California woman cooks dinner for boyfriend. He openly dislikes the food and mysteriously disappeares for 8 years – We Got This Covered
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Image via San Bernardino PD

California woman cooks dinner for boyfriend. He openly dislikes the food and mysteriously disappeares for 8 years

For eight years his family thought he was missing.

A murder case in San Bernardino, California has finally reached sentencing after a 2022 arrest. The crime itself dates back to 2014, when Trista Spicer, 43, struck her then-boyfriend, Eric Mercado, 42, in the head with a cast-iron skillet before slitting his throat and burying him in her backyard.

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According to the New York Post, prosecutors compelled Spicer in court to testify in detail about how she carried out Mercado’s murder. She told the San Bernardino jury that on an evening in Oct. 2014, Mercado complained about the dinner she cooked for him — and she chose to escalate the situation far beyond reason.

Per her testimony, she responded by striking the father of two several times in the head before ultimately slitting his throat. She faced second-degree murder charges and, in what appeared to be a plea for leniency, claimed Mercado had also been violent toward her — a claim his family vehemently denied. Spicer was ultimately sentenced to 15 years behind bars.

What made the case even more disturbing was how she managed to hide Mercado’s body for so long. Unlike the murder itself, this part involved help from others. A friend initially assisted her in wrapping the body in a deflated air mattress, after which they hid it beneath a concrete staircase in her backyard.

Spicer then enlisted a homeless man to build a wall over the area, effectively sealing the body inside a makeshift tomb. Mercado’s disappearance remained a mystery to authorities until 2022. His sister, Mahira Torres, described that period as the hardest time for the family. She said, “As time went by, life just got harder and harder to live for me, as well as my family — the thought of not knowing what happened … not knowing if he’s alive or dead, or suffering waiting to get saved — that really broke me.” She added, “My family went eight years trying to get answers, and it seemed like everybody knew about it except his close family.”

Cases of relationships turning violent are, unfortunately, more common than they should be. In California in particular, there have been instances where even unrequited love has led to unthinkable crimes. For Spicer, though, the same theme of trust and proximity ultimately led to her downfall.

In 2022, while trying to sell her home, Spicer told her then-boyfriend about the body, hoping he would help her move it. Unlike others in her past, he refused — and instead reported her to authorities. And now, she has until at least 2041 to reflect on those decisions. Hopefully, she’ll get the opportunity to finally rehabilitate her outlook on love and find ways to apologize to his family. By all accounts in court, Mercado was revealed to have been a good man — described as a “person of integrity” and a “good father” by those who knew him best.

Mahira, finally having some closure, paid tribute to her brother, saying, “I will always feel thankful and blessed for the love I received from my brother. He taught me to go after anything in life with a fearless mindset.”


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Author
Image of Fred Onyango
Fred Onyango
Fred Onyango is an entertainment journalist who primarily focuses on the intersection of entertainment, society, and politics. He has been writing about the entertainment industry for five years, covering celebrity, music, and film through the lens of their impact on society and politics. He has reported from the London Film Festival and was among the first African entertainment journalists invited to cover the Sundance Film Festival. Fun fact—Fred is also a trained pilot.