Missouri mother goes free after daughter's death

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. – Rebecca Ruud, who stood trial in the death of her teenage daughter in Ozark County, was sentenced Thursday on charges of abandoning a corpse. Also in court Thursday, we received an update on the case against Ruud’s husband, who was also charged in the teen’s death.

In July, Judge Calvin Holden found Ruud guilty of abandonment of a corpse, in the death of Savannah Leckie, her 16-year-old daughter. Ruud was found not guilty of murder in Leckie’s death after a bench trial this past summer. Leckie’s remains were found on a burn pile on Ruud’s property in 2017.

After the ruling, Ozarks First reporters traveled to Theodosia, where the family lived, and the people our reporter spoke with said they did not agree with the judge’s ruling.

Ruud was sentenced to four years, with no probation and a $5,000 fine. She will be released after getting credit for 1,790 days served in jail while awaiting trial. Ruud will be taken to jail and transferred to the Department of Corrections in Fulton. Her time served will be calculated there. Ruud served five years in jail waiting for her trial, so she will be released.

What happened during Ruud’s trial

During Ruud’s trial, prosecutors tried to make the case that Ruud drugged Leckie before burning her body, and brought several inmates to the stand as witnesses who said Ruud told them she drugged her daughter by crushing up pills and putting them in Kool-Aid.

Ruud’s defense attorneys said those witnesses weren’t credible, and while they acknowledged that Ruud burned Leckie’s body, they said there was no credible evidence submitted that proved Ruud killed Leckie.

Update in the case against Ruud’s husband, Robert Peat, Jr.

Robert Peat, Jr. is also charged in the case of Savannah Leckie's death
Robert Peat, Jr.

Also in court Thursday, the state dismissed the case against Robert Peat, Junior. Peat testified during Ruud’s trial and said Ruud never told him that she burned Savannah’s body. Peat was also facing charges in Savannah Leckie’s death.

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