
By Taylor Bennett. Mar 1, 2026
Tommy Schaefer, the American convicted in the high-profile “suitcase murder” in Bali, has been released early from an Indonesian prison after serving 11 years and is now facing federal charges in the United States.
According to People and the Associated Press, Schaefer was convicted in 2014 for the murder of 62-year-old Sheila von Wiese-Mack during a trip to Indonesia and was sentenced to 18 years behind bars. Indonesian authorities confirmed his release came after sentence reductions typically granted for good behavior.
Upon his deportation to the United States, federal prosecutors in Chicago unsealed an indictment charging Schaefer with conspiracy to commit murder and other related offenses in connection with the 2014 killing, according to the AP.
Von Wiese-Mack was found dead inside a suitcase in the trunk of a taxi in Bali in August 2014. The discovery stunned both local authorities and the American public.
She had been traveling with her daughter, Heather Mack, and Schaefer, who was Mack’s boyfriend at the time. Prosecutors in Indonesia argued that the killing was planned and carried out inside a luxury hotel room after an argument.
The brutality of the crime and the image of a body concealed in luggage quickly made the case international news, drawing intense media coverage in both Indonesia and the United States.
Family members described von Wiese-Mack as a devoted mother and grandmother whose life ended violently while abroad. Her death left relatives grieving not only the loss, but the circumstances that surrounded it.
In 2015, an Indonesian court sentenced Schaefer to 18 years in prison after finding him guilty of premeditated murder. Heather Mack was sentenced to 10 years for her role in the crime, according to People.
Indonesia’s legal system allows for sentence reductions based on behavior and other factors, and Schaefer ultimately served about 11 years before his release. Mack was released earlier and later returned to the United States.
In 2021, U.S. authorities charged Mack in federal court with conspiracy to kill a U.S. national overseas. She later pleaded guilty and was sentenced in Chicago in 2023 to 26 years in prison, according to prior reporting by the AP.
The new indictment against Schaefer signals that U.S. prosecutors intend to pursue their own case, separate from the Indonesian conviction.
Although Schaefer was already tried and convicted in Indonesia, American law allows federal prosecutors to bring charges if a U.S. citizen is accused of killing another U.S. national abroad.
According to the AP, the indictment filed in the Northern District of Illinois alleges that Schaefer conspired with Mack to murder von Wiese-Mack while overseas. Federal officials have not publicly detailed how the case will proceed or when Schaefer will make his first court appearance.
Legal experts have noted in similar cases that prosecutions in multiple countries are permitted because each nation is considered a separate sovereign under the law. The U.S. Constitution’s protection against double jeopardy generally applies within the same sovereign jurisdiction.
Authorities have not indicated whether additional charges could be filed.
For many Americans, the Bali suitcase murder never faded from memory. The shocking details, the international setting, and the family dynamics kept the case in headlines for years.
Now, more than a decade after von Wiese-Mack’s death, her name is once again at the center of a courtroom battle.
Federal prosecutors have framed the indictment as part of their authority to pursue justice when U.S. citizens are killed abroad. Schaefer, like Mack before him, is presumed innocent under U.S. law until proven guilty.
For von Wiese-Mack’s surviving family members, the legal process is stretching into a second decade. The tragedy that began in a Bali hotel room continues to ripple across continents, a reminder that some crimes follow families home.
References: Bali Suitcase Killer Convicted of Murdering Girlfriend’s Wealthy Mom Is Out of Prison | Suitcase Murder: Bali Indictment Chicago Schaefer
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