking
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- Gynecologist who sexually abused dozens of patients is sentenced to 20 years in prison
- Israel’s government has passed the first part of its legal overhaul. The law’s ripples are dramatic
- Transgender patients sue the hospital that provided their records to Tennessee’s attorney general
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Investigators pore over evidence from the home of alleged Gilgo Beach serial killer as search ends
- The best TV in early 2023: From more Star Trek to a surprising Harrison Ford
- From 'Dreamgirls' to 'Abbott Elementary,' Sheryl Lee Ralph forged her own path
Recommendation
North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
Sikh men can serve in the Marine Corps without shaving their beards, court says
In 'M3GAN,' a high-tech doll gets programmed to k1ll
America's gender pay gap has shrunk to an all-time low, data shows
Current, future North Carolina governor’s challenge of power
What does 'OP' mean? There's two definitions for the slang. Here's how to use it correctly.
American freed from Russia in prisoner swap hurt while fighting in Ukraine
Investigators dig up Long Island killings suspect Rex Heuermann's backyard with excavator