You'd think she would have disposed of it after she left the house like others have suggested - or toss it when she was swimming ashore that night. Even if found eventually, being in the ocean after an assumed drowning shouldn't arouse suspicion, should it?
Others made a REALLY good point above: even in real life a lot of times people make dumb mistakes, even with the best laid plans.
When I used to watch Dateline like a decade or so ago, they used to have stories like these ALL the time: some abusive rich husband, some abused wife; she attempts to leave him, he kills her, tries to cover it up.
In most of the cases the biggest mistake the women made were telling their husbands they were leaving. That's usually when they got offed. Others would make the mistake of telling a relative or family friend that would then tell the husband, and that's how he would track her down and kill her.
It was always simple, seemingly stupid mistakes made either in the heat of the moment or because they just didn't think about the consequences of that action.
From the outside looking in, we the audience are already calculating what the best course of action is. We're not IN the moment, we don't have to make those life and death decisions, or think about the consequences for us, just for the characters, and so we can armchair quarterback the best case scenarios and what someone should do from the outside looking in. But in the moment, people usually aren't thinking that clearly, or not always thinking about all of the potential consequences when they're doing what they're doing, just like in real life.
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