The most striking achievement of Season 1 is its reframing of the “family of the killer” from peripheral figures to central protagonists in a tragedy of complicity. Episodes such as “My Brother’s Keeper” (featuring the sister of serial killer Keith Hunter Jesperson, the “Happy Face Killer”) and “I Was His First Victim” (featuring the mother of murderer Antwan Deon Jones) do not offer simple portraits of innocent victims. Instead, they reveal the agonizing process of cognitive dissonance. These narrators confess to ignoring bruises, rationalizing violent outbursts, or attributing sinister behavior to a “difficult phase.” The season argues that the family’s greatest adversary is not the killer himself, but the human need to believe in the goodness of those we love. The emotional weight of the series comes from watching these individuals piece together a horrifying puzzle they had, for years, willfully left incomplete.
The true crime genre often revels in the psychology of the killer—their methods, motives, and madness. The Investigation Discovery series Evil Lives Here deliberately shifts the camera lens away from the perpetrator and onto the one place evil is meant to feel safest: the home. Season 1, which aired in 2016, establishes the show’s powerful and unsettling formula. It is not a whodunit but a “how-did-we-live-with-it.” Through a collection of harrowing firsthand accounts from family members and loved ones of notorious killers, the season constructs a profound thesis: evil is not a sudden, monstrous aberration but a slow, corrosive presence that thrives in the silence, denial, and desperate love of those who share its roof. Evil Lives Here - Season 1
However, the first season is not merely a catalog of trauma; it is a study in survival and fractured identity. Each episode concludes not with the killer’s arrest, but with the family’s ongoing reckoning. The narrators live with a unique burden: they loved a person who did unforgivable things. The show explores the guilt of survival—“Why didn’t I see it?”—and the stigma of association. One of the most poignant episodes, “My Son, Jeffrey” , features the mother of a man who committed a school shooting. Her narrative is not about her son’s crime but about the loss of her child to an ideology of hatred, and the public’s inability to separate her from his actions. Season 1 thus becomes an exploration of secondary victimization, arguing that the family of the killer dies a kind of social death as well. The most striking achievement of Season 1 is