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Murder of Janet March

Murder of Janet March
A woman with long dark hair and brown eyes against a red background
Janet March
Date August 15, 1996 (1996-08-15)
Location Forest Hills, Tennessee, U.S.
Coordinates 36°04′34″N 86°51′11″W / 36.07615°N 86.85302°W / 36.07615; -86.85302Coordinates: 36°04′34″N 86°51′11″W / 36.07615°N 86.85302°W / 36.07615; -86.85302
Convicted Perry and Arthur March
Charges Second-degree murder, tampering with evidence, abuse of a corpse, two counts of conspiring to commit first-degree murder, (Perry only) grand larceny
Trial 2006
Verdict Guilty on all counts
Sentence 56 years (Perry), 5 years (Arthur)
Litigation March v. Levine, March v. Sexton, March v. McAllister

On August 29, 1996, Janet Levine March (born February 20, 1963), a children's book illustrator in Forest Hills, Tennessee, United States, a suburb of Nashville, was reported missing to police by her husband and mother. Perry March, a lawyer, told police that he had last seen his wife when she left the house on the night of August 15, two weeks earlier, following an argument. He claimed she had packed her bags for a 12-day vacation at an unknown location and driven away. She was never seen alive by anyone else afterwards.

Janet's car was found at a nearby apartment complex a week after the police report, apparently having been there for some time. Other evidence began to suggest that Perry had fabricated some evidence of his wife's supposed motive for departure, and attempted to tamper with or destroy other items that might have provided evidence. Police soon reclassified the case as a homicide, despite the absence of Janet's body, and named Perry as a suspect. Shortly afterwards he moved back to his native Chicago area with the couple's two children. After his in-laws won visitation, he fled with the children to Mexico, where his father, Arthur, a former U.S. Army pharmacist, had retired. The case received attention in the national media, where it was the subject of two segments on the CBS News program 48 Hours.

For several years afterwards, Perry fought his former in-laws in state and federal court over the administration of Janet's property and the status of his children. Janet was declared legally dead in 2000. Nashville police continued investigating the case and found further evidence suggesting Perry had in fact killed her. In late 2004 a grand jury indicted him on murder and other charges in her death; it was kept secret by police until the following year, when they were able to arrange for him to be arrested in Mexico and extradited to Tennessee to face trial. While he was in jail, police learned that March was conspiring with his father and another inmate to have his in-laws killed; Arthur March was then arrested and extradited himself. After telling prosecutors that he had helped Perry move Janet's body to Kentucky, he agreed to cooperate with them and testify against his son in exchange for a reduced sentence; however he was unable to recall exactly where he had disposed of the body and it has never been found. Arthur's plea bargain was rejected and he died in federal custody shortly after beginning his sentence.


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