Who Killed Lucy in Untamed? Breaking Down Netflix’s Twisted Miniseries Ending
Netflix’s Untamed has quickly become the latest streaming obsession — a six-part psychological drama that grips viewers with its haunting mystery, morally ambiguous characters, and a finale that leaves audiences reeling. The question at the heart of the series — who killed Lucy? — is finally answered, but not without a trail of twists, betrayals, and devastating truths that redefine everything leading up to the shocking end.
Turner: The Flawed Investigator
At the center of Untamed is Turner, a detective painted in shades of grey. He is the archetype of the “difficult but brilliant” cop — abrasive to his colleagues, yet undeniably skilled in unraveling lies. Turner spends much of the series pulling apart the threads surrounding Jane Doe and Lucy, raising suspicions about nearly everyone in the Parks Department.
Yet Turner himself is haunted. He is grappling with grief over the death of his son Caleb, and his marriage to Jill (played with quiet devastation by Rosemarie DeWitt) is shattered. These personal scars shape his every decision, adding layers of vulnerability beneath his tough exterior. As the finale makes clear, Turner’s own secrets are just as corrosive as the lies of those he investigates.
The Shadow of Sean Sanderson
One of the most intriguing subplots is the disappearance of Sean Sanderson (Mark Rankin), a patron whose case seems to hover on the edges of the central mystery. Both Turner and Jill know more than they admit, and their silence creates unease throughout the story.
By the finale, Sean’s disappearance ties back to the same corrupt undercurrents that fuel Lucy’s tragic end. His fate is revealed in fragments, another casualty of the secrets rotting this seemingly ordinary community.
Lucy’s Murder — The Shocking Truth
The murder of Lucy, a vibrant yet troubled young woman, drives Untamed’s suspense. Every character — from Turner’s fellow officers to townsfolk with something to hide — comes under suspicion. Red herrings abound: jealous colleagues, manipulative lovers, even Lucy’s own family.
But the truth, revealed in the final episode, is both shocking and tragic. Lucy’s death was not the result of a single act of violence, but of a web of negligence, betrayal, and selfish cover-ups. She uncovered corruption within the Parks Department — a scandal tied to missing funds and illegal dealings — and when she threatened to expose it, she became a target.
The killer is finally unmasked as one of Turner’s own colleagues, someone viewers had been led to trust throughout the series. Their betrayal hits hardest not because of brutality, but because of cold calculation — a desperate attempt to silence Lucy before her revelations destroyed reputations and careers.
Turner’s Breaking Point
While Turner solves Lucy’s murder, the finale does not paint him as a hero. Instead, Untamed ends with him confronting his own complicity — in the lies about Sean Sanderson, in his broken family relationships, and in his inability to let go of vengeance.
In one of the series’ most powerful closing scenes, Turner admits that justice in Lucy’s case feels hollow. He may have solved the crime, but the corruption and moral decay at the heart of his department remain unresolved. His grief for Caleb lingers, his estrangement from Jill deepens, and his future feels as uncertain as ever.
Jill’s Silent Struggle
Jill’s arc is subtle but devastating. Throughout the series, she serves as both Turner’s mirror and his counterpoint — a reminder of what was lost in their family and of the emotional costs of his obsession with work.
Her silence about Sean Sanderson reveals not just complicity, but also her desperate attempt to protect what little stability she has left. By the finale, Jill is left broken, caught between truth and survival, a woman who knows that even justice has its limits.
Closure… and More Questions
Untamed answers the primary mystery of Lucy’s murder, but leaves lingering questions. Did Turner truly serve justice, or simply perpetuate a cycle of corruption by concealing the full scope of rot within the department? What happens to Jill, now that her secrets have surfaced? And most hauntingly, does Turner ever reconcile with his own past — or will he forever remain “untamed” by grief and anger?
A Dark Reflection of Justice
The brilliance of Untamed lies not just in its suspense, but in its refusal to give viewers neat resolution. By the time credits roll, audiences are left with a bitter truth: in this world, justice is murky, truth is fragile, and everyone carries guilt.
The finale is both satisfying and unsettling — Lucy’s killer is unmasked, yet the moral wounds remain open. For fans of psychological drama, Untamed is a chilling reminder that the real monsters aren’t always strangers in the dark… sometimes they’re the people we trust the most.
✨ Untamed is now streaming on Netflix. Viewer discretion is advised.