As temperatures neared 100 degrees in Wylie, Texas during the summer of 1980, few people in the small church community could have imagined the events that were about to unfold.
It was the morning of Friday, June 13, 1980 when Candy Montgomery, a homemaker and mother of two, went to the house of her friend Betty Gore. The two women knew each other through their local church. Betty was also the mother of two young daughters who were part of the same church community. At some point during that visit, a confrontation occurred inside the home and Betty Gore was later found deceased.
What followed was a trial that kept the small North Texas community riveted for weeks. Candy admitted she was responsible but said she acted in self-defense after being confronted about an affair with Betty’s husband, Allan Gore. Her attorneys introduced psychological testimony suggesting a dissociative response during the confrontation. In October 1980, the jury returned a not guilty verdict, a decision that surprised many observers at the time.
After the trial ended and she was acquitted, Candy eventually left Texas and started a completely different chapter of her life. She went on to train and work as a licensed therapist.
In the years that followed, the case continued to appear in news coverage, interviews, documentaries, and the 1984 nonfiction book Evidence of Love by journalists Jim Atkinson and John Bloom. Decades later the story caught a new wave of attention when two television series revisited the case within months of each other.
The first to drop was Candy, released by Hulu in 2022 and starring Jessica Biel as Candy Montgomery and Melanie Lynskey as Betty Gore. Not long after that release HBO Max dropped Love & Death, with Elizabeth Olsen portraying Montgomery and Lily Rabe as Betty Gore.
Nearly half a century later, what happened inside that house on Dogwood Drive remains one of the most recognizable true crime stories to come out of Texas.
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