Sometimes a marriage reveals itself not in the moment of collapse, but in the desperate details that follow. That’s where Teen Mom’s Ryan Edwards and Amanda Conner find themselves now — unraveling in a way that’s become painfully public, one 911 call at a time.
Just hours after Conner, 35, was arrested on DUI and child neglect charges for driving under the influence with a baby in the car, she called police with a request that said everything: she needed an officer present so she could retrieve her belongings.“Me and my husband are in the middle of a divorce,”she told the 911 operator, according to audio obtained by The Ashley’s Reality Roundup. What started as a relationship born in 2023 during Edwards’court-ordered rehab has now deteriorated into the kind of domestic fracture that plays out with police as witness.
The specifics Conner provided paint a picture of a relationship gone volatile. She claimed Edwards had given her permission to enter their home, yet feared being trapped there — a dynamic she described as his pattern. That morning, she said, she’d woken up and told him it wasn’t working. His reaction was immediate: yelling, a look in his eye that frightened her enough to grab her purse and flee to the car. She worried he was“probably in there destroying my s***,”as she put it to the dispatcher, urgent enough to request officers arrive quickly.
The timeline here matters. Conner and Edwards had welcomed a baby girl in February 2025 before marrying seven months later. By April, they were still presenting a united front at Edwards’high school reunion. Now, less than two months after that public appearance, Conner’s relapse after three years sober — which she confirmed in a TikTok video on May 27 — seems to have been the breaking point.“I have let you all down and I’ve let my family down,”she said, acknowledging the shame and fear that came with her arrest. But the arrest wasn’t the only casualty of that night. Her marriage apparently was too.
Edwards, 38, hasn’t been charged with any crimes related to the incident and hasn’t publicly addressed the divorce claims. Us Weekly reached out to both for comment but received no response. What remains is the audio of a woman documenting her exit from a relationship in real time, speaking to a 911 operator because that’s the only way she felt safe enough to leave. It’s a stark reminder that reality TV relationships, even the ones that seemed to find redemption through recovery, aren’t immune to the kind of damage that can’t be aired or edited out.

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Ava Hart
Ava Hart is a contributor to LocalBeat, covering local news and community stories.





