Author's Note
Twenty years ago, I wrote The Guilty Innocent from the heart of a mother's greatest crisis. At the time, I was fueled by a desperate need to protect my son and a struggle to grasp a reality that felt impossible. Today, my perspective has changed. I have come to terms with my son's responsibility in this tragedy, and I recognize that terms like "innocent" used throughout the original narrative no longer reflect the truth as I understand it now.
I want to acknowledge the shortcomings of the book while offering it as an honest reflection of my experience at that time-the raw, often blinded journey of a mother navigating the unthinkable.
At the core of this tragedy remains Cassie Jo Stoddard. My deepest empathy goes out to the Stoddard family, who for twenty years have had to endure the silence of a life and future cruelly stolen. Cassie was a vibrant girl who will never reach the milestones she deserved, leaving a void that lingers with every passing year-a loss that remains the ultimate, undeniable truth of this story.
I also hold sincere empathy for the Drapers. No parent is prepared for the soul-crushing task of reconciling the son they raised and loved with the haunting reality of Brian's own admissions. They, too, were forced to navigate a landscape of grief and horror that no family should ever have to face.
As for my own son, Torey Adamcik, this book documents the harrowing years of his initial arrest and trial. It captures a mother's fight against a legal system she didn't understand and a truth she wasn't yet ready to see. I share this story now not to excuse the past, but to show how three families were forever shattered by the actions of two teenagers on one terrible night.
Related Subjects
True Crime