Cold Case Files - REOPENED: Justice for Eglena
Episode Date: March 27, 2025In 1992, outside of a Seguin, TX carnival... officers discover the body of 15 year old, Eglena Diaz DeLeon. Their best lead: a bloody bandana found in a nearby storm drain.Homes.com: We�...��ve done your homework.ZocDoc: Check out Zocdoc.com/CCF and download the Zocdoc app for free!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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This episode contains descriptions of violence and sexual assault. Use your best judgment.
Mexico celebrates its Independence Day on September 16, 1992.
Eglena Diaz de Leon was 15, a high schooler.
She was a student at the University of San Juan, Texas.
She was a student at the University of San Juan, Texas.
She was a student at the University of San Juan, 1992.
Eglena Diaz de Leon was 15, a high schooler. She wanted to go with her friends to the celebration.
Her mother was hesitant, but she let Eglena go on her own.
She trusted her daughter.
So, Eglena went to the festival with her friends.
But she never made it home.
Like moths to a flame,
the people are drawn to the bright lights of a Texas carnival.
They are young mostly, looking for a night out and a bit of fun.
None realize they are being watched by a killer, and that one amongst them has already been marked for death.
A little past 2 a.m. and the carnival is closed for the night.
A solitary beat cop picks his way past the festival grounds
and into the courtyard of a nearby church.
In a dark corner, behind a statue of St. Andrew,
he sees a figure outlined in black.
It is the body of a young woman.
Officer Maureen Watson and Detective Jimmy Limmer It is the body of a young woman.
Officer Maureen Watson and Detective Jimmy Limmer are called to the crime scene.
It was shocking. It was sad. And for me, a young patrolman, it was overwhelming.
The body was totally disrobed. No shoes, no clothes, no jewelry, nothing.
Detective Limmer sends Officer Watson back into the streets surrounding the church, looking
for any scrap of evidence that might tie into the body.
At the corner of Nolte and Milam, about a block from the church, Watson finds exactly
that. The beam of my flashlight caught what looked to me
like possibly an article of clothing
that was stuck in the storm drain.
And as I got closer, I recognized it to be a bandana.
Watson bags the bandana and forwards it to the crime lab,
where forensics isolates smears of human blood. In 1992, however, the
stains are insufficient for DNA testing. Meanwhile, the body is sent to the morgue, where it is
eventually identified as Iglena De Leon, a Seguin girl who attended the festival the
previous evening. The coroner believes DeLeon was first strangled,
then suffered a single stab wound,
severing a major artery in the victim's neck.
It was like everything done to her was for effect.
There was no peripheral injury anywhere.
Every injury that was done to her was for effect.
Whoever killed Iglena DeLeon selected his victim carefully
and was precise in his attack.
Both signs of a serial killer.
Detective Limmer needs to move fast.
One of the first things he does, pay a visit to the victim's family.
I already had a feeling that something wasn't right.
As a mother we know. I already had a feeling that something wasn't right.
As a mother we know.
Atzi De La Garza is a mother with a premonition.
When her daughter, Eglina, didn't come home from the Seguin Festival, the uncomfortable
feeling first settled in her mind.
Throughout the hours that followed it only got worse.
I quickly called my mom, and I said,
Mom, I want you to say a prayer for Irina
because she didn't come home last night.
And it wasn't like her not to notify me.
By afternoon, Atzi is at work when her other daughter calls
about a report heard on the radio.
It was in the news already on the radio,
and she says in the description, Fetiglina.
And when she told me that, I said, OK, baby, I'll be home.
Detectives eventually find their way to Atsy's front door.
With the news, her daughter is dead.
And asking if Atsy has any idea who might have done it, she suggests a couple of Iglinas'
high school friends.
I can remember a couple of them that I didn't like.
I said, Aglina, I don't like you associating, talking to these boys.
Oh, Mom, they're just my friends.
I said, yes, love, I know, but, you know, I just, as a mother.
Detectives check out Aglina's classmates, but can't spot a potential killer in the bunch.
Meanwhile, whispers about the murder circulate through Seguin,
and fresh leads begin to filter in.
Two women share the story of a stranger they saw near the church
on the night Eglena was killed, and a gasp they heard
emanating from inside the courtyard.
It's commonly referred to as a death rattle that a person makes.
It's a final gasp for breath or exhaling as the body goes limp.
And I think he was concerned that,
oh, this person isn't done for.
I believe that's when the stab wound to the side of her neck occurred.
The two women claim they got a look at the suspect, a male Hispanic in his 20s with a
distinctive haircut.
Actor Steven Seagal, his style, he used to wear his hair with a ponytail, you know, closely
cut on the sides and pulled back into a ponytail.
Limmer provides a sketch for the press. The next day, several callers ID the man as a local named Guadalupe Sandoval.
Oh, he was a dead ringer for the guy in the sketch.
When we did finally get him to come down and talk with us, he had fresh hair clippings
on his shirt on his collar area.
One of the detectives brought up, well, what's with the clippings on your collar?
Well, then he had to admit that he did cut it off
just that day.
Sandoval's makeover raises further suspicion
among detectives who query their suspect
about his activities on the night of the murder.
Sandoval claims he attended the fiesta
with his girlfriend and was home in bed an hour before Aglina de Leon disappeared.
As soon as the interview is over, Limmer seeks to extract a statement from the suspect's girlfriend.
Totally contradicting what he said. She said he wasn't with her, that she didn't see him till small hours of the next morning, and at that time he was all sweaty and nervous and
had changed clothes from the clothes she knew he had had on earlier.
My impression of her was she was as afraid of him as anybody could be.
She pretty much indicated that to us that she wouldn't doubt that it was him that did it because
the way the victim was assaulted,
the choking down part, was he had done the same thing to her on several occasions when
she resisted his advances sexually that he would get angry and would choke her down.
Detectives search Sandoval's home and find a collection of martial arts swords. Forensic testing, however, fails to provide any link
between Sandoval and the murder.
Limmer discusses the case with district attorney Bud Kirkendall,
who believes detectives are on the right track,
but still have a few holes to fill.
We had people who saw him in the courtyard at the church,
but one of them had picked out the wrong person in the lineup, weren't able to identify him.
They had seen him for seconds in the dark.
We just didn't have enough to connect him to the crime.
In the days and weeks that follow, detectives pick through the small town of Seguin, looking
for some bit of evidence or another witness who might cinch their case against Sandoval.
In the end, they come up with another
and the case gets dropped into the cold files.
Thank you for being with us always,
and we will never forget you, of course.
Meanwhile, Eglinna's family finds its comfort
in a higher authority.
I knew it would happen one day because I never gave up that hope.
Because of my faith also that we always have to, you know, have hope.
Hope and faith are good things, especially when leavened with a dose of the Texas Rangers. A law enforcement legend that brings a Glena de Leon's cold case in from the cold.
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Guadalupe Sandoval matched the description that the witnesses had given, and as the primary suspect, he didn't help himself by lying about his alibi.
But he wasn't arrested because even after searching his home, the investigators didn't
have any physical evidence tying him to the murder. We don't have murders like this in Seguin.
I guess I can't say that because we had one.
Antonio Leal is a Texas Ranger assigned to the town of Seguin, Texas.
That's why this murder struck this community.
You've got a young girl who was what we call a true victim.
Lial's true victim is 15-year-old Iglena De Leon,
snatched from a community fiesta,
her naked body found in a nearby church courtyard.
On a Sunday, these people went to church.
This happened on a weekend where there's police tape around your church.
Those things burn into the memory.
Ten years after the case goes cold,
Lieutenant Leal meets with Seguin's district attorney,
Bud Kirkendall, on the agenda justice for Iglena
and answers for her family.
She suffered this horrible end, and that just stuck with me forever and always will.
This is small town America and a girl or young man should be able to go to a county fair or fiesta without fear of being killed.
The two men know they have at least one outstanding suspect.
A local spotted near the church courtyard at the time of the murder.
A wannabe black belt named Guadalupe Sandoval.
We knew that something had compelled him to kill once.
We didn't know if that would happen again.
It was always the urgency to do something,
but when you do it, you gotta do it right.
Doing it right means the use of DNA
to develop a forensic link between Sandoval and the murder.
It is something Leal, as head of the Rangers Cold Case Unit, knows a thing or two about.
DNA is to the modern Texas Rangers what the coal revolver was to their forebears.
A bit of technology that gives the lawman a leg up.
With this forensic edge in mind, Leal begins to review evidence in the DeLeon case.
When you're reviewing a cold case,
something was missed the first time.
So we don't, in investigating cold cases,
ignore any piece of evidence.
We look at all of them.
Leal is drawn to a blue bandana.
In 1992, it was picked up by a rookie patrol officer
who found it hooked on a storm drain about a block from the crime scene.
Coupled with the bandana is an old lab report
indicating the presence of blood of the same type as the victim.
Leal is intrigued.
I thought maybe there's not blood anywhere else on this bandana,
but maybe there's sweat, nasal mucus,
something else on this bandana
that might tell us either it is hers
or it belongs to someone else.
The bandana, along with a box of other case evidence,
is packed up and sent to Austin.
A long shot at best,
but one the Texas Rangers are willing
to take.
Chad Heinle is a DNA analyst with the Texas Department of Public Safety.
He begins his work on the DeLeon evidence with a visual once over, looking for anything
that stands out.
There was a discolored area in the center of the bandana.
It was a wide area, possibly something from nasal mucus or sweat.
With Hanley's coaxing, the ambiguous stain yields a bit of human DNA.
Hanley amplifies the sample and immediately notes the genetic profile is male.
Obviously at that time you have no idea who it's consistent with until the final profile is generated,
but it does give you something to have some hope with.
The profile is compared to blood taken from Sandoval and provides a genetic match. Hanley then pulls a DNA profile from the human blood found on the bandana
and matches it to the victim, Higlena de Leon.
This is a very damning piece of evidence and it causes the opportunity
for a lengthy explanation from the suspect as to why his DNA is on a piece of evidence
found at a crime scene and the victim's
DNA is on the same piece of evidence.
Lieutenant Leal takes Hanley's work back into the field, into the streets of Seguin, where
a theory of murder begins to take shape.
We're at the corner of Milam and Nolte, which is the corner where the bandana that ultimately
became a key piece of evidence was located.
It was located in a storm drain right here to my left.
The church is behind me and to the right where the murder scene was located.
Leal knows that the festival had shut down many of Seguin's streets on the night of
the murder.
The street where the bandana was found would be a logical route for Sandoval to walk to
his car.
The storm drain, a perfect place to dump a damning piece of evidence.
So the most logical thing that would have happened was whoever committed the murder,
if their vehicle was parked to the north, would east, and at the first street that wasn't barricaded
would then go north.
This is that street.
Lial believes the bandana and its location
in relation to the crime scene provide
a blueprint for exactly what happened on the night
Eglena de Leon was killed.
The Texas Ranger presents his case to Bud Kirkendaw,
and the DA likes what he hears.
This is what we've been looking for.
This took a circumstantial case that was a house of cards
and made it into a brick wall.
On June 17, 2002, Guadalupe Sandoval
is arrested for the first degree murder of Aglina De Leon.
For Aglina's family, it's a day they've been anticipating for almost 10 years.
We were happy, you know, we said finally, you know, we're going to go through this, you know, trial and see who did it and let him get his, you know, punishment.
I mean, you're going to reap what you sow in life.
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At trial, the state's case opens with a simple premise.
Defendant's mucus and the victim's blood, and no possible explanation for that other than that was the defendant's bandana that he tried to get rid of after he killed her.
If the defendant can explain how his DNA and the victim's blood got onto the same bandana, he walks.
If not, according to the state, he is a murderer.
Detective Maureen Watson was a rookie
when she collected the bandana from the edge of a storm drain.
She relives that moment for the jury.
My memories of that night were vivid.
I had no problem going back 10 years.
I can remember that moment like it was frozen in time.
Not all the prosecution witnesses are so easy.
The defendant's wife, who was estranged from Sandoval
when she cooperated with police in 1992, has now reconciled.
She was very reluctant to testify, and I had to drag it out of her.
But for the statements that had been taken by the PD and the Rangers, we wouldn't have
gotten it.
Kruckendahl reminds Mrs. Sandoval about her statements in 1992, how she described cutting
the defendant's ponytail after these sketches hit the press, and how she told police that Sandoval asked her to lie
about his whereabouts on the night of the murder.
One of the things he did sometimes was to choke women
into submission for sex, and he had done that to her.
Mrs. Sandoval's testimony closes the case.
After three hours of deliberation,
a Sagene jury finds Sandoval guilty of first-degree murder
and sentences him to 75 years in prison.
For some, justice delayed is indeed justice denied.
The decade of freedom Sandoval enjoyed, inherently unfair.
Lieutenant Leal has another way of looking at things.
At the time we arrested him, he had established himself with a job.
He had two children.
He had a modest but brick home that he owned, two vehicles that he owned.
So my question to people is, he got away with this for 10 years. But would you rather him gone to prison when he was a loser and had nothing to lose?
Or is it more punishment to go to prison when you've gained all these things
and know they're gone for the rest of your life because of something you did in 1992?
For the Rangers' new cold case unit, the Sandoval case is their first success,
an important notch
in the belt.
For the family of Iglena de Leon, the investigation provides answers to a question that never
should have been asked.
On his whole hands.
Thy kingdom come, thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven.
Give us this day our daily bread and forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass.
It's hard, you know.
He won it, but then again, you know,
you have to relive this thing.
But we're doing it also for other victims,
other families that have gone through this,
and for them to have hope that it'll come to one day.
until one day.
Guadalupe Sandoval was denied parole on August 1st of 2017.
He won't have another parole hearing until August of 2022.
He's 62 years old and serving a sentence in a Texas prison.
Cold Case Files, the podcast is hosted by Brooke Giddings, produced by McKamey Lynn and Steve
Dolamater.
Our associate producer is Julie McGruder.
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.
You can find me at Brooke Giddings on Twitter and at Brooke the podcaster on Instagram. I'm also active in the Facebook group, Podcasts for Justice. for Are you looking for your next case? Pluto TV has all your favorite crime dramas streaming for free.
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