A jury in Phoenix has found Lori Vallow Daybell guilty of conspiring to murder her niece’s ex-husband in 2019, marking her second conviction for murder conspiracy in Arizona in just under two months.

On Thursday, the jury delivered a guilty verdict on the charge that Daybell conspired to kill Brandon Boudreaux, who was previously married to her niece, outside his residence in Gilbert, a suburb east of Phoenix.

This conviction follows a separate verdict in late April, when an Arizona jury found Daybell guilty of conspiring with her brother, Alex Cox, to murder her estranged husband, Charles Vallow, at her Chandler home, also in the Phoenix metro area.

Daybell, a mother who subscribed to apocalyptic religious ideologies, is already serving a life sentence in Idaho for the murder of her two youngest children and for taking part in a plan to eliminate a romantic rival. That sentence followed a separate trial that revealed a chilling timeline of deaths and deception tied to her beliefs and relationships. She was sentenced in Idaho to life in prison with no chance of parole.

Chad Daybell.

She now faces sentencing for both Arizona convictions on July 25, with each carrying a potential life sentence, further cementing her place at the center of one of the country’s most disturbing modern criminal sagas.

According to Boudreaux, his former wife Melani Pawlowski—Daybell’s niece—had become enamored with Lori and their bond strengthened over shared religious activities beginning in 2018. Pawlowski began promoting doomsday prepping, urging Boudreaux to store food in anticipation of the end times.

In October 2019, a rifle was fired at Boudreaux from a Jeep parked outside his home. Though the bullet missed him, it shattered a window in his vehicle. He later identified the Jeep as the one often driven by Vallow’s daughter, Tylee Ryan, who was later found murdered.

Despite lacking legal training, Vallow Daybell opted to represent herself in both Arizona trials, continuing to maintain control over her defense even as her convictions stacked up.