Cold Case Files - A Killer's Skin - Where's Peggy

Episode Date: November 11, 2025

Police in Albany, N.Y., get a surprise when a killer they think targets only older women is suspected in the murder of an elderly man. The contents of a secret storage shed holds the grisly c...lues to a murder that has gone cold for more than 14 years.Homes.com: We’ve done your homework.Progressive: Multitask right now. Quote your car insurance at Progressive.com to join the over 28 million drivers who trust Progressive.Quince: Go to Quince.com/coldcase for free shipping on your order and 365-day returnsShopify - Sign up for a one-dollar-per-month trial period at Shopify.com/coldcase and take your retail business to the next level today!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hi, Cold Case listeners. I'm Marissa Pinson. And if you're enjoying this show, I just want to remind you that episodes of Cold Case Files as well as the A&E Classic Podcasts, I Survived, American Justice, and City Confidential, are all available ad-free on the new A&E Crime and Investigation Channel on Apple Podcasts and Apple Plus for just $4.99 a month or $39.99 a year. And now on to the show. This program contains subject matter that may be disturbing to some listeners. Listener discretion is advised. There are over 100,000 cold cases in America. Only 1% are ever solved. This is one of those rare stories. Inside a police evidence room, these men are collecting items from a cold case. Each of these items have significant DNA evidence. Among them, a bedrockery.
Starting point is 00:01:00 spread. The killer actually would have wiped his hands on this comforter as he left. A pair of jeans. And you can actually see there is blood all over jeans. And a steel bar. Someone had stood over him and repeatedly thrust down and beat him, beat him repeatedly with this. For Sergeant PJ McKenna, unwrapping the evidence is easy. Unwrapping this investigation, however, is another story. One that takes him back to the cold night of January 20, 2000 in Albany, New York. We'll call one out to the patrol division for a woman in the area, and there was a complaint of a potential assault.
Starting point is 00:01:42 At 8.30 p.m., Albany police detective P.J. McKenna pulls up to 799 Mertel Avenue, where an 85-year-old woman has been found wandering the neighborhood. We were informed that she was in the early stages at the very least of dementia, and really couldn't provide much, only to say that he had hurt her. Inside the old woman's house, McKenna finds blood and evidence of a possible rape. Nothing was taken, but the phone cords were pulled out. It was the phone cord that was actually tied up in a knot, as if used for holding something, tying someone up.
Starting point is 00:02:24 With no identified suspects, the case is not a priority for DNA, testing. Eventually, a DNA profile is extracted from semen found on the victim's body and entered into the state's data bank as an unsolved case. With no one in the neighborhood being able to know anything, nothing off canvas, nothing off registered or known sex offenders, it went cold. We had no leads in this case. 50-year-old Martha Montalvo was discovered staffed to death by her landlord who looked through a rear window and saw Martha laying in a pool of blood. As we went into the house, you pass through a living room. On March 6th, less than two months later, detectives McKenna and Tim Carroll arrive at the apartment of Martha Montalvo, a 50-year-old
Starting point is 00:03:12 woman with a history of mental illness. Inside, they find a dead body and a crime scene, already several days old. There was no forced entry. There was no struggle by the doors. She was decomposed, advanced stages of decomposition. Her buttocks was propped up on some pillows. She was partially naked. There was a towel draped on her face. She was blood soaked. And we had both said after speaking to dozens of people in the area and seeing the scene that this was going to be a forensic case. It was going to be something where we were going to need a forensic break. An autopsy reveals no evidence of semen in the body. The victim's blood-stained genes and bedding are sent for DNA testing.
Starting point is 00:03:57 Meanwhile, the story gets a lot of coverage in the press. A quiet Albany neighborhood filled with families has been plunged into concern and fear by the murder of a woman who lived alone at 1071 Madison Avenue. The news coverage generates attention. Then a phone call and Detective McKenna's first solid lead. And a phone call came in from a person who identified himself as Adam's Cope. He told us that he was a friend of hers.
Starting point is 00:04:25 that he was concerned about what had happened and he'd known her for a long time and he wanted to offer his assistance in any way to the investigation. We were just acquaintances. We saw each other once in a while. Like Montalvo, Adam's scope has a history of mental illness, along with a history of sexual violence towards women.
Starting point is 00:04:46 McKenna decides to pay him a visit. When we went to speak to him, it was very difficult to keep him on point on any question. He would go off on. tangents. They were like playing good, bad caught with me, you know. We could attribute some of that to his telling us that he was on medication and that may affect his thought process, but it was difficult to tell if he was avoiding questions
Starting point is 00:05:11 and being evasive in his answers or if he was actually having a problem coming up with clear thoughts. They were pressuring me to admit to killing Martha, and I didn't, I wouldn't, and couldn't. And I just felt like I was being arrested without being told I was being arrested. After two interviews with police, Scope realizes he has become a suspect in the murder and decides to approach the media with his side of the story. Adam Scope lives just a few doors away from what was once the home of 50-year-old Martha Montalvo.
Starting point is 00:05:47 We interviewed Adam Scope after he contacted us here at News 10. He said that he was very interested in trying to figure out who killed Martha Montalvo. TV reporter Sarah Welch interviewed scope. Like detectives, she finds his story has some holes. When we interviewed him, said that he clearly had an alibi for the night that Martha Matalvo was murdered. However, at the time, police had not yet released a specific date as to when Martha was killed. While you and your girlfriend saw Martha on Sunday,
Starting point is 00:06:17 and her body was found on Monday, the coroner says that Martha had been dead for at least a couple of couple of days. No. At one point, he did tell us that he didn't know Martha very well. However, in the next breath, he told us that he loved her or he thought that he loved her. His comments were at times very unpredictable, borderline strange and bizarre. Bizarre may be, but to detectives, Scopes' performance on the evening news is something they've
Starting point is 00:06:50 seen before. You know, my first thought was Wayne Williams from the Atlanta Child Kill. He was very close with the police, very close to the investigation, and very close to the media at the same time. I mean, that was a classic scenario. So here we have a person doing the same thing, and you have to ask, is this person following that same pattern? Is he directly involved? Police suspect Adam's scope might be their killer. The problem is a lack of proof.
Starting point is 00:07:16 Well, I remember that I was called upstairs and told that this was a high priority case. On March 24th, Dr. Allison Eastman of the New York State Crime lab takes possession of a pair of blood-stained jeans. They once belonged to Martha Montalvo. On the front side, there was a single drop of blood located right near the pocket that looked like it was totally unrelated to the other blood. It was assumed all the blood on the genes belonged to the victim. Eastman sees the small round drop and thinks otherwise.
Starting point is 00:07:53 What I thought it might have, what kind of happened is that someone leaned over her body and the blood fell from that individual. And it appeared like this as though the individual was leaning over her body and blood fell possibly from a cut and deposited like that, forming a small circle. Eastman's suspicions are well-founded as a male DNA profile is developed from the stain. This is a vial of Adam Scope's blood, which we obtained via search warrant. Detective P.J. McKenna has one good suspect in the case, an acquaintance of the victim named Adam's Scope.
Starting point is 00:08:36 He looked good in the beginning. He did. He fit a lot of the criteria that we were looking at. And when it came back negative, it was just, okay, well, let's move on. Scope is not a match for the mysterious blood stain. An initial run through the state's DNA data bank also fails to generate a suspect. 104 of Farge and Krug. Two years later, however, detectives get a hit.
Starting point is 00:08:59 Not to an individual, but to the unsolved rape of an 85-year-old woman committed just six weeks before the Montalvo homicide, and only five blocks away. In the first case, it was someone who was clearly stalking an individual for the purpose of sex. And six weeks later, he sees some more prey, follows her into her house, attempts to take sex. And when she defends herself, he is not afraid to turn in a moment and turn it into a homicide and kill her to put her down. Detective McKenna believes he is looking for a sexual predator, one who targets older or vulnerable women. Detective McKenna, however, is wrong.
Starting point is 00:09:44 We have a parent homicide of a 68-year-old Alexander Street resident. George Young, an Army veteran, lived alone in his Alexander Street home. It was so violent. Right here, when they came through the door, he had to stand up to open the door. And he was laying here almost like in a fetal position. On January 26, 2004, just after 12 noon, P.J. McKenna and Detective Jack Grogan respond to the home of 69-year-old George Young. Inside, they find Mr. Young's beaten and bloody body. And the pool of blood that Mr. Young was laying in,
Starting point is 00:10:22 you could see that it was an extremely violent crime that happened here. And when forensics got here, as you looked up to the ceiling, you could tell that whoever was doing it was lifting and striking and lifting and striking and moving around him as they hit him over and over again. And you'd have blood spatter all the way back in an outward pattern away in every direction. Detectives find an unlocked safe near the body, indicating robbery to be the likely motive. Also near the body, a bloody piece of steel rebar.
Starting point is 00:10:56 Just looking at the position of George Young and the way his head looked, to me, that looked pretty obvious that that was probably the murder weapon. An autopsy determines that George Young was both beaten and shot. While detectives don't recover a gun, this news bolstered. their theory that this was a two-man operation. When one of them brought the safe down, they stopped right about here. And they put the safe on the floor. While this was going on, the other one was beating George still.
Starting point is 00:11:27 He beat him numerous times in his head about the body. From the injuries that we could see from the autopsy photos, it was numerous to count. Detectives questioned people in the neighborhood, hoping to find out who knew about George Young's money. Everyone in that part of town, which is economically depressed, said that George had money. He wouldn't let people in his house unless he knew who they were. And that's one of the things that piqued our interest when we found, Mr. Young. How did somebody get into his house? By not forcing the door, he had a lot of men, so he had to know who they were.
Starting point is 00:12:01 Detectives learn of a handyman who did odd jobs for the victim. Someone George Young would have allowed into his home, someone already familiar to the police. This was someone who had a checkered history. His name had come up in a previous investigation, a previous homicide investigation. His name was on a short list of possibilities amongst street people. The handyman is brought in for questioning and denies killing Young. We also asked him to take a polygraph, which he initially agreed to, and then as hard as it is to imagine for a person who was in his 40s,
Starting point is 00:12:36 refuse to cooperate any further unless his mother could be in the interview room with him at all times. He didn't want a lawyer. He wanted his mom. The handyman ultimately refuses to take a polygraph. Meanwhile, evidence from the crime scene is examined for possible clues. Of particular interest is the probable murder weapon. Ultimately, the decision was made by our forensics unit to send it out for identification in the hopes that whoever had taken this. I mean, when you use this with such force, if you're not wearing gloves, you can cut your hand on the metal or as it twists in your hand, you can leave skin scrapings behind. The actual piece of rebar in the case was longer.
Starting point is 00:13:19 On February 11, 2004, criminalist Nicole Zavotech examines the piece of rebar used to kill George Young. She focuses on the end with very little blood, believing it to be the end most likely handled by the killer. I took another swab towards the very end, and that's the swab DNA-wise that, ended up yielding a mixture profile. It's a mixture of blood from the victim and a small amount of something from the killer.
Starting point is 00:13:49 Most likely it's skin cells, shed skin cells, or from sweat. The partial profile is plugged into CODIS. It doesn't match any offenders in the system or to a voluntary DNA sample taken from George Young's handyman. But investigators do get a match, one that takes them by surprise. And we got a case-to-case hit on this case with two other previous cases. A hit to two crimes that have already been linked. The sexual assault of an 85-year-old Albany woman and the murder of 50-year-old Martha Montalvo.
Starting point is 00:14:23 It was an unbelievable revelation when it came back from the lab. It was scary. These people just, they had no connection to each other. They had none. DNA has connected the dots for detectives. Three crimes, one person. person. Now the hunt is on to find out who. It was someone who was very much alive, someone who was still very much active, unfortunately, and had expanded not only their area, but their
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Starting point is 00:17:03 It hurt, you know, to know that someone who had eluded us, eluded me initially, for two and a half years, had gone out and killed somebody else. And, you know, there's a sense of responsibility there. Okay, tonight in 111 is Farge. Albany police have a problem. DNA has linked three crimes to one man. The rape of an 85-year-old Albany woman in 2000, the murder of 50-year-old Martha Montalvo that same year, and the murder of 69-year-old George Young in 2004. The first two had a sexual nature to them.
Starting point is 00:17:40 There was a rape, and then there was a murder in the middle of an attempted sexual attack, and there were females, both with some form of mental illness, and now you have a 65-year-old male in the complete opposite end of town, who's bludgeoned to death. I mean, it took a right-hand turn. It made no sense initially. The lack of any identifiable pattern makes the investigation difficult. Then McKenna takes yet another call from the forensics lab.
Starting point is 00:18:10 You know, that day when DCJS told us all three cases had a name to it, I mean, Jack and I want to run out the door. Forensics has matched the unknown profile to a convicted felon named Ramon McGill. We had no idea who he was. He was no one that was on our radar. His name would never come up. Never come up in any crimes. Miguel is sitting in a New York state prison on an unrelated robbery conviction from earlier in the year.
Starting point is 00:18:37 Going through his criminal history, very petty stuff. I mean, some drug arrests and that attempted robbery, but other than that, nothing, nothing major. Nothing major and no substantial ties to any of the victims. A DNA match, however, would seem to be enough for the conviction. Assistant DA Michael McDermott disagrees. If the only proof we had was that we found his DNA at the scene, I mean, that's really compelling proof, but I think the jury's going to want more, like, how did you get there? You know, who was he? Why was he there? How did he get in? You know, what happened after the fact? And without a statement from him, we wouldn't be able to fill in those blanks.
Starting point is 00:19:15 You know, if you have a skilled defense attorney, they could come up with a million cockamamie reasons why their client's DNA was, you know, found at a crime scene, you know? The order from the district attorney's office is simple. Get a confession. detectives McKenna and Grogan pack their bags and head upstate to speak to McGill. PJ and I were expecting to see a monster, and we didn't see that. We saw what appeared to be a very scared 20, 22-year-old kid. Detective sit McGill down and begin by asking about the most recent murder. We just started with, you know, did you ever know George Young? First, he denied it.
Starting point is 00:19:57 Asked him if he'd ever been in this house, old George's house. And he said no. Detectives know they've caught McGill in a lie and begin to unpack their evidence for support. Well, let me show you some paperwork. This is your DNA. And this says that the odds of another person having the same DNA are one in something like 26 billion. So do you want to tell me how it is that your DNA is in this house? You want to tell me the truth now?
Starting point is 00:20:23 His shoulders just seem that they went down like, you know, now it's time. You know, it's time to tell us what actually happened. actually happened. Ramon McGill confesses to beating George Young to death, but he says he didn't do it alone. He names another person as the one who shot Young, the same handyman who refused to take a polygraph at the time of the murder. Once old George opens the door, Ramon starts to hit him. They demanded where the safe was, because they knew there was a safe in the house. When the safe was brought down, he asked him the combination. The combination was wrong, and he started to start to striking again and again.
Starting point is 00:21:01 And with George's dying breath, he gave the correct numbers to the combination to stop the beating. McGill says his accomplice then shot George Young in the head, and they took off with about $1,200 in cash. Detectives next pressed McGill about Martha Montalvo. He was confronted again with the DNA, and he was told.
Starting point is 00:21:22 You told us what you did on Alexander Street. You told us that the DNA down there was yours. So how do you explain your DNA? And there was his paws, and he looks out the window. He looks back, and he said, okay, that was me. I was there. I killed her. McGill again takes detectives back to the night he murdered Martha Montalvo.
Starting point is 00:21:41 He told us that he had followed her into the house. He told us that he attempted to engage her in kissing and petting, and he started to get her clothes off when he said she freaked out. There was a little bit of a struggle. Ramon stated to us that Martha grabbed the knife, and he took it away. He stabbed her 16 times in the chest. Detectives now have two confessions and go for the third. P.J. said to Ramon, he said, we need to discuss one more incident.
Starting point is 00:22:12 Is there any place else you think we might find your DNA? And that's when he brought up Myrtle Avenue. P.J. said, what happened on Myrtle Avenue? He said, the old lady in a question for him. He was asked, what about the old lady? And he said, yeah, we had sex. McGill pleads guilty to the murders of Martha Montalvo and George Young and to the sexual assault on Myrtle Avenue. All that's left is sentencing. On January 23rd, 2006, in an Albany
Starting point is 00:22:40 courtroom, Ramon McGill faces the families of his victims. Virginia Young is George Young's sister. But today there is a sense of relief. Perhaps now we can begin to heal knowing that this, his rampage of lawlessness, his campaign of death, has come to an end. Wanda Flores is Martha Montalvo's daughter. My mother was a very beautiful light, like at sunrise. Her light was put out when Ramon or Gill came into our lives. Frederick Young is George Young's brother. And I want you to think about how I felt after seeing this new scooter parked in his house,
Starting point is 00:23:21 blood spattered all over it. Ramon, why did you kill, my brother George? What did he do to you to cause you to be so brutal? When it's the killer's turn to speak, Ramon McGill fails to muster up an apology or take responsibility. I would like to say my prayers go out to the victim's families and also that justice is not served here today because the killer, madman, still runs free
Starting point is 00:23:51 and I'm being punished for it. The killer McGill refers to is the accomplice he says shot George Young. A handyman, police had looked at in 2004, and continue looking at today. The challenge now is to develop sufficient evidence apart from what McGill has told us to prosecute this other person
Starting point is 00:24:12 because under New York law, we cannot use a co-defendant statement as a basis for a prosecution. We need some evidence, whether it's testimonial, or whether it's physical evidence linking this other person to the commission of the crime. And the police are working on that now. Ramon McGill will serve 40 years to life for his crimes.
Starting point is 00:24:32 Investigators say two of those crimes might have been prevented, had the killer been forced to provide a DNA sample for a 1999 misdemeanor conviction. Right now, if you're convicted of a misdemeanor, you have to give up your fingerprints. That's 19th century technology. That's the way they identified people back at the turn of the century. Why not include their DNA, which is, you know, cutting-edge technology. If you look at the facts of this case, it just cries out to expand the group of people included in the database to include all offenders. It's an idea supported by Sergeant P.J. McKenna, who, six years later, finally gets to see his suspect sent to prison.
Starting point is 00:25:12 It was mission accomplished two out of three. Two of the cases are completely closed. one of the people involved in the most recent homicide will be eligible for parole when I'm in my mid-80s so I don't think that he's going to be a threat to society anymore and in the back of my mind there's still a little bit of work to be done.
Starting point is 00:25:34 Albany police are still working to bring Ramon McGill's alleged accomplice in the George Young murder to justice. We're here at the Sheriff's Office inactive records file. We're heading down to the case file where Peggy Rehombe case was kept. Detective Keith Hall works cold cases for the Onondaga County Sheriff's Office. Spring of 2002, I was assigned to Peggy Rehom case. At the time, it was classified as a missing person investigation.
Starting point is 00:26:10 This is a picture of Margaret Peggy Rehom. She was 31 when she disappeared without a trace. Margaret Peggy Riyom has been missing and presumed dead for 12 years. Her story begins with her daughter, Jerylian. In 1990, I was in the sixth grade. I was living with my mother in George Gettis and wasn't a happy time. In 1990, Jerylian Riehlm is 13 years old and living in fear of her mother's boyfriend, George Gettis. George was sexually abusing me.
Starting point is 00:26:47 repeatedly. There was a time that he got caught and by another adult, and that's when I told. So I knew that somebody was there behind me to say, yes, I seen this. Jerelyn runs away to her biological father, Jerry Rehom, and reports the abuse. First thing I did was called the police. I told all of us, don't let Peggy or George know what you was just told. Because George would have probably skis. Police arrest George Gettis in early February. A few weeks after that, Gerylain turns 14 and expects a visit from her mom.
Starting point is 00:27:27 She didn't come around, no phone call, no nothing. So February 26, I was calling, reporting her missing. Detective Lenny Stordow picks up the missing person's case. She basically came out and told me she knew George did it. It's a long time, a long time to go without knowing what happened to your, you're, you know, to a loved one. Storto visits George Geddes in the county jail and asks about Margaret. Gettis claims he last saw her the day before he was arrested.
Starting point is 00:27:59 George said that they got into an argument. It got heated and he left and went to get a pack of cigarettes. Upon his return to the apartment, he saw one set of prints leading out in the snow to the road, and that's the last he saw of Margaret. Storto doesn't believe Gettis and suspects Margaret. Riyom might have somehow caught wind of her daughter's alleged rape. I knew from talking to Jerylind and talking to her grandmother, Margaret's mother, that she was very protective of her children.
Starting point is 00:28:29 And I knew that when she found out about the abuse with Jerylind, that she was going to confront George. It probably got physical. And that was always in the back of my head. Storto has a murder suspect, but no evidence or even a body to examine. he returns to Gettis' apartment, hoping to catch a break. When he asked me where things were and what was in the apartment and what I'd done with it, he wasn't too happy when I told him that I'd disposed of almost everything.
Starting point is 00:29:00 Bill Waltoz is Peggy Rehom's landlord. With her apartment vacant more than a month, Walthos tells Detective Storto he threw everything out of the unit, including a mattress stained with blood. Maybe six, eight inches. it almost looked like, you know, that time of the month for a woman. So I just didn't, I never gave it another thought. Very frustrating when you're trying to determine what happened to somebody who's missing
Starting point is 00:29:27 and kind of just like dropped off the face of the earth. So try to start back where the last person saw her. And then she had her car here. Did he come back and get her car? Storto knocks on a few more doors and finds a downstairs neighbor named Butch Oka. He tells the story about George Gettis and a large and heavy trunk. And we heard this big banging coming down the stairs like bang, bang, bang. I came out the door to see what it was.
Starting point is 00:29:56 He was coming down these stairs here and he had a steamer trunk, like a blue steamer trunk coming down all the way down. And his truck was parked out here. And he came down and he put him to the back of his truck. Oka asked George Gettis if he needed help carrying the trunk. but Geddes seemed to be in a hurry. Normally it's talk, but he didn't even talk. He just went and got there as fast as he could,
Starting point is 00:30:19 and he left as fast as he could. George Geddes' trunk appeared around the time Margaret Rehom disappeared, a coincidence that is not lost on Detective Storto. George was asked about the trunk, and he was a contractor and said that the trunk was heavy because he had his tools, saw blades,
Starting point is 00:30:40 It's tools of trade. When I asked him what he did with the trunk, he said it did. He sold it to some guy in a bar and couldn't give us any of the information on who the recipient was or what buyer it was. And he said he was pretty wasted. Gettis is convicted of raping Gerelyn Rehom. The investigation into Peggy Rehom's disappearance, however, goes cold. Meanwhile, Geraldine Rehom faces life without a mother. This is my mother's wedding day.
Starting point is 00:31:08 I wrote back on here, Mom, I hope you're happy wherever you're at. Remember, I'll always love you. I hope you come back real soon. Love Jerry Lynn. My mother knew where we were living, and then we moved. And then when we moved, I remember sitting in my bedroom crying because if my mother came back, she wouldn't know where we moved to. For 12 years, neither Peggy Rehom nor the mysterious steamer trunk can be located.
Starting point is 00:31:35 until a cold case detective happens upon a woman with a story about George. So I said, what is the one thing you've always scratched your head wondering about George? And that's when she looked at me and said, well, I don't know. Oh, there's that storage shed. When I first started my podcast, I had no clue what I was doing. Between figuring out recording equipment, editing software, scheduling guests, and trying to make a halfway decent logo, my to-do list grew faster than my downloads. It can feel lonely and overwhelming trying to wear every hat at once when you're building something from scratch.
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Starting point is 00:33:56 They even have an agent directory with the sales history of each agent. So when it comes to finding a home, not just a house, this is everything you need to know all in one place. Homes.com. We've done your homework. This is where Peggy was last seen. She lived in the upstairs apartment. Keith Hall is a cold case detective. In 2002, he walks a street in Maddie Dale, New York, where Margaret, Peggy, Riyom, disappeared 12 years earlier. Riyom is presumed dead. and the main suspect is her ex-boyfriend, George Geddes.
Starting point is 00:34:33 Witnesses saw George Geddes dragging a trunk down a flight of stairs. They actually were drawn to this action by hearing the loud banging noise of the trunk and bouncing off the steps. Original detectives thought the trunk might contain the body of Peggy Rehom. I was motivated. Getting this case was a challenge. I knew it when I was assigned the case. From that point on, it became personal.
Starting point is 00:34:59 Detective Hall meets with the victim's daughter, Jerylyn. After it fell in Keith's lap from day one, he was telling me he's given his 110%. I still remember the look that I saw in Jarlene's eye. She wanted to believe me, but it had been so long since her mother had disappeared that, you know, she looked like a little hopeless. In 1990, George Gettis went to prison for raping Jerylin. He's now out. His conviction reversed on appeal.
Starting point is 00:35:32 I talked with his ex-wives. I was able to develop his personality. He was a violent individual. He would punch him, strike him, choke him. George Geddes' most recent abuse victim is a woman named Alicia Geddes. The two have recently divorced. Hall calls her to see what she knows. He was very controlling.
Starting point is 00:35:54 He had a very bad temper. Possessive even? Yes, very possessive. He got violent a couple of times. Domestic violence, he hit me. Alicia provides valuable background on George Gettis. Then, Hall steers the conversation toward Peggy Rehom. You had just told me little differences of what George had said
Starting point is 00:36:15 that Peggy had taken off to, I believe it was Arizona with a cab driver. Yeah, with a cab driver. Keith was very easy to talk to. He got me thinking way back at bringing out things that I was trying to forget. And the last question I asked Alicia before walking her to the door was, what is the one thing you've always scratched your head wondering about George? Alicia thought for a few moments, said, geez, well, there is that storage shed he's always run it. He had a storage unit that he had, and he would call me from jail to make sure that the payments were made all the time.
Starting point is 00:36:54 Alicia once asked, what was in the storage shed? George said it was tools. And if you push the issue about it, he would get angry. He would get very angry. It's like, you know, we really have to skip this payment. No, we can't do that. It would mean that I could get a lot of time in jail. Alicia tells detectives, Gettis has rented the shed since 1990.
Starting point is 00:37:17 Now I'm able to piece together the time frame. Peggy's missing since 1990. George has been running a storage shed since 1990. At some point, I'm going to need to do it. to you, statements from her. Detective Hall tries to obtain a search warrant for the shed. The county prosecutor, however, says Hall lacks probable cause. Then, the cold case detective tries a different approach.
Starting point is 00:37:41 And initially, I wanted to know if you had the authority to go in there and search the storage shed. Lori Albright is a federal probation agent, supervising George Geddes on a recent firearms violation. As part of his probation, Geddus must file a report with Albright every. month. There is one question on the front here where it asks, do you rent or have access to a post office box, a safety deposit box, or a storage space? And on this report, Mr. Gettis had checked no for all three of these things. And that's when I said, we need to get into that storage shed. That's right. There's a reason why he's lying about this. He doesn't want you to know, doesn't want anybody to know. He's running this storage. Gettis's lie constitutes probable cause for a search. The order is issued, and Hall heads out to the shed. This is the storage unit that George Geddes rented, and number B-32.
Starting point is 00:38:37 That's the storage shed that we opened up on April 1st, 2004. Armed with a federal search warrant and a pair of bolt cutters, detectives opened the storage unit B-32. If I'm doing that, I could see the bottom of a green metal steamer-type trunk, the same trunk that was described by witnesses in the house. 1990. I looked at Detective Doyle and I said, Peggy's going to be in there. Agent Bragg unclipped the has blocks, picked up the lid. At that point, I could see a stained blanket with two decomposed feet sticking out from underneath. Within about six seconds, you could smell a strong
Starting point is 00:39:17 odor, distinct odor of death. It was time to go find George Geddes and bring this case to close. I said, George, tell me about the storage shed out in Cicero. In an interview room at the Onondaga County Sheriff's Office, Detective Hall gets right down to business with George Geddes. George looked at me for approximately 10 seconds, didn't say a word, just staring. At that point, he broke down, started crying, started flailing his fists, pounding on the table, saying he'd been keeping a secret for such a long time. George admits his ex-girlfriend Peggy Riyom is in the shed. Gettis claims her death was an accident.
Starting point is 00:39:59 This final version of what happened to Peggy was that they got in an argument. He punched her. She fell down, hit her head on a wood buffet, and died. Not knowing what to do with Peggy, he went into Geraldine's room. The trunk that Peggy was entombed in was actually Geraldine's toy chest. He put her inside the chest and transported her out to the storage shed. The story didn't make sense from the beginning. Joe O'Donnell is an assistant DA for Onondaga County.
Starting point is 00:40:30 Here's a guy who accidentally kills his girlfriend. Stuffs her in a trunk, puts her in a storage shed for 14 years. He drives past the police station. He drives past the fire department. He drives past the ambulance corps. It just was preposterous from the beginning. We're looking at the skull of the decedent. This is her skull.
Starting point is 00:40:53 Mary Jambelic is the chief medical examiner for Onondaga County. This is the mastoid process, portion of the temporal bone. It's a very thick, hard portion of skull. And you can see a very distinct and dramatic fracture through the mastoid. Jambelic rules out Gettiz's contention that Peggy Riemme hit her head on a table. It was our conclusion that this is, a forceful blow, probably with an instrument, to the skull, to cause this type of damage. It's not a simple fall from a standing height or a fist.
Starting point is 00:41:32 One of the lead suspects into the disappearance of Peggy Riyom has been her former boyfriend, 52-year-old George Gettys, arrested Friday afternoon on charges of violating his federal parole, charged in 1993 for raping a 13-year-old girl. I am the 13-year-old that George raped. After George Geddes' arrest, Jerelyn goes public with the tragedy that was her childhood. I got out of that situation, and somehow my mother found out, and that's what led to her being gone.
Starting point is 00:42:06 At Gediz's murder trial, prosecutor Joe O'Donnell brings in a green steamer trunk and places it before the jury. There's been an odor in this courtroom all week. And it's the smell of death. And it's martyr Rion. And I pointed to him and said, and he brought her in here. He did not intentionally cause the death of Peggy Rome. Gettus sticks to his story.
Starting point is 00:42:30 Peggy Rome's death was an accident. It's a theory the jury dismisses. They find Gettis guilty of second-degree murder, and he is sentenced to the maximum, 25 years to life. I would best describe George Gettis as a waste of humanity. I think there were dregs left over that God had nothing to do with and he dumped him in George Gettus' body.
Starting point is 00:42:54 He's just one of my mom and my dad and the three of us. After the trial and sentencing, Jerry Lynn Rehom is finally able to grieve for the mother she lost at age 13. It was weird. We even had a service for her. It's not like I was really crying
Starting point is 00:43:13 and everything I was happy and then there came anger, just all this emotion. This is a case I'll never forget. I took this case personal because I like a challenge. And this type of case certainly was a challenge. He did find my mother. He gave his 110%. And, you know, I always have a place for him in my heart.
Starting point is 00:43:38 I love him. This November, action is free on Pluto TV. Go on the run with Jack Reacher. Every suspect was a train killer. Then buckle up for drive, World War Z. Happy human being we save. It's one of less fights. And Charlie's Angels.
Starting point is 00:44:00 Damn, I hate to fly. Launch into sci-fi adventure with the Fifth Element and laugh through the mayhem in Tropic Thunder. What is going on here? All the Thrills. All for free. Pluto TV. Stream now. Pay never.
Starting point is 00:44:15 Thank you.

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