Cold Case Files - Danger At The Door
Episode Date: February 15, 2022When a 9-year-old girl is abducted from her own home and brutally murdered, shock waves spread throughout the community. Detectives refuse to give up until her killer is behind bars. Check out our gr...eat sponsors! NetSuite: Schedule your FREE Product Tour RIGHT NOW at NetSuite.com/ccf SimpliSafe: Claim a free indoor security camera PLUS 20% off with Interactive Monitoring at simplisafe.com/COLDCASE Shopify: Go to Shopify.com/coldcase for a FREE 14 day trial and get full access to Shopify’s entire suite of features! Progressive: Take one small step to help your budget. Get a quote today at Progressive.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Thank you for listening to this Podcast One production, available on Apple Podcasts and Podcast One.
In 1991, a nine-year-old girl was brutally murdered in Chula Vista, California.
Her body was dumped in plain sight.
Any child's death, any death for that matter,
is a tragedy.
When a child dies violently
and the murder is so public,
it affects the entire community.
The impact hits hardest
among the family and loved ones,
of course,
but it ripples outwards
and becomes part of a shared memory.
Trauma works in strange ways
when it comes to memories.
Sometimes it erases the difficult things from your mind that you can't bear to think about.
But it can also cement them in your memory.
Fear and trauma can make the memory that much clearer,
and that much harder to let go of.
I think that's what happened in Chula Vista, back in 1991.
When Laura Arroyo was kidnapped from her own home and murdered,
the fear must have been unimaginable.
And when her story was publicized even further,
wild theories started to circulate.
Theories about visions of Laura appearing at night,
whether these visions were driven by traumatic memories
or just a need to see her again,
one thing was for sure.
Laura's murder was unforgettable,
and detectives wouldn't rest until they found her killer.
From A&E, this is Cold Case Files. I'm Brooke, and here's the dynamic Bill Curtis
with a classic case, Danger at the door.
The person that kidnapped then killed 9-year-old Laura Arroyo
made no effort to hide her body.
It didn't take investigators long to make the
connection to a reported kidnapping last
night. There was a knock on the door.
The 9-year-old female
answered the door and
by the time the parent got to the door, the child was gone.
The door apparently was still open.
Don Hunter is a detective with the Chula Vista PD when he is called out to the scene of a homicide.
The first thing I noticed as I was walking up is the reactions of the officers.
There were officers actually sitting on the curb, looking very upset.
You don't see that very often.
It just was obvious that someone had brutally killed this little girl.
Her fully clothed, barefoot body was found on a sidewalk at a light industrial and business park in Chula Vista.
Apparently, she was beaten, possibly on this very spot.
She was laying right in this area here.
Her head was open to the point that you could see her skull.
Whatever was used to penetrate her torso had gone all the way through her body
with such force that it was able to chip the concrete below her.
So you can still see the chips
in the concrete? If you look very carefully, you have one right there. Evidence tech Rodrigo Viesca
documents the scene, including injuries to the young victim's face. It was during that photograph
that I had to basically stop and recompose myself. And part of the reason was, at the time, I had a nine-year-old daughter,
and my mind superimposed her face in that picture.
And it was like probably the one photograph in my career that tugged at my heart forever.
The news of what police found in this office parkway travels quickly,
eventually reaching the doorstep
of a father who refuses to believe he will never see his little girl again.
That's a mistake. It's somebody else. It's not my... that's for sure it's not my little
girl. It's gonna be somebody else. She was everything for me, you know, my little girl. I'll never forget it.
It's not so much that it's more than we've seen before,
but it was just so brutal.
On June 21st, Dr. Mark Super is present
for the autopsy of 9-year-old Laura Arroyo.
She has several chop injuries of her head that have gone through
her skull and into the brain. And then she has 10 of these penetrating spear type injuries,
several that have gone through her torso. They've gone through both lungs, went through the heart.
So all of these injuries are considered to be working as a group to cause her death.
Laura was found fully clothed, with no sign of sexual trauma,
but a rape kit is done as a matter of procedure.
Each area that we swab, we usually take a packet of four.
The swabs are taken in the off chance sperm could be identified.
As you can see on the screen here, this is what sperm would look like on such a slide.
This is a control that is nothing but sperm.
You can see how bright fluorescent red they are.
When Laura's slides are examined, however, this is not what the medical examiner sees.
There were no sperm.
No sperm were found on the smear.
Detectives operate under the assumption that no sexual assault actually took place, and
the swabs are not sent out for additional testing.
Meantime, detectives begin their digging.
We felt like it was probably somebody she knew
because there's no sounds, there's no screams.
Somebody, you know, lured her away from that door very easily.
Detective Hunter and Detective Wayne Maxey hit the streets
to talk with those who knew Laura best,
people from her own neighborhood.
She was a very happy child,
always jumping around, always playing.
Elizabeth Alcarez is a playmate of Laura's
and had been outside with her earlier the same evening she went missing.
Well, those were the steps towards Leonor's house,
and she lived right in front.
So we were just sitting there, and we were just talking and playing.
What became significant in talking with her is that she told us that Jessica's dad had walked by.
Jessica's dad is a man named Manuel Bracamontes, who was dating the mother of one of Laura's playmates.
So he passed by and the first time he didn't say anything and then a little bit later he passed by, and the first time he didn't say anything, and then a little bit later he passed by again.
And I believe that's when he pointed towards me and he said, your parents are looking for you.
I went and knocked on my door, and I asked my mom.
I kind of opened the door, and I said, Mom, did you call me?
You know, someone, a man said that you were looking for me, and she said no.
We thought that was significant.
We felt that was probably his attempt to separate Laura
from the other two girls.
This is somebody that we've got to get a hold of, talk to,
find out what he saw.
And there's always, when you have that type of information,
a little bit of a thought in the back of your mind of, well,
you know, could be the guy.
This is the H Street trolley station in Chula Vista, and we came down here to interview Manuel Bracamonte.
On July 14th, detectives catch up with Manuel Bracamontes.
We told him that there had been a crime that we thought he was aware of and we were
hoping that he could provide us with some information. I think one of the first things
when we talked about, you know, that it was the murder of Laura Arroyo and that he knew her,
he kind of said something like, I've kind of seen her around the neighborhood, something like that.
And we both kind of went, what? Because we knew that Laura played with his girlfriend's daughter, Jessica.
We knew he had been around there
and played with the kids and such.
So, you know, he was minimizing, basically.
That's what he was doing.
And that kind of perked our interest.
Detectives asked Bracamontes
if he was in the neighborhood the night Laura went missing.
He either denied being there,
whether we asked him about it,
or came out and told us that he didn't know anything because he wasn't there.
Bracamonte's story doesn't play with what detectives are hearing in the neighborhood.
More than two weeks later, they sit down again with Bracamonte's, this time on their turf, and this time, the gloves are off. We've got hundreds of hours of investigation on this case,
and our investigation clearly indicates
that you're involved in the death of Laura Arroyo.
Every so often, there's a case that, for some reason,
just seizes on you.
I don't know what it is.
Maybe it was the pictures of Laura, those snapping black eyes, that fabulous little smile she had, all that long flowing black hair.
Doug Curley is a television reporter in San Diego.
In the summer of 1991, one story dominates the daily news.
The murder of nine-year-old Laura Arroyo.
Her fully clothed, barefoot body was found on a sidewalk
at a light industrial and business park in Chula Vista.
This was the worst nightmare a parent has.
The child goes to answer a ringing doorbell,
somebody knocking on your front door to see who's there.
And you turn around and
the child is gone and you never see her alive again. Laura may be gone, but many begin seeing
her image in an unexpected place. By night, some claim the billboard comes to life via spirits like
that of Laura Arroyo's. The boards become the talk of the town, many attributing the images to a supernatural power.
A lot of people thought that that was a vision of Laura,
that Laura was in heaven looking down on the people.
A lot of people thought it was Laura telling her friends and family
not to worry, I'm safe in heaven.
A lot of people thought this was laura
pleading with people don't let him get away with it i mean i heard every conceivable permutation of those that you could imagine to the chula vista police department the vision serves as a reminder
find laura's killer at the top of the list is man Bracamontes, a man with no hard criminal history, and
according to the suspect himself, a man with nothing to offer detectives.
Basically, his alibi was, I was home with my mother.
Detectives Don Hunter and Wayne Maxey, however, can prove otherwise. We did talk to two other men who lived in the area.
As they described the timing, right at the time that Laura would have gone downstairs to answer the door and disappeared,
they see his black Jetta leaving the parking lot.
Racamontes is asked to come down to the police department for some hard questions.
Tell me why you think you're down here talking to us today.
That's why I suspect something of me. The body posture of his arms crossed and,
you know, his feet, he's ready to bolt out of the room at any time. So we knew
we were probably on the right track with that. The body language may be telling,
but Bracamontis himself remains silent.
Who do you think did this to him?
Oh, I don't know.
Something like that.
Can you tell us who didn't do it?
Myself.
You're trying to tell me I did something to him.
I'm not that stupid.
Almost everyone had a very strong response to what they thought should happen to the person that did this.
Many people said they should be killed.
People made physical threats.
You know, if I ever catch the guy who did this,
I'll do some terrible thing to them.
With Manuel, when we ask him that question,
shrug of the shoulders, look at the ground.
I don't know.
You know, maybe go to jail forever.
If you have any involvement in what happened to Laura Arroyo, now's the time to tell us.
No.
Okay.
We've talked to a lot of people down in the neighborhood.
Is there any possibility that anybody we talk to is going to tell us that you were down there in the neighborhood
at the time that Laura disappeared?
No. I can't tell us that you were down there in the neighborhood at the time the bar disappeared. No.
I can't tell you that.
Detectives ask Bracamontes to sit for a polygraph.
Bracamontes declines, and police turn up the heat.
We've done hundreds of hours of investigation on this case,
and our investigation clearly indicates that you're involved in the death of Laura
Arroyo.
Why do you say that to me?
Because we have people that put you there at that time and you haven't told us that.
And you can see the lack of response from him.
Just nothing.
And an innocent person, you accuse somebody of something as horrific as this, they're
going to come out of that seat like a spring under their butt and deny it.
I have the right to walk out of here.
That's what I told you earlier.
That's...
I'm not fooling you, huh?
Racamontes ends the talk, but not before detectives mention one more thing.
This is the part where I told him we have the search warrant. What we have is a search warrant, and we're going to take hair samples
and blood samples. Racamontes gets the full workup. Hair, blood, even his home and car are searched.
We believe that the instrument used to kill Laura was probably a pickaxe or pickmatic
that had a bladed surface on one end, a pick on the other end.
We were going to be looking for any kind of puncturing and bladed type objects
that could have inflicted these kind of wounds.
Detectives don't find a murder weapon.
Fibers from one of Bracamonte's sweaters, however, provides a possible forensic
link.
The fiber from one of those sweaters matched the fiber, one of the fibers found on her
clothing.
The link to Bracamonte's is tenuous at best, and the D.A. decides to take a pass.
I wish we could have found the weapon. That would have put us there.
But that was never located.
More after this.
Now, back to the case.
Detectives have dedicated hundreds of hours to Laura's murder investigation.
But despite having a likely suspect with a forensic link to the victim,
police are no closer to solving the case.
Laura knew Manuel Bracamontes as Jessica's dad.
They were close enough that Laura would have gone with him willingly.
He was also seen in the neighborhood at the time that Laura disappeared,
and his reactions during police interrogations were suspicious.
But still, investigators had nothing but a single fiber linking Bracamontes to Laura, and she could have picked that up anywhere.
She played at his house.
Investigators presented their limited evidence to the DA,
but they couldn't make a case strong enough to convict.
So rather than risk taking a losing case to trial
and missing their chance to put Laura's killer behind bars,
the investigators decided their best bet was to wait
and hope for a breakthrough.
All right, let's go ahead and get started.
As you know, Team 4 is already out there, so...
A year has passed since Laura Arroyo was found murdered,
but Chula Vista police still have Manuel Bracamontes on the brain
and decide to give their suspect another shot.
Well, I told him I wanted to clarify some things
in reference to the crime and...
Sergeant Bob Rutledge asks Bracamamantes to come down to the station
and hopes that his suspect might finally fess up.
Can I talk to you a little bit? Where comes the case?
Pretty quick.
Well, it won't take very long.
I told him there's some statements that say that you were at the complex
and you're telling us that you weren't there,
and, you know, the people seem that they're genuine.
There's several people that said that they saw you there that night.
Yeah.
Somewhere between 8.30 and 9.
No, that's not, that couldn't be.
As we took off, it was like, it was still kind of daylight.
Racamontes still denies being at the apartment that evening, but he does remember seeing
the nine-year-old that day.
When you were there earlier, did you see the little girl, little Laura?
Yeah, there was a lot of kids playing.
Yeah, she was up there.
This contradicts Bracamontes' earlier statements about not seeing or really knowing Laura Arroyo.
Where did you see her?
By, um, like the neighbor that ended up crossing it from her.
She was, uh, she was running back and forth.
Rutledge is hoping a few more minutes with the suspect
might lead to more admissions.
But that doesn't happen.
Actually, the interview ended when his beeper went off.
Racamontes ends the interview and walks out of the police station once again a free man.
Laura's case goes cold and remains that way for 11 years.
Until a second look at some old evidence takes everyone by surprise.
These are sperm cells which were observed on the oral swabs from Laura.
There were approximately 10,000 sperm cells.
This case was a monster. I mean, it really was.
In 2003, the San Diego County District Attorney's Office starts a cold case squad.
One of the first cases on its list,
the 1991 murder of Laura Arroyo.
Anybody that was around here at the time
remembers this case and the brutality of it.
The original investigators had developed a suspect
pretty early on in the investigation.
That suspect is Manuel Bracamontes.
What gets me, though, still is that you look at what he did to this little girl
and you see how he grew up.
It doesn't explain it, you know?
I mean, it just doesn't explain it.
He's a little league player and, you know, a minor criminal.
All sisters.
How do you explain that?
For answers, investigators turn to physical evidence in the case.
We were talking about, number one, the hairs, because there were some 50 hairs.
Is there anything we can do with the hairs?
Investigator Bob Conrad suggests reaching out to the San Diego crime lab.
They had a grant, which was about to run run out and it had to do with cold sexual
assault cases, including homicides. I get a call from Bob and he says, you know, I have this great
old homicide case. I said, you know what, let's have a discussion about the evidence. I'll come
down. I really felt my role was kind of as a consultant. Evidence from the case is pulled out of storage.
In 1991, the rape kit had been tested and turned up negative for semen.
O'Donnell, however, wants to take a second look.
I thought, well, you know, this has already been checked, and there's nothing there.
And I didn't quite understand why he was doing it.
And I realized that the sexual assault kit had been looked at,
but that it had only been looked at at the medical examiner's office.
And it's been our experience that we provide a better evaluation
of that sexual assault evidence than typically occurs
through perhaps the medical examiner.
This is the forensic biology unit of the San Diego Police Department crime lab.
And basically what we do here is DNA analysis.
On September 23rd, criminalist Ian Fitch receives the original swabs
from Laura Arroyo's sexual assault kit.
We have this method where we can treat the cell mixture with a chemical
which breaks open only the skin cells or the blood cells,
but leaves the sperm cells intact.
After performing the test, Fitch prepares a slide and looks under the microscope.
I found sperm cells present on the oral swabs.
What we're looking at here is the final microscopic examination of the purified sperm.
These are sperm cells which were observed on the oral swabs from Laura.
And from that oral swab, I estimated that there were approximately 10,000 sperm cells.
Once the sperm cells were identified, I proceeded with DNA testing,
and I was able to generate a DNA profile from
the sperm from a single male individual.
I couldn't believe it. I was, I just couldn't believe it. I was almost speechless. Not quite,
but almost.
Hair samples taken from Manuel Bracamontes in 1991 are sent into the lab for comparison. Only a few days after that was my phone call to you
to indicate that, in fact, the DNA from the semen
was a perfect match to your suspect.
I just couldn't believe it when you told me that.
I was so happy.
And everybody was.
Everybody was happy about that.
And then things really progressed quickly from there.
The cross street here is Joshua Place,
and the address that my partner and I were going to
was 3982 Dave's Way, which is just right up the street.
On October 24th,
DA investigator Robert Marquez
prepares to arrest Manuel Bracamantes.
There's a light, like a bluish-colored SUV,
Ford Explorer-type vehicle comes around the corner
and proceeds eastbound, and he stops right in the middle
of the roadway in front of the residence.
And I tell my partner, that's our guy.
Marquez approaches the car as it parks outside the home.
And as I did so, I pulled my hand back like this
to expose my weapon and my badge
so that he could clearly see that I was a law enforcement
officer, because he didn't know me.
As I approached, I saw him rolling down the window.
As he turns to look at my partner, my partner,
I could hear him say, you're under arrest.
And I could hear, Brocamoche said something,
but the only word I could hear him say was, what for?
My partner says,
for murder.
The suspect takes off.
Investigators fire two rounds
at the vehicle, but miss.
Racamonte's gets lost in traffic
and alerts are put out.
The Mexican border crossing
only four miles away is notified.
Chula Vista Police Department, we're doing a search of different motels and hotels in the city of Chula Vista
to see if maybe by chance he had returned to Chula Vista, and they located his vehicle in a parking lot.
Bracamontes is nowhere to be found, and a tracking device is placed on the car.
Investigators hope Bracamontes will return to the vehicle.
The following morning, he does.
This is the I-5 freeway corridor as it runs through the city of Chula Vista.
Sergeant Kelly Harris learns Bracamontes is on the move and picks up the chase.
I think my speeds at that time were about 80 miles per hour.
Monitoring the radio, I could hear that a collision had just occurred on the ramp.
The officers were telling us that the suspect, Bracamontes,
had actually rammed one of our police cars and had completed a U-turn on the ramp
and was now going to go southbound in the northbound lanes of the freeway.
Harris spots the car.
Brachimantes is heading straight at him.
I was determined not to let him go free. I was not going to let him get away from us.
Sergeant Harris steps on the gas, holds onto the wheel, and goes head-to-head with his suspect.
At the last second, he decided that he didn't want to do that, so he turned
hard right, and that's when his vehicle lost control and he rolled it over.
Bracamontes is taken into custody, unharmed, and arrested for the murder of Laura Arroyo. This is the pink dancing reindeer top that Laura was wearing when she was murdered.
Garland Peed is a deputy DA for San Diego County.
As he prepares to try Manuel Bracamontes for murder,
the prosecutor discovers that he has not one DNA link between Bracamontes and the victim, but several.
It was reexamined by Shelley Webster at the San Diego County Sheriff's Crime Lab in 2003-2004. She found, actually, sperm DNA three different places on this little pink top.
And all three DNA profiles that were developed from these spots on this garment
matched the defendant, Manuel Bracamontes.
Additional testing finds trace amounts of Bracamontes' DNA under the 9-year-old's fingernails and on her neck.
How could we go from no evidence in the case to suddenly an avalanche of DNA?
Of course, the answer to that is the truth, which is things have changed.
The screening processes, we know a lot more about screening evidence
for biological DNA than we did back then.
The scientific evidence is convincing, but the trial also packs an emotional punch.
To go through the in-life pictures of her, when she was born, her baptism, her five-year-old birthday, with her dad on a swing, you know, that's the hard part of doing a case like this. You know, to have the guy over there who killed my little girl,
it, and you have to stop everything, you know, nothing you can do, you know.
I want, when I see the guy, you know, I want to kill the guy.
I want to, you know.
On September 2nd, 2005, the jury hands down its verdict.
Guilty.
Today, a stoic Manuel Bracamonte has turned toward his family
while the jury recommended the death penalty
for the molestation and murder of 9-year-old Laura Arroyo.
I always feel good that we're able to bring,
I don't like the word closure,
but we bring some closure to these, in these cases, for parents and other relatives.
Bracamontes now sits on California's death row,
while a father suffers his own life sentence,
life without his little girl.
You know, my little girl, she was nine years old. She was a very happy little girl. It's
very hard for me, you know, to remember everything about my little girl, but she was everything
for me.
Hopefully, the capture and sentencing of Manuel Bracamontes
provides a little closure and a little peace to Luis Arroyo and his family.
Maybe now their thoughts of Laura involve happy memories
instead of lingering questions and the desperate search for answers.
Still, some questions about this case can never be answered.
I can't explain why someone like Manuel Bracamontes,
with no real criminal history to speak of,
and no prior history of violence on record,
would commit such a brutal, heinous murder.
I don't think anyone will ever be able to explain that.
And I can't say that the death penalty is a cut-and-dry solution in this case.
It never is.
But I do know that Manuel Bracamontes still sits on California's death row to this day.
He won't ever be able to hurt another child again.
And hopefully, in a town that can't forget Laura Arroyo, that gives a little peace to everyone.
Cold Case Files, the podcast, is hosted
by Brooke Giddings, produced by
McKamey Lynn and Steve Delamater.
Our executive producer is Ted Butler.
Our music was created by Blake Maples.
This podcast is
distributed by Podcast One.
The Cold Case Files TV series was
produced by Curtis Productions and is
hosted by Bill Curtis.
Check out more cold case files
at AETV.com or learn more about cases like this one by visiting the A&E Real Crime blog
at AETV.com slash real crime.