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Women
Convicted of Insurance Murders
of Two Homeless Men
April 21, 2008
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contacts:
Joe Scott, Director of Communications
Sandi Gibbons, Public Information Officer
Jane Robison, News Secretary
(213) 974-3525
LOS
ANGELES – A jury returned the final two guilty verdicts today in
the case of two women convicted of befriending homeless men, then
murdering them to collect $2.8 million in life insurance.
“Justice has now been served in the murders of two homeless men,”
said District Attorney Steve Cooley in a prepared statement. “The
final chapter will be when the defendants are sent to prison for the
rest of their lives for the killings that were spawned out of
greed.”
Helen Louise Golay, 77, and Olga Rutterschmidt, 75, are scheduled to
be sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole for
their crimes. Golay is scheduled to be sentenced on June 24 and
Rutterschmidt on July 15.
A jury of nine women and three men returned the bulk of the guilty
verdicts against the women last Wednesday following a little more
than a day of deliberation. Golay was convicted of two counts of
first-degree murder with the special circumstances of murder for
financial gain and multiple murders, and two counts of conspiracy to
commit murder for financial gain. The jury convicted Rutterschmidt
of one of the conspiracy counts, but was unable to reach verdicts on
the other three. Jurors told trial Judge David S. Wesley they needed
more argument from both the prosecution and defense to help them
decide.
Jurors on Thursday came back with a guilty verdict on one of the
murder counts against Rutterschmidt, but were unable to reach
verdicts on the other two counts of murder and conspiracy. One of
the jurors – a man – was replaced because he had to leave town on a
business trip. He was replaced by a male alternate and the judge
told jurors to renew the deliberations today. Verdicts on the two
counts were reached in a half-hour.
Both women were convicted of Paul Vados, 73, who was killed on Nov.
8, 1999. He was run over by an automobile in an alley in the 300
block of Westwood Boulevard in Westwood. It was a hit and run
killing.
They also were convicted of murdering Kenneth McDavid, 50, on June
21, 2005, when he was run over by an automobile in an alley in the
1200 block of North La Brea Avenue in Hollywood. It also was a hit
and run.
The women provided housing for both victims prior to their deaths.
They applied for dozens of insurance policies in the men’s names and
were involved in activities relating to the victims after their
deaths.
Originally charged with capital murder, the District Attorney’s
office later decided to seek life in prison without the possibility
of parole for the two women, dubbed by the media during the trial as
the “Black Widows.”
Cooley praised the work of prosecutors Truc Do and Bobby Grace of
the Major Crimes Division on the case. He also noted the hard work
done by investigators to put the case together. He singled out
Detectives Dennis Kilcoyne and Rosemary Sanchez of the Los Angeles
Police Department’s Robbery-Homicide Division, as well as Special
Agent Samuel Mayrose of the FBI, and Rob Brockway of the California
Department of Insurance.
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