Career
Her late daughter is the namesake for Marsy"s Law, the California Constitutional Amendment and Victims" Bill of Rights, which appeared on the November, 2008, ballot as Proposition 9. On November 30, 1983, Marcella Leach"s daughter, Marsalee Ann (Marsy) Nicholas, was murdered by her ex-boyfriend, Kerry Michael Conley. Marsy, then 21, was a senior at University of California Santa Barbara and had come home to Pint
Dume, Ca., for Thanksgiving when Conley, with whom she had broken up, shot her to death.
Conley was subsequently convicted of second-degree murder and sentenced to 17 years to life in prison, where he died in 2007. In one particularly wrenching incident, Marcella Leach recalled being shocked when she encountered Conley in a neighborhood grocery store shortly after the murder.
Among those who comforted the Leach family was Ellen Griffin Dunne, the mother of actress Dominique Dunne, who had been strangled to death by a spurned ex-boyfriend the year before Marsy"s death. When Dunne decided in late 1983 to create a local support organization for the survivors of homicide victims, the Leaches were among the founding members, along with Marcella Leach"s son Henry Nicholas.
The California Center for Family Survivors of Homicide was formed as a nonprofit, with a subgroup, Justice for Homicide Victims, as its public face.
The Leaches assumed leadership of Justice for Homicide Victims in 1990, after Dunne who suffered from multiple sclerosis, moved to Arizona, where she died in 1997. Bob Leach served for many years as the president of Justice for Homicide Victims, and Marcella Leach was its longtime executive director During the 1990s, the organization continued to push for improved law enforcement and longer penalties for convicted felons, including California"s Three Strikes Law.
By the late 1990s and early 2000s, with Leach as executive director, the group claimed some 10,000 members.
The organization grew and was refocused as an educational non-profit. The constitutional amendment was enacted by voters in November 2008 and became law.
In addition to various awards by three governors, the Los Angeles District Attorney"s office and the Los Angeles Sheriff"s Department, the Leaches were honored by the National office of Victims of Crime and two Presidents. In 2005, Marcella Leach was awarded the National Crime Victim Service Award from the United States. Department of Justice.
She died on March 16, 2015.
Leach"s first marriage was to an attorney with the Internal Revenue Service named Henry Nicholas Junior. They had two children (Henry III and Marsy) and lived in Glendale, Ohio. She was a teacher and later an administrator and theater instructor.