Film & TV5 min(s) read
Published 12:43 13 Jun 2026 GMT
Netflix viewers left 'nauseous' after watching disturbing documentary about woman who faked a pregnancy before committing brutal crime
Warning: This article may contain some distressing information.
Netflix viewers are warning others to prepare themselves before watching Maternal Instinct, a harrowing true crime documentary that explores one of the most heartbreaking murder cases.
The film examines the killing of 21-year-old Reagan Simmons Hancock, a pregnant woman from New Boston, Texas, whose unborn child was stolen in a horrifying attack in October 2020.
As the documentary unpacks the shocking investigation, many viewers have been left deeply unsettled by the story.
One person took to X to share: "I have so many questions. This by far is the most disturbing documentary I’ve watched. #MaternalInstinct."
Another added: "Netflix's #MaternalInstinct is the most jaw-dropping true crime doc I've seen."
A third viewer commented: "I’ve seen MANY documentaries, and this by far has taken the cake for me thus far………….."
Meanwhile, one particularly shaken viewer admitted: "Well I’m going to be nauseous for the rest of the weekend over this documentary."
The shocking case at the centre of the documentary
Directed by Jessica Dimmock and produced by Joshua Levine, Samantha DeMaria, and Jon Bardin, Maternal Instinct follows the investigation into Taylor Parker.
According to the documentary, Parker, from Texas, began dating roofer and hog trapper Wade Griffin in 2019.
Early in their relationship, she told him she was pregnant and spent months building an entire life around that claim.
Evidence presented in court revealed that Parker staged medical appointments and even organized a gender reveal party.
Griffin explained in the documentary that because the pregnancy occurred during the COVID-19 pandemic, Parker was able to tell him he couldn't attend appointments due to restrictions, preventing him from independently verifying her claims.
Parker didn't just lie about her pregnancy
The documentary reveals that the woman's alleged lies extended far beyond her pregnancy.
According to the people interviewed, she claimed to come from a rich family and spoke about a future inheritance that would eventually make her a millionaire.
Wade recalls being swept up in the life she promised. "She just shined," he says in the documentary, adding: "She just kind of painted a pretty picture kind of for the future."
As doubts about the pregnancy began to grow, those closest to Parker started digging for answers.
Wade's mother, Connie, and family friend Stephanie Ott tried to confirm medical information but repeatedly found themselves hitting dead ends.
"She always had a counter," Connie says in the doc. "Everything I presented, she countered it."
The truth eventually came out when Stephanie contacted Parker's mother directly.
"'I've been waiting on this phone call,'" Stephanie recalls her saying. "'Taylor cannot have kids. She's had a hysterectomy…And there is no money at all anywhere.'"
Medical staff would later confirm Parker had previously undergone a hysterectomy, making pregnancy impossible.
The tragic murder of Reagan Simmons Hancock
By October 2020, Reagan was 35 weeks pregnant with her second daughter.
The young mother had previously hired Parker for photography work and had become acquainted with her over time.
On October 9, Hancock was found dead inside her home in New Boston. Investigators later determined she had suffered multiple stab wounds and blunt force trauma before her unborn baby was removed from her body, Time Magazine reported.
Her three-year-old daughter was inside the home during the attack but was not physically harmed.
Her newborn daughter, Braxlynn Sage, was taken from the scene.
How investigators uncovered the truth
Just hours after the attack, Parker was pulled over by a Texas state trooper for driving erratically near De Kalb.
She told officers she had just given birth and that the newborn in her vehicle was not breathing.
Emergency responders transported Parker and the baby to a hospital in Oklahoma. It was there that her story quickly began to crack.
Doctors found no evidence that Parker had recently given birth. DNA testing later confirmed that the infant was not hers but Hancock's daughter.
Investigators subsequently reconstructed what prosecutors described as a calculated attempt to maintain a false pregnancy by keeping a baby she could pass off as her own.
An Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation agent later informed Griffin what police believed had happened.
"I didn't really have no words for nothing at that point," he recalls in the documentary. "It was unimaginable, what she did."
Conviction and where Parker is now
Parker's trial began in 2022 and included testimony from more than 100 witnesses.
Prosecutors charged her with capital murder, arguing the killing occurred during the commission of kidnapping, making her eligible for the death penalty under Texas law.
On October 3, 2022, Parker was convicted of capital murder and later sentenced to death.
Subsequent appeals have failed to overturn either the verdict or sentence. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals upheld the conviction, while a request for review by the US Supreme Court was also declined.
As of 2026, Parker remains on death row in Texas, where she is among only a small number of female inmates awaiting execution.
You can tune into Maternal Instinct on Netflix.















