He Was Accused of Killing His Wife. Idaho’s Coroner System Let Clues Vanish After a Previous Wife’s Death.

The city dropped more than 250 domestic violence assault cases and more than 270 drunken driving cases between May 1 and Oct. 2 last year. Now it says it has hired a full staff of 12 “frontline” prosecutors who will take cases to trial.

More in this series
Caret

Reporting Highlights

  • Short-Lived Investigation: After Clayton Strong drove his wife’s body to a hospital in Idaho, the coroner took his word that it was a natural death.
  • A History of Red Flags: Police had previously made repeated visits to the Strongs’ home in Florida. After an officer called in adult protective services, the couple left town.
  • Another Wife Dies: Clayton Strong was indicted in murder of the next woman he married. Both women’s families say Idaho’s flawed coroner system is partly to blame and needs reform.

These highlights were written by the reporters and editors who worked on this story.

// When Iterate loads, add a "Give Feedback" button to the page that, when clicked, opens a survey. Since Iterate is commonly blocked by ad blockers, we want to avoid displaying a feedback button that won't trigger a survey and will appear broken. document.addEventListener("DOMContentLoaded", (event) => { Iterate('onLoad', (survey) => { var elSurveyPlaceholder = document.getElementById("survey-placeholder"); elSurveyPlaceholder.innerHTML = "
 0
 0