When the people who gave you life become the ones you blame for your pain, the bond of family can turn deadly. This is the story of a daughter who decided that her parents had to die so she could finally live as herself.
WHAT HAPPENED
In a newly released video, Mia Bailey sits calmly in an interrogation room. She tells police exactly how she killed her mother and father, Gail and Joseph Bailey, in their Utah home.
She says she felt her mental health was failing and she needed gender surgery to fix it. When she felt her mother was trying to stop that surgery, she decided to "do the deed."
Bailey bought a gun at a pawn shop and went to the house. She fired 12 shots at her parents, fled the scene, and was caught after a long search by police.
WHAT THE EVIDENCE SHOWS
- 12 rounds were fired during the attack.
- 1 pawn shop gun was used as the weapon.
- 2 life sentences were handed down in December.
- 25 years to life is the minimum time for each sentence.
- 1 confession was filmed where she says she has no regrets.
THE BIGGER QUESTION
We often talk about the "breaking point" in a person’s mind, but what happens when a family becomes a battlefield for someone's identity? This case forces us to look at how deep a person's desperation can go when they feel their only path to happiness is being blocked by the people they love.
Is there a way to spot this kind of rage before it turns into a plan? We have to ask if our systems are failing to help families navigate these intense personal changes before they end in violence.
THE OTHER SIDE
In court, Bailey's actions were seen as a cold-blooded choice. Prosecutors argued that no matter how much she disagreed with her parents, she chose to buy a gun and end their lives. While she claims she was pushed to the edge, the law says she had many other choices.
Given that she shot her parents 12 times and admitted she does not feel sorry, her defense that she was "forced" to do it does not hold much weight in the eyes of the law.
WHAT HAPPENS NOW
Mia Bailey is currently in prison. She will likely spend the rest of her life behind bars, as her sentences run back-to-back.
For the community in Washington, Utah, the shock of the 2024 murders is starting to fade into a grim reminder of the case. It serves as a dark example of how private family pain can explode into a public tragedy.
WHAT WE STILL DON'T KNOW
- Did her parents know she had bought a weapon before the day of the shooting?
- Were there any doctors or therapists who saw signs that she might turn violent?
- How did she manage to buy a gun if her mental health was declining as quickly as she claimed?
Transparency notes
Published: May 14, 2026. No major post-publication update has been logged.
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Sources
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