When I refused to give my $400k savings to my sister for her lavish trip, she planted drugs in my car and called the police. To my shock, my parents stood against me as her witnesses, saying, “Give us your $400k savings or live the rest of your life in jail.” But then my lawyer showed up, and what happened was…

My pulse jumped. “Yes.”

For the first time her expression changed. “Good,” she said. “Because if that camera recorded who opened your trunk, your sister didn’t just frame you. She gave us the evidence to destroy her.”

Nina moved faster than anyone I had ever seen. Within an hour she had contacted the towing company, requested the dashcam unit from my impounded car, and sent an investigator to my townhouse complex to secure security footage before it could be erased. For the first time since my arrest, I felt something close to hope.

While we waited, Nina asked precise questions. Who could access my car? Did Madison know where I kept the spare key? Had she been at my townhouse recently?

The answers came too easily.

Madison had borrowed my car twice that month. She knew the spare key was hidden in a planter beside my front door because my mother had pointed it out once. And yes, Madison had come by the night before my arrest, furious after I refused the transfer.

Late that afternoon, Nina returned carrying a hard drive and a look that made it difficult to breathe.

“The camera worked,” she said.

She turned her laptop toward me. The footage was grainy but unmistakable. At 11:42 p.m., my porch light turned on. Madison appeared wearing a baseball cap and my father’s rain jacket. She used the spare key, opened my car, lifted the trunk, and placed something inside the emergency kit. Then she shut the trunk and walked away as if nothing had happened.

I felt both sick and relieved at once.

“There’s more,” Nina said.

The complex security camera showed my parents’ SUV parked across the street with my mother in the passenger seat. They hadn’t simply believed Madison.

They had driven her there.

Nina immediately called the prosecutor and demanded an emergency meeting. She also reviewed my recent messages. Buried in an old family group chat was a sentence that tied motive to pressure. My father had written, “If Claire won’t help Madison willingly, we may have to force her to understand what family means.”

At the time I had ignored it.

Now it looked like a threat.

The prosecutor agreed to a pre-charge meeting the next morning. My parents and Madison were told it was an opportunity to clear up inconsistencies before the case proceeded. They arrived looking confident. My mother wore pearls. My father carried a folder. Madison looked irritated more than worried.

Nina said almost nothing.

She opened the laptop and pressed play.

No one moved during the video.

Madison watched herself unlock my car and hide the pills. My mother’s face went pale halfway through. My father leaned forward so sharply his chair creaked. When the second clip showed their SUV parked across the street, Madison cracked first.

“It was supposed to scare her,” she said. “Not turn into this.”

The prosecutor’s voice stayed calm. “Scare her into what?”