Elderly
women on trial for murder
LOS
ANGELES (AP) — The prosecution in the trial of two
elderly women accused of a murder-for-profit scheme on Tuesday showed jurors a
videotape of one defendant accusing the other of being too greedy in taking out
too many insurance policies on homeless men.
“It’s
your fault,” Olga Rutterschmidt, 75, told
co-defendant Helen Golay, 77, in the tape. “You can’t
have that many insurers. ... You were greedy. That’s the problem.”
The
tape was played during an opening statement by Los Angeles County Deputy
District Attorney Truc Do, who presented jurors an
outline of evidence she said will tie the women to the deaths of two homeless
men who were run over by cars.
Authorities
allege that the defendants conspired to insure two indigent men, kill them in
fake hit-and-run accidents and collect on the insurance policies.
Rutterschmidt and Golay each face two counts of murder and two counts of
conspiracy to commit murder for financial gain in the deaths of Paul Vados, 73, in 1999 and Kenneth McDavid,
51, in 2005. Both women have pleaded not guilty. The prosecution is not seeking
the death penalty.
“We
have evidence to show she’s not guilty,” Golay’s
attorney, Roger Jon Diamond, said in an interview Monday. “They have over 100
witnesses but they have no eyewitness, no confession. It’s all circumstantial.”
The
videotape was recorded by the FBI when the women were in custody for what was
initially a mail fraud investigation.
In
one part of the videotape, Golay coolly attempted to
say that one victim loved her and Rutterschmidt and
felt they were his family.
Rutterschmidt snapped back: “I was
the cousin. You were the fiancee. Baloney.”
Do
said the women found the men in a homeless shelter at a Hollywood church, set
them up in apartments and supported them for two years, all the while taking
out multiple life insurance policies on them.
The
prosecutor said they ultimately profited to the tune of $2.8 million and were
still trying to collect on policies when they were arrested.
During
the prosecution’s opening statement, the jury was shown pictures of the
victims’ bodies, receipts for rent, a car that has been linked to one of the
killings and a rubber stamp with one victim’s signature that was allegedly used
to sign insurance policies.
The
case began in 2006 in federal court with a grand jury indicting the women on
nine counts each of mail fraud and related charges for making false insurance
claims. But when further evidence developed in the alleged hit-and-run scheme,
the case was transferred to Los Angeles County Superior Court and murder
charges were filed.