Cold Case Files - Deadly Stroll / Unholy Secret
Episode Date: February 24, 2026In Rhode Island, policewomen go undercover in as street walkers to nab the man suspected of murdering three prostitutes. And a dagger-shaped letter opener is the key piece of evidence that li...nks a priest to the grisly 1980 murder of a nun in Toledo, Ohio.Hers: Start your free online visit at forhers.com/CCF for your personalized weight loss treatment options.Homes.com: We’ve done your homework.Marley Spoon: Head to MarleySpoon.com/offer/COLDCASE for up to 25 free meals!Shopify - 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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Right, Jeff.
Any idea why you have?
No idea.
No idea.
It's a game.
You go into that room, and your sole purpose is to retrieve whatever he's hiding.
You're playing a dangerous, dangerous game.
I'll deal with these girls.
You're working so hard to get this information out, and then when it finally comes,
it's like, oh my God, he's got to admit to it right now.
Where on?
Derry.
Daring garbage bags.
Random would indicate to me just free stabbing, no pattern, and looking at this, that's not random at all.
I don't even believe they're freehand.
This would indicate to me that something was used as a template.
They would have been on her chest with the cross in an upside down position going up to her left shoulder.
There are over 100,000 cold cases in America.
Only 1% are ever solved.
This is one of those rare stories.
On July 27, 2004, Officer Steve Fairley heads to the Rhode Island State landfill with a team of officers and a backhoe.
Basically what we were looking for was several black bags wrapped several times with yellow ties.
And that was supposedly, you know, dismembered body parts in those bags.
For seven days, officers dig for the remains of...
three women, then finally, Fairly gets a break.
When I did open it, it was kind of, you know, a little shock to me.
I saw it, I saw the remains of a scalp, a crushed scalp, I believe it was two forearms.
The skin was removed, the bones were crushed.
The discovery will seal the fate of a serial killer, one who found his first victim in the
spring of 2003.
Right now on my main street, I'm heading to the corners of Hainano.
That's an area where prostitution activity is extremely high in this city.
Paul Seveny is a detective with the Woonsocket Rhode Island Police.
In April of 2003, he works a missing person's case of a local prostitute.
Her name was Audrey Harris.
She was in her 40s, a black female.
I interviewed and spoke to several prostitutes that worked that area that I was familiar with.
The reason I did that is because prostitutes are street people.
They're out on the road 24-7.
They're the best source of information of police officers can have in trying to solve a case.
But with this case, it was totally different.
Nobody had seen her or heard of her for a week or so.
The lifespan for a prostitute working a street corner in Woonsocket is typically five years.
It's a punishing business, and many simply don't survive.
Well, John will pick them up, and you don't know the individual who they don't have no clue who this individual is.
They just jumped in a vehicle with this guy, perform what they have to do, just to get the money to go back out and road and buy their narcotics.
It's an extremely dangerous lifestyle that they're living.
But this one here was like just a dead-end street, no matter what leads we got to investigate, it always came up empty-handed.
A month after Audrey Harris goes missing, her case remains unsolved.
And a second woman disappears off a Woonsocket Street corner.
Lieutenant Kyle Stone takes the case.
My partner and I were assigned a missing person's case on a Christine Dumont.
She was a 42-year-old white female reported missing May 3rd of 2004.
One of the problems we ran into was her sister that reported.
her missing had last seen her April 23rd.
So we had about a 10-day span from when she was last seen to when it was brought to our attention
that she was missing and there might be something, you know, something going wrong.
Like Audrey Harris, Christine Dumont is a woman on the edge, a drug user who has worked the
streets for years and is now missing.
You're not getting a feeling like there's going to be a happy ending to this, but there's just
nothing to go on.
Lieutenant Stone investigates the streets where Dumont worked.
This was an area that Christine frequented.
Throughout my years on the job, it wasn't uncommon to see her, walking these streets,
perhaps, you know, going from bar to bar.
You know, as each day went by, the longer a case goes, you know, the colder and colder
the trail goes.
And you became less and less optimistic that you were going to.
you know, get anything solid to go on.
It was very frustrating, very sad.
And like Audrey Harris, her disappearance finds its way into the cold files.
14 months later, Debbie Berger worries about her daughter, Stacey, a good girl who fell
in with the wrong crowd.
And I used to tell her, like, Stacy, you better be careful, you know, think about what you're
doing.
But like all kids, one in one and out the other.
I think she was looking for fast money
and got up in the wrong situation
and liked the cash, but didn't like what she did.
In July of 2004, a mother's worst fears are realized
when Stacey's boyfriend files a missing person's report with police.
He says, Stacy's missing. I says, what are you talking about?
He said, yeah, she didn't come home last night.
That's it. It's like she disappeared off the face of the earth.
Sergeant Edward Lee is assigned to the case.
It was actually July 4th.
There was a fireworks display,
and she was with her boyfriend there.
And he'd last seen her walking up East School Street
towards North Main Street,
and he had not seen her again.
By now, it's a sad yet familiar story.
Three women working on the streets in the city of Woonsocket
vanished in less than two years.
Could this be a serial killer?
You hear the word thrown around a lot and everything, but you'd never think it would
happen in a community like this.
Lee shares his suspicions with his partner, Sergeant Steve Nowak.
The people who were missing, we knew that they were arrested before for prostitution.
We know that's a high-risk endeavor.
The pair dig into the three cases and quickly ID a pool of suspects.
We really had no other suspects.
suspects other than a potential John.
We want to know everyone that's coming into the city picking up these prostitutes.
You know, it was going to be a long, tedious process.
On July 15th, Lee and Noak hit the streets and set up a sweep for Johns.
This is an area that we decided that we would send decoys out, undercover police women,
to try to pick up Johns.
You're not to party?
I love the party.
What are you looking for?
Everything?
Within just a few minutes, prospective Johns begin to approach the undercover officers.
There was probably 15 or 20 contacts within an hour or two.
I'm working, sorry.
I'm going to make my money.
What you want?
Do you want?
She was wired so we could monitor her.
We had a couple of guys in one vehicle across the street from her.
With tinted windows, we could hear everything that was said between the two.
When we heard that a transaction had taken place, we would radio them.
They would move in and stop the car and taking the custody of the customer.
Although the sweep amounts to little, an anonymous call to the police gives detectives a fresh lead.
Gosselin Martell was attacked by a guy.
She fits the same category in the news without a miss it.
Probably has information I might want that you should get a hold of us.
The information was a phone call, anonymous phone call, that said we might want to speak with Jocelyn Motel.
Some people get $20 for a blow job, you get $50 for L.A.
It all depends on who you went and what you're doing.
Jocelyn Martel worked as a prostitute for more than eight years.
I had a heroin addiction.
I did it because I needed the money for my drug addiction.
In July of 2004, Martel talks about the night that almost turned deadly.
He pulled up. I was walking on the sidewalk and he's like, you want to make some money?
And I was like, yeah, you know.
We went into the house. We spoke about money for sex.
I asked him where he wanted to go.
And as soon as I turned my back to him, he put his arm around my neck and started choking me.
What I did was is I'd bang my head back on his head and we both fell backwards.
And when we both fell backwards, I stuck my thumb in his eye.
and he let me go and I ran out the door.
Jocelyn survived the assault but never reported it to police.
It's unfortunate.
A lot of times they think that the police aren't going to help them because of the lifestyle they're in.
That's certainly not the case.
We were happy to get the tip and obviously with having nothing else to go on at the time,
we were just happy to have something to follow up on.
Jocelyn doesn't know her attacker's name, but she remembers where he lives.
The color of the house, and she described the shutters, the trim.
She described how she got in.
We were able to get that address, run it through our computer system, find out who lives there.
The house is rented by 33-year-old Jeff Mailhot.
He's nowhere to be found in our database.
Not a ticket, not an arrest.
Mailhot seems clean.
Then detectives run his home address through their system.
We did a computer check, and then,
And Eddie found that there was another case at that house that had happened several months earlier with another prostitute.
Tese Morris tells detectives about a John who tried to kill her.
He's seen me walk in and he asked me if I wanted to go have a drink with him.
And I was like, fine, no problem.
It was my birthday.
So, I mean, he seemed very nice.
He was clean-cut me.
And you know what I'm saying?
Very friendly.
The way she described, she was kind of excited because she was actually with a clean-cut guy,
a guy that seemed like to be a nice guy.
He said, all right, you know, come in, have a drink.
So I sat at the kitchen table, you know,
and we was talking and everything like that.
I opened up a can of beer and I grabbed a napkin.
And when I went to turn back around, he was behind me.
Gets her in a chokehold and she has a violent struggle with him.
She remembers that the point of almost losing consciousness.
The man grabbed me with his forearm and had me like this in a chokehold.
I could not breathe.
And I couldn't scream.
So I'm thinking, oh my God, I'm gonna die.
I'm gonna die.
She just screams and pleads for her life, please, please, please,
you let me go, you know, I won't say anything to anybody.
He didn't say not one word to me.
And I knew at that point my life was over.
And I started crying, I'm saying, sir, please, I have a baby.
My money's in my pocketbook, please, just don't hurt me.
She says this gives him this cold stare.
cold stare and just tells her to leave when she walks out the apartment.
I don't know why he didn't kill me. I don't know why he let me go. He just said, get the
f*** out of here. I don't want to see you around here no more. Tice Morris is the second woman
to allegedly be attacked by Mailhot and live to tell about it.
This guy's playing this game. He's already choked two girls. I mean, choke hole is a very,
very dangerous move. You tried it on these two. Obviously, you might have tried it on other girls.
And maybe they didn't get away.
And that was our whole theory.
So, yeah, we had our arrest warrant and our search warrant.
And we, you know, very hopeful to get it in.
On July 16th, Sergeant's Lee and Nowak head to 221 Kato Street and put Jeff Malhot in handcuffs.
It's a great anticipation.
You're hoping he's going to talk.
You hope he's not going to lawyer up.
You hope he's going to go in there and tell us the truth.
Or just, hey, even if you're not going to tell us the truth.
Or just, hey, even if you're not going to tell us the truth, we want you to talk to us.
On July 16, 2004, Cold Case Detective sit down with Jeff Malhot.
You have that a problem with the prostitute in your house?
I've never, I've never had a serious problem with the prostitute in my house now.
It's a game. You go into that room in your sole purpose is to retrieve whatever he's hiding.
You get this off your conscience. It's going to be like someone left out of a fucking car with you back.
I've been seen it a thousand times. What is it?
Five.
What?
I've gotten a little physical.
Yeah.
Okay.
What do you usually do?
I choke him a little bit.
Okay.
Yeah.
That's what I'm trying to get it.
Okay?
I'm sure you felt better to getting that off your chest, but...
Mailhot admits to choking prostitutes, but won't go any further.
It's never going too far.
It's never going...
It's never going to.
I've never killed anybody.
You never choked someone that didn't wake up?
No.
Detectives aren't buying Malhot's story.
Lee switches tactics and slides pictures of three girls across the table.
I don't know any of these girls.
No?
Mm-hmm.
None of these is the ones that I had.
You're positive?
That was a pretty quick look.
When I threw those three photos down there, the three victims,
he had an immediate reaction.
You could see it all over his body.
his body language, his expressions, he was very nervous,
and he knew there was something there.
I mean, I've never killed anybody.
That's what you're getting at.
This is something these girls are killed, first.
He told us, you guys think I killed these girls.
We had never told them that the girls were dead.
We didn't know the girls were dead.
So that was a red flag for us.
That's when we really started hitting them a little hotter
with the questions we were asking.
I hope you know the truth because you're playing stuff,
and you're a bombing coming up.
Anything you know all about DNA and all that stuff, all right?
What are you?
Detectives are walking male hot closer and closer to a triple homicide.
It was apparent that he was going to give it up.
I mean, he was starting to cry, he was shaking, he would pause long, unnatural pauses,
like he was thinking about what should I do.
You're playing a dangerous, dangerous game.
out there with these girls. Any one of these girls could have ended up dead. Our whole resources,
the state police resources are going to be put into this. We will scour your apartment. We will
scour the name of the little will scour. We will talk to everybody. We will get to the bottom
whether or not you had these girls in your house. Tears start the well up in his eyes that you can't
see on the videotape. But sitting there, that's when you realize, you know, oh my God, he's going to
confess to this.
A little more than an hour into the interview, Mailhot breaks.
Jeff, your life will be over,
over unless you get this off your chest.
I know you're not fucking bad, man.
I know you just pushed it too far.
What happened?
What happened?
What happened?
You pushed it too far one night, right?
Things got out of him.
All of them?
All three?
All three.
All right.
Where are they?
Where are they, Jeff?
Yeah.
You're working so hot, and then when it finally comes, it's like, oh my God, he's really done this.
A million things are going through your mind, your heart's racing, your adrenaline's flowing.
Where are?
Daring, garbage bags.
Garbage bags?
Where?
I just dumped him in trash containers.
How did you fit in trash bags?
He described how he did it.
He did it in a careless manner.
manner, at times stopping, going to have a beer, going back in, finishing the job.
Mailhot says he cut up each victim in his bathtub, wrapped their bodies in black plastic bags,
and threw them in dumpsters.
I wanted to choke them myself.
I mean, I could not believe that a human being could do that to another human being, but they
did not deserve this.
They were, it was somebody's daughter, they were somebody's mother, they had family, they had
friends. Just before 9 p.m., Mailhot is handcuffed and led to a jail cell. With a confession in hand,
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We're on there. We're on there, John?
We're on.
Thank you. Derry. Daring, garbage bags.
Within minutes of Jeff Mailhot's confession, crime scene technicians, including Jerry Durand, work their way through his apartment.
You walk into the scene, and it doesn't seem like it's going to support a triple homicide with a dismemberment.
You know, it's an orderly scene.
You know, everything's in its place.
And as you keep going through the scene, it's just strange.
You know, his sock drawer, his socks are separated by color and fold it up.
And everything just is, it's just odd that this was the scene of a triple homicide.
But when Detective Duran heads to the bathroom, he uncovers the first pieces of a murder.
Now it starts to fit.
Now we start looking closer and, you know, small stains on the floor that just look like dirt or some sort of grease.
You know, you look closer and you do a presumptive test and it's a blood stain.
And we also did luminal tests on two mops in the linen closet and we tested one of the mops and it just fluoresced.
In the evidence room, Detective Timothy Paul
stands in front of the bathtub, Malhot used.
This is the tub taken from Malhot's apartment.
In this tub, you can see where the, actually the kerf marks or the saw marks are located
where the cutting was done upon the body parts and went down into the tub.
This is where the faceplate would have been.
Underneath the faceplate, detectives find more traces of blood
determined to be from two of the victims.
We knew we had hit the jackpot forensically, so to say, when we located blood.
Still, detectives need more.
So we were interested in whether we could recover any evidence from the sewer pipes, from the house.
For two days, detectives tear up the street and snake cameras through the pipes, looking for human remains.
In the end, the search uncovers nothing.
I just dumped him in trash containers.
Where?
All around in one socket.
Yep.
Where is she?
She's, I don't know right now where she is, probably in landfill right now.
If Jeff Mailhot dumped his victims like trash, there remains should be at the local landfill.
On July 19, 2004, cold case detectives begin to search for the bags.
It's kind of hard to believe the magnitude of...
of what's behind me. But the size of the landfill, the amount of trash that was here,
just realizing, I mean, you're kind of, in essence, looking for a needle in a haystack,
I guess you can say. In Rhode Island, 96% of the state's waste ends up at the central landfill.
We're digging deeper and deeper in different areas, and we're able to spread that out
amongst, say, a football-sized-filled area and just sift through it, you know, one by one.
It was a tedious task, and it was hot, dirty, it smelled. I mean, it was the worst of working,
I can say that.
For six days the team searches, but comes up empty.
Then, on the seventh day, Detective Fairley unearths a small black bag wrapped in duct tape.
When I did open it, it was kind of, you know, a little shock to me.
I saw the remains of a scalp, a crushed scalp, I believe it was two forearms.
The skin was removed, the bones were crushed, but I was able to decipher what was what,
distinguish those amongst other body parts.
The remains are eventually ID'd as Stacey Goulet,
the last of Jeff Mailhot's victims.
The remains of Audrey Harris and Christine Dumont
are never recovered.
It's a somber thing that, you know,
what you find, you're finding human remains,
and you know, it's sad, and it's an awful thing.
But we were happy, you know, we celebrated
because we knew we were full.
bringing him closure to this case.
He was an atypical defendant, certainly an atypical serial killer.
Patrick Young's prosecutes Jeff Mailhot for murder.
On February 15, 2006, Malhot pleads guilty to three counts of first-degree murder
and two counts of assault.
So he got life plus life plus 10 years.
That's how it broke down.
At sentencing, Malhot addresses the packed courtroom.
There's nothing I can do that it's going to take away the pain of the action that I've done.
And I just hope he'd guide him to the family and not only victims' families,
but my family also peace to be able to move on on this.
He did apologize, and I think that was sincere.
I don't know that he knows why he did these things.
So I think he wanted to get it behind him as well.
Due to my drug addiction, I was out trying to make money,
and he picked me up and we went to his apartment.
Jocelyn Martel could have been Malhot's fourth victim.
Instead, she survived and helped put him behind bars.
Martel is still trying to come to grips with the fact she escaped and her friends didn't.
There's three women out of my friends that are dead right now.
You know what I mean? And one of them could have been me.
I think I got away so I could put a stop to it and help all the girls and give the parents closure
and the kids' closure against what he had did,
so I could testify and make things right.
To be truthfully honest, that's what I believe in my heart.
I believe God spared my life so I could be here today
and testify against Mr. Milhart.
She was just like a God he and he just sent to save us all.
Otherwise, I wonder if he would still be out there.
That's scary.
All families are here today so we can get some,
some type of closure
by seeing you lot in prison
for the rest of your pitiful life.
One by one, friends and family
of the three victims
stand in open court and speak
their peace. For Debbie
Berger, it's a chance to express
the loss of her only daughter.
My daughter and I may not have always agreed on everything,
but I never thought her life is going to be
cut short by a vicious man like you.
Getting a chance to talk to him that day
was just
kind of like closure for me
just to say, you know,
you're a dog, you know?
I was like, how dare you?
You know, who made you God
and decided that you're going to take someone's life?
And he stated that
he took these girls' lives
because he felt
they didn't have nobody that cared about them.
I tell you, when we went to the courthouse that day,
was he wrong?
Because these women had families,
they had lives, they had kids.
What he did was horrendous.
To me, I look at him.
He's just a monster.
I was satisfied for what he received.
I'm confident that he'll never see the lighted day again.
And he'll spend the rest of his remaining years behind bars where he belongs.
In 2006, an unusual murder trial is underway in Toledo, Ohio.
One in which the victim is a Catholic nun and the defendant is a priest.
Dean Mandros is a Lucas County assistant prosecutor.
We were always pretty confident about the nature of our evidence,
but what we were mostly concerned about was the intangibles, if you will.
How's a jury going to react to being asked to convict a Roman Catholic priest?
This case is about perhaps the most common scenario there is for a homicide.
A man got very angry at a woman.
and the woman died.
The only thing different is the man wore a white collar
and the woman wore a habit.
It's an investigation that begins with two detectives
inside the cold case department of the Toledo police.
We're headed to the Detective Bureau
at the safety building here in Toledo
where we utilize a part of this.
Tom Ross and Steve Forrester are cold case investigators.
In 2003, they reopened the murder of Sister Margaret and Paul.
This is Sister Paul, and this is Father Robinson.
This was at the dedication of a new intensive care unit.
On Easter Saturday, 1980, 23 years earlier,
Sister Paul's body was discovered on the floor of a chapel,
with an altarcloth covering it.
Lieutenant Bill Keena was the original detect.
assigned to the case.
She was stabbed 31 times in the chest and in the neck and face area,
even in the ear.
To slaughter a person in that manner,
there had to be a deep-seated hatred attempt to defile the victim
besides killing her to defile her.
There were lots of people that they looked into.
After the first week, the focus was clearly
on the priest.
Father Gerald Robinson was considered a prime suspect at the time of the murder.
Found inside his quarters was a letter opener, shaped like a dagger.
We were at the desk, and I'm right next to art, and he opened up the center drawer,
and he said, oh, what do we got here?
And he reached in there with his fingers and pulled out this dagger-type letter opener
with a knuckle guard and blade about eight inches, ten inches long.
Father Robinson was given a polygraph in 1980 and showed signs of deception.
Before charges could be filed, the Catholic Church, in the form of the local Monsignor, stepped in,
and the case was dropped.
The deputy chief in charge of the Detective Bureau was standing there, and behind him was a Monsignor
from the Catholic Church Diocese.
and behind him was a defense attorney.
And all of them walk out of the interrogation room,
arm and arm and out of the safety building.
We had no charges against him at that time.
And I asked Father Switecki, I said,
hey, I said, what are they going to do with him?
And Switecki says,
they'll put him on a funny farm someplace
and you'll never see him again.
He said, that's what they do with Wayward Priest.
When we opened this up in 2003,
We had access to both of these.
We had known that this came from his room,
and we knew that this was not looked at since 1980.
Detective's Ross and Forrester pick up where Bill Keena left off two decades earlier,
with the altar cloth that covered Sister Paul's body
and the dagger-shaped letter opener pulled from Father Robinson's quarters.
When we made a comparison here, what startles at first was,
You can see this finger guard on this ladder-shaped letter opener matches this and the blade matches this.
Now, obviously, we're not experts, but we can see that there's some great similarities there.
It was startling, really.
I mean, we looked at each other and said, you know, we were just shocked.
Ross and Forrester bring in Detective Terry Kuzno, an expert in the analysis of blood transfer.
With this pattern, you have sort of a ribbed pattern.
and you look at the letter opener has a ribbed handle.
Size and shape are consistent.
Right off the bat, eyeballing some preliminary measurements,
I told Sergeant Forrester that these blood transfer patterns,
to me, appeared to be consistent with this letter opener.
Immediately then, I began to look at the puncture defects
that were in the cloth.
The killer stabbed Sister Paul through the altar cloth.
These puncture defects had a very dangerous
distinctive shape to them. I call it a Y type puncture rather than a straight slit or a rounded
hole. They have a very distinctive Y shape to them. The Y shape is pretty unique. I measured these
puncture defects. They are consistent in size and shape with the letter opener. Next, Kuzno turns his
attention to the overall layout of the stab wounds on the altar cloth. To Kuzno's eye,
they seem anything but random.
Random would indicate to me just free stabbing, no pattern.
And looking at this, that's not random at all.
The three sets of two pairs, okay?
And then when you have these two on the outside
that are exactly six inches apart
and equidistant from these,
not only are we talking about no longer being random,
but I don't even believe they're freehand.
In other words, this would indicate to me that something was used as a template.
The template, Cousnosah Spex, might have been a crucifix.
They would have been on her chest, basically, with the cross in an upside-down position,
going across her chest this way, up to her left shoulder.
It was a startling find to be able to say that there's definitely a pattern.
It appears to be a cross-type pattern,
and that an object was used as a template,
it was surprising.
It was a shocking find.
The chapel altar cloth provides detectives with fresh insight
into, perhaps, the ritual underpinnings of the murder.
Their next step is to exhume Paul's body
and examine her bones for clues.
We wanted to see if any of the puncture wounds to her flesh
would uncover any markings to her.
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This is where we brought Sister Margaret Ann Paul the day that we exhumed her.
Dr. Diane Barnett is the deputy coroner for Lucas County, Ohio.
In May of 2004, she opens the waterlogged casket of Sister Margaret and Paul.
When we first took her out of this disintegrating casket, I was really worried about what
condition the body was going to be in. She had been down about 24 years. So basically, I didn't know
what I was going to find. I didn't know if the body was going to be helpful. Once we got her here
in good light, we saw that she was actually better preserved than I anticipated. Sister Paul was
stabbed 31 times in the neck and chest. Dr. Barnett examines the victim's
looking for evidence of the wounds.
You could actually still see some of the stab wounds in the chest and neck area,
which made me pretty excited because I didn't think we were going to be able to see that.
When we brought the skin flaps back over the sternum,
over the second right rib,
there was a characteristic, almost triangular type stab wound.
And then the anthropologist happened to pick this piece back up out of the body bag,
out of the body bag and examine it.
And sure enough, right in the piece that we had cut out,
there was a stella diamond-shaped defect
in right here in the mandible
that one of the stab wounds had made.
There it is.
This was the defect in the bone, diamond shaped.
The diamond shape appears to be consistent
with the letter opener found 24 years earlier
in the desk drawer of the boxed
of Father Gerald Robinson.
Barnett makes a physical comparison
between the letter opener and the bone.
I very gently placed the letter opener into the defect.
It was a perfect fit.
There it is close up.
Sister Paul's bones have provided detectives
with a tangible link to the suspected murder weapon.
Meanwhile, investigators confront their suspect.
Father Gerald Robinson.
Between 1974 and 1981, you were one of the two chaplains assigned in Mercy Hospital.
Is that correct, sir?
Father Robinson is asked to come down to the station.
At the time of the murder, he denied any involvement in Sister Paul's death.
Now, he says he walked into the chapel, just as another priest, Father Sweitechi,
was performing last rights on Sister Paul's death.
Paul. He advised at this point that Father Switecki looked up at him and asked him why he did this to the sister.
He said that right in the secretary. Yeah. In front of everybody with the sisters and everybody else.
He said, you did this. And I just looked at me as first time I was seeing sister. And for him to say something like that, I had no idea what he was doing.
When Father mentions it during the taped interrogation, I asked him how he responded to that,
and he said that he was kind of a meek and mild type personality.
That was his character and that he couldn't respond at all concerning that.
Holy cow, you had to say, Father, what are you saying?
Well, that's what, you know, but I'm not one to answer.
I think I'm not a voiceful person, and that's my trouble.
Well, you didn't stand there and take that.
Yeah. I took a lot.
And we felt that that was quite unusual due to the fact that you just enter a murder scene
and you're being accused of murdering a nun. Why, when you respond to something like that?
What made him think you did? Why did he?
I couldn't answer him. I didn't have any picked an answer him. I had no idea why.
Detective Ross believes Father Robinson is lying, playing a game with detectives.
although the reason why remains unclear.
Later in the interview, I asked him a direct question
when he kind of had his mouth in kind of a smirking fashion.
I said, Father, you're smirking, and this is quite serious.
I wanted to see how he would react to that,
and he immediately came back to me.
I'm not smirking.
Father, why do you smirk at me?
I mean, this is serious.
I'm not smirking.
I just, I don't know how this is about.
And I thought, okay, you responded to my question concerning smirking.
Why, when you respond to an accusation concerning a homicide?
Sister had 31 stab wounds thereabouts.
That is an active rape.
That's somebody that's angry.
Did she ever make you angry?
No, she is not.
He's a hard person to explain because he's never fully really, I think,
showed himself to any individuals as to who he actually is.
I think he's a secret.
Father Robinson does not confess to killing Sister Paul,
but he doesn't deny it either.
The interview ends, and Father Gerald Robinson is arrested for first-degree murder.
Father Robinson is not guilty.
He's not guilty.
And that's solely and simply because this table, the state of Ohio,
has not proven to you beyond a reasonable doubt that this letter opener is the murder weapon.
For Father Robinson's attorney, John Thebes, this trial turns on one piece of evidence,
the letter opener, and its alleged links to the wounds that killed Sister Paul.
They talk in the language.
They cannot exclude.
Ladies and gentlemen, that is not reasonable doubt.
And I would tell you, you don't need an expert to come in here and tell you about blood transfer.
All you need is a pair of eyes, a pattern, an object, and a vivid imagination.
Not one expert, not one with any credibility anyway, came in here and said, ladies and gentlemen of the jury,
this is the weapon. Not one.
They can't make their case beyond a reasonable doubt, forensically.
You listen to this evidence.
You heard what took place in that sacristy.
Is this some sort of satanic cult killing?
The prosecution offers a broader focus,
including speculation on the motive behind this murder.
We felt that the real reason was perhaps the most common reason
for most of the homicides that occur in this country.
A man got very angry at a woman.
And the woman died.
He had had enough.
The man had decided he had enough.
And he got behind her, and he choked her down,
either with his arm, like Dr. Barnett had described,
or with a ligature, that altar cloth that we find in the hallway,
and he choked her, and he choked her down,
and it would have taken a minute or two
to get her to the point where she's very, very near death.
What do you do over the dead or dying?
You perform last rights, and that's what he did.
Oh, a bastardized version of last rights to be sure, but that is what happens.
He covers her with that blessed altar cloth, and he marks her with the sign of the cross, but an upside down cross.
Why?
Father Grob told us why.
To degrade her, to mock her, to humiliate her, to bring her down.
to the lowest point he possibly could.
And what's a more humiliating way for a nun to meet her maker
than to be branded with an upside down cross on her chest?
What's a more humiliating way for a nun to be discovered
than to be stripped naked in front of the Eucharist?
And what is it that he has left there on the floor?
He's left a message.
A message to Sister Margaret Ann Paul?
to be sure, maybe to the church, maybe to God himself.
See how angry I am?
See what you have made me do?
This is how angry I am.
And one of the things that I argue to the jury
is that if Gerald Robinson believed anything
in terms of what that white collar represented
is that he always knew that one day, one way or another,
he was going to have to answer for what he had to have to answer
he had done and that he had been spending most of the past 26 years waiting to be held to account.
And finally, the jury held him to account.
The jury deliberates for six hours and returns with a verdict, guilty of first-degree murder.
You always want people to be held accountable for their criminal conduct.
You hope that that happens sooner rather than later, but later is better than never.
That very same day, the judge sentences Father Robinson to 15 years to life in prison.
Robinson died in prison in 2014.
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