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Seventy Year-Old Jewesses
Helen Golay, 77, and Olga Rutterschmidt, 75, found themselves in
Los Angeles Superior Court recently, facing life in prison on charges
of murders that challenge even Hollywood's powers of diabolical
imagination. 1
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Zionist Prosecutors Say Their Harmless
"It sounds like 'Arsenic and Old Lace,' " said Deputy District
Attorney Shellie Samuels, "but it doesn't have Cary Grant."
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Detectives Say They Were Cold-blooded
The two women would almost certainly have gotten away with driving
over one homeless man to collect on the insurance policies they coaxed
him into signing. But then they drove over a second one
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They Were Caught On A Fluke
When McDavid's body turned up in 2005, his head crushed by the
undercarriage of a car that was later linked to Golay and
Rutterschmidt, the Los Angeles police officer who caught the call
mentioned it to a colleague. The colleague thought, " 'God, I had a
case like that in '99,' " the prosecutor said. "So he pulls it. Sure
enough, it's the same women, same method of death."
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They Used Him For Sex
Rutterschmidt took Vados under her wing in 1997, found him an
apartment, and persuaded him to sign life insurance policies totaling
$760,000. Insurance companies look most closely at deaths that occur
within two years of a new policy. Police say that explains why Vados
did not turn up dead until Nov. 8, 1999.
The women filed a missing-persons report 10 days later, claiming that
Vados was a cousin to one and the fiance of the other.
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Around the same time, Golay approached McDavid, 50, at an Episcopal
church in Hollywood, offering him an apartment in exchange for signing
a $500,000 insurance policy, prosecutors say. Rutterschmidt had a
rubber stamp made of his signature, used to sign policies that
eventually were worth a total of $7 million.
His body was found June 21, 2005, in an alley in Westwood near UCLA.
The same night, Golay phoned AAA for a tow a block away.
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Lots Of Planning Here
They steal a woman's ID, purchased a 1999 Mercury Sable
at an Orange County lot, registered it to the woman, and then used
to the car to murder the men.
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Their Attorney 'Jakob' Diamond
"All they have is circumstantial evidence," said Roger Jon Diamond,
who is defending Golay. "They don't have any eyewitnesses. They don't
have a confession. They don't have any fingerprints."
The defense attorney predicted acquittal.
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Detectives Wonder How Many More There Are
"They gave their victims alcohol laced with drugs. "They then drove
him to the alley, pushed him out of the car and backed up over him."
They was six years (1998- 2004) between murders, and detectives
calculate there could have been a few others.
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