A Texas woman who was convicted of brutally murdering her husband more than 20 years ago was charged this week in an apparent hit-and-run crash, according to court documents.
Susan Wright, who now goes by her maiden name Wyche, was arrested on Thursday morning for allegedly hitting someone's vehicle in Harris County and fleeing the scene.
It's unclear where the incident precisely occurred, but authorities said Wyche, 50, slammed into the other person's vehicle and caused at least $200 worth of damage to it.
Wyche was charged with failure to stop and give information, a misdemeanor offense. She posted bond and is due to appear in court on May 7.
On January 13, 2003, Wyche tied her naked husband, Jeff Wright, to their bed with neckties and a bathrobe, before stabbing him 193 times. She stabbed him with two different knives and seven of the wounds were in his groin area.
Wyche, then 26, then buried her 34-year-old husband in the backyard of their home in northwest Harris County.
The couple had been married for four years and had two young children at the time - a four-year-old son and a daughter who was 18 months old.
Two days after the murder, Wyche submitted a domestic abuse report and within a week, her attorney claimed she killed Jeff in self-defense after he allegedly spent years beating her.
Susan Wright, who now uses her maiden name Wyche, was arrested on Thursday morning for allegedly hitting someone's vehicle in Harris County, Texas, and fleeing the scene (Pictured: Wyche during her murder trial on March 2, 2004)
Wyche was convicted in 2004 of murdering her husband, Jeff Wright, by tying him to their bed and stabbing him 193 times. She later buried his body in the backyard of their northwest Harris County home (Pictured: Wyche with Jeff and their two children)
In her 2004 trial, prosecutors argued that Wyche's motive was financial gain, telling the jury she was the beneficiary of her husband's $200,000 life insurance policy.
Prosecutors also said Wyche 'undertook an elaborate plan to seduce [Jeff] so that, in anticipation of lovemaking, he would allow her to tie him to their bed'.
'Once Jeff was tied up and defenseless, she emerged with a knife and, with unfathomable anger, brutally stabbed him over and over again,' they said.
The trial was full of dramatic moments, including a reenactment of the murder, a stunt that Wyche was seen crying throughout.
Prosecutors hauled the blood-soaked mattress into the courtroom, right in front of the judge, and proceeded to go through the state's theory of the case.
Paul Doyle, a then-assistant district attorney, was tied to the bedframe by his wrists and ankles. Once he was secure, lead prosecutor Kelly Siegler straddled him and performed mock stabbing motions while questioning a state expert.
This 20-minute-long demonstration, combined with the financial motive, was enough to convince the jury of her guilt. She was later sentenced to 25 years in prison.
In 2010, Wyche was able to get her sentence reduced by five years after arguing she had ineffective counsel during the penalty phase.
Pictured: The blood-soaked mattress that was found outside the couple's home after the murder. Prosecutors took this mattress into the courtroom and reenacted the vicious stabbing
Pictured: Detectives found this broken knife at the home. Prosecutors would later use the fact that the knife was broken to show how angry Wyche was at her husband
Ahead of Wyche's re-sentencing trial, Jeff's former fiancee testified during an appeals hearing that she had been beaten by him while they were together.
Ultimately, Wyche served 16 years in prison and was released on parole in 2020.
Her parole officially concluded in February 2024, meaning she has been a free woman for more than two years.
While she was on parole, she was on intensive supervision, which included wearing an ankle monitor, and submitted to mandatory anger management counseling classes.






















