Rusty Yates; Rusty Yates and Andrea Yates with their children in family photo. Investigation Discovery; Pam Francis/Getty

Andrea Yates’ Ex-Husband Rusty Still Visits Her Decades After She Drowned Their 5 Children

Thomas Smith
7 Min Read

On June 20, 2001, a stay-at-home mother called 911 and confessed she had drowned her five children in the bathtub of their home in the Houston suburb of Clear Lake, Texas.

The shocking crime made national and international news and led to the arrest of then-37-year-old Andrea Yates.

In March 2002, Andrea was convicted of capital murder and sentenced to life in prison in connection with the deaths of Noah, 7, John, 5, Paul, 3, Luke, 2, and 6-month-old Mary. That verdict was later reversed, and in July 2006, she was found not guilty by reason of insanity.

Her attorneys argued that she had suffered from postpartum depression and postpartum psychosis, and that weeks before the murders, her doctor had taken her off of the powerful antipsychotic drug Haldol.

Andrea’s ex-husband Rusty, now 61, has spoken about his life with Andrea — and why he still visits her once a year at a Kerrville, Texas, mental health facility nearly 25 years after the death of their children.

“I try once a year to visit in person and we text back and forth some and talk on the phone some,” Rusty says. “Andrea and I always got along. That’s a time of our life that we both cherish and she’s the only person I can talk to about it. She and I are the only two who can get together and reminisce about what it was like to enjoy those years together.”

Andrea Pia Yates is escorted into court on 22 June, 2001 in Houston, TX. STEVE UECKERT/AFP via Getty

Rusty, who divorced Andrea in 2005, says that although they both value the connection they still share, “it’s bittersweet.”

“I mean, it’s nice to reminisce. Honestly, I never imagined anything like this could happen, especially with her, especially how caring and loving and devoted Andrea is. I don’t hold it against her, but even just communicating with her is a reminder of that. So, we try to focus on the better times, but it’s a little hard to, even in our conversations, avoid that most significant tragedy,” he says. “And I think that for her, it loomed so large that it’s really kept her from growing, from really living and trying to enjoy the balance of her years. It’s just too big. She can’t get past it.”

Andrea has been held at the facility since 2007.

According to prior reporting, she can undergo a review every year to determine whether she is competent to leave the facility, but she has opted each year to waive her right to be reviewed.

Rusty says Andrea embraced motherhood deeply — and that the way it ended has been profoundly painful for her.

Andrea Yates enters the courtroom to hear the verdict in her retrial on July 26, 2006 in Houston, Texas. Brett Coomer-Pool/Getty

Andrea “spends a lot more time going over old videos of our family, looking through old pictures — that sort of thing — because her mind is still sort of stuck there,” says Rusty, who is a computer engineer at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston.

“I was raised in a tradition where intention matters as much as anything, right? And we’re flawed humans. We can have good intentions and do the wrong thing,” he says. “So, it’s easier for me to forgive Andrea than it is for her to forgive herself because she was raised in a tradition of works. It’s a strict Catholic upbringing. She’s kind of stuck because she has this extremely hard time forgiving herself. It’s like, how do you take something that significant and get past it in life? Or do you get stuck there? And that’s where you’re stuck and that’s it.”

Rusty says he met Andrea, who was a nurse at the time, in the late ’80s while they were living at the same apartment complex in Houston.

“One night someone had bumped her car in the parking lot, and I was sitting in my apartment,” he says. “I was talking to somebody on the phone. I heard a knock at the door and opened the door, and it was Andrea. And I literally dropped the phone. She asked me; she said, ‘Hey, do you know anything about that?’ Because she knew that I parked out in the same area she did. And later she admitted that it was just an excuse to meet me.”

“She’d been wanting to meet me,” he adds. “And Andrea is a very shy, kind of reserved person. And if you know her at all, that was a big step for her because she’s not a very forward person at all.”

Rusty Yates on January 5, 2002 in Houston, TX . Pam Francis/Getty

They married four years later in 1993 and started a family.

“I was almost jealous of the fact that she got to spend so much time with the kids while I had to work all the time,” Rusty says. “I offered; I said, ‘Hey, we could probably make it if I work halftime and you work halftime.’ And she said, ‘I’m a mother now.’ And I thought, ‘That’s a role that she embraced and being a father is a role that I embraced.’”

Rusty also participated in ID’s The Cult Behind the Killer: The Andrea Yates Story, which premiered Jan. 6 and is available to stream on HBO Max.

Andrea and Rusty Yates with children. Getty

“It’s my favorite role in life — being a father,” says Rusty, who has a 17-year-old son from a second marriage that has since ended in divorce. “And I honestly think being a mother was [Andrea’s] favorite role.”

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