He met Rachel Ruiz (now Rachel Carter) in 1993 at a birthday party for a mutual friend. She worked as a receptionist at a dental clinic and had a contagious laugh that lit up any room. They married in 1994 in a simple ceremony at the neighborhood church, surrounded by close family and a few friends.
They didn’t have much money, but they had plans—dreams of a better future.
Their first son, Ethan, was born in 1996. Their second, Lucas, in 1999. By 2000, they’d managed to buy a modest two-story home in Lindavista: red brick front, a small garden out front that Rachel cared for obsessively, planting geraniums and bougainvillea to bring color to the street.
Neighbors knew each other. Borrowed sugar. Watched each other’s kids. Gossiped on Sundays after church.
Michael was what people called “a good man.” He didn’t drink too much. He didn’t gamble. He came home every night. On weekends he took the boys to the park, helped Rachel with groceries, watched soccer with the neighbors. He was the kind of father who showed up to school meetings, who quietly saved a little money every month for a yearly family trip to the beach, who dreamed of paying for his sons’ college one day.
At work, his colleagues described him as serious but kind—meticulous with numbers, always punctual, never causing trouble.
And yet, beneath that ordinary surface, Michael carried a secret that was eating him alive—one Rachel, the boys, and everyone close to him had no idea existed.
And that secret was about to explode in the most devastating way possible.
The last morning
Tuesday, August 22, 2006 looked completely normal.
Mexico City woke under the familiar late-summer gray sky, when afternoon rain feels almost guaranteed. Michael got up at 6 a.m., just like always. Rachel heard him in the bathroom—the shower, his footsteps down the hallway. They had breakfast together: coffee and sweet bread, while the kids still slept.
Ethan was 10. Lucas was 7. School had started only two weeks earlier.
Rachel would later remember every detail of that morning with painful clarity. Michael seemed distracted—quieter than usual—but she blamed work stress. The company was going through an external audit, and Michael had mentioned he was buried under extra paperwork.