In 1997, Seattle primary school teacher Mary Kay Letourneau was convicted of raping sixth-grade student Vili Fualaau.
At the time she was 34 years old and married with four children. Fualaau was 14 years old, just 18 months older than her eldest son.
Speaking to Barbara Walters of the ABC (US) in 2017, Letourneau said their relationship started when Fualaau was 12 years old.
“The incident was a late night that didn’t stop with a kiss,” said the now 56-year-old.
By the time she pleaded guilty to two counts of second-degree child rape and was convicted of a suspended sentence of 89 months, in November of 1997, Letourneau and Fualaau were the parents of a six-month-old child.
Then, after serving six months in a county jail she was released on parole under the condition that she would attend counselling and not contact Fualaau. Weeks into her parole she fell pregnant with their second child and was forced to serve the full 7.5 year sentence. At 15 years old, Fualaau had become a father of two.
Now 20 years after her trial, Letourneau’s life has been made into a two-hour confessional documentary by A&E Documentary, titled: Mary Kay Letourneau: Autobiography.
Premiering just days after their 13th marriage anniversary on the 29th of May 2018, Letourneau said she wanted to set the ‘record straight’. It aired in Australia on Saturday on Foxtel.
She now denies Vili was her student when they began their “relationship”, claiming instead it began when they were doing classes at a community college.