THE MASSACHUSETTS CURSE? Why does 131 Edgemoor look exactly like the Clancy house? 🏠😱
True crime fans are losing their minds over the “glitch in the matrix” between Janette MacAusland and the infamous Lindsay Clancy case. Two high-society mothers. Two wealthy Massachusetts suburbs. The same horrific method. The same “failed” suicide attempt.
Is there a “blueprint” for this tragedy being shared in hidden online mom groups, or are we witnessing a terrifying new pattern in “suburban breakdowns”? Reddit sleuths have uncovered a series of eerie coincidences—from the specific timing of the “psychotic break” to the identical legal maneuvers used by the defense teams. Even the “well-being check” that led to the discovery feels like a dark sequel.
Are these just “copycat” crimes, or is there a hidden “trigger” in the Massachusetts family court system that the media is too afraid to talk about? The side-by-side comparison of the two “perfect mothers” is chilling.
The “Clancy Connection” thread is blowing up. See the 12 identical “Red Flags” they both shared. 👇🔥

History isn’t just repeating itself in Massachusetts; it’s screaming.
As the Commonwealth grapples with the horror of the MacAusland children’s deaths, the “True Crime” community has bypassed the “Why?” and moved straight to the “How is this happening again?” On Reddit, X, and TikTok, a massive digital investigation is underway, linking Janette MacAusland to the haunting 2023 case of Lindsay Clancy in a way that is as compelling as it is terrifying.
A Suburban Mirror Image
The parallels are impossible to ignore. Duxbury and Wellesley: two of the wealthiest, most pristine ZIP codes in the state. Two mothers who presented as “overachieving” and “deeply devoted.” Two homes where “Postpartum Psychosis” or “Medical-Induced Mania” was whispered as the silent killer.
“If you change the names and the house numbers, the police reports are almost identical,” posted a moderator on the r/TrueCrimeSleuths forum. Both women allegedly strangled their children. Both women attempted to end their lives but survived to face a judge. Both cases involved a “well-being check” triggered by a husband or relative who realized the silence had gone on for too long.
The “Copycat” Conspiracy
While investigators focus on Janette’s 50-hour blackout, the internet is focusing on her browser history. A popular theory gaining traction on Discord suggests that MacAusland may have been “obsessed” with the Clancy trial.
Was she studying the legal defense? The “Clancy Strategy”—blaming a cocktail of prescription drugs and a “psychotic break”—has become a lightning rod for debate. Skeptics argue that MacAusland might be using the “Clancy Playbook” to build a “sympathy-first” defense before the trial even begins. The way Janette appeared in court, with her neck bandaged and her eyes downcast, was described by one X user as “a frame-by-frame recreation of the Clancy arraignment.”
The “Massachusetts Trigger”
Beyond the individual women, “thám tử mạng” (online sleuths) are pointing at the system. They are questioning if the intense pressure of “perfect” New England motherhood, combined with a legal system that “weaponizes” custody battles, is creating a specific type of domestic time bomb.
The “Clancy-MacAusland Parallel” isn’t just about the mothers; it’s about the husbands, the lawyers, and the “silent” neighbors. On TikTok, the hashtag #WellesleySecrets is being used to share stories of “high-stakes parenting” that push mothers to the edge. Is there a “Social Contagion” effect where one high-profile tragedy gives another desperate parent a “viable” way out?
The Digital Evidence
“We are looking for the overlap,” says a digital forensic hobbyist who has been tracking Janette’s old Facebook interactions. “Did she follow the ‘Free Lindsay’ support groups? Did she read the deep dives into the Clancy meds? If she did, this isn’t a break—it’s a tribute.”
As the prosecution prepares to bring Janette MacAusland back to Massachusetts, they won’t just be fighting the facts of the Edgemoor Avenue basement. They will be fighting the “Clancy Shadow”—the lingering public debate over whether these women are victims of a medical system gone wrong, or cold-blooded killers who found a “socially acceptable” excuse for the unthinkable.
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