Cold Case Files - REOPENED: Man in the Shadows
Episode Date: July 25, 2023Police in Columbus, Ohio spend more than a decade hunting a man who terrorized a neighborhood known as Linden. In the process, he became one of the most prolific rapists in U.S. history. Sponsors:&nbs...p; Fab Fit Fun: Sign up at FabFitFun.com/COLDCASE, customize your box, and get access to discounts up to 70% off on brands like Fenty, Free People, and Our Place - to name a few. Not in-love this season’s options? Take the credit to shop their exclusive flash sales of up to 70% and save on the biggest name brands out there. If you join FabFitFun as a NEW seasonal member right now you’ll also get 20% off your membership so your 1st box is only $47.99 - for up to a $300 value box each season. But only while supplies last - FabFitFun boxes sell out! Join FabFitFun today and save at FabFitFun.com/COLDCASE. Rocket Money: Stop throwing your money away. Cancel unwanted subscriptions – and manage your expenses theeasy way – by going to RocketMoney.com/coldcase Angi: Download the free Angi mobile app today or visit Angi.com Progressive: Multitask right now. Quote your car insurance at Progressive.com to join the over 29 million drivers who trust Progressive.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, Cold Case fans, we have something special for you.
We're bringing you double the episodes every week.
We know you dedicated fans need your fix in between new episodes.
So every Thursday, we are back bringing some of our best episodes from previous seasons.
Let us know which classic episodes you'd like to hear again in the comments.
And don't worry, we'll see you back here every Tuesday for all new episodes of Cold Case Files 2.
Now, on to the episode.
In February of 1991, Christina Ruth was warmly settled in for the night at her home in Columbus,
Ohio. It was winter, and the cold, suffocating winds were knocking at her windows and doors.
She also heard another knock. She thought it was the neighbor's dog trapped out in the cold.
It wasn't.
I went ahead and opened the door,
and suddenly this person came into my doorway,
and I went to shut the door,
and he reached out and slammed the door open.
One-third of all murder cases in America remain open.
Each one is called a cold case.
And only 1% are ever solved.
This is one of those rare cases.
From A&E, this is Cold Case Files, the podcast.
The man entered Christina's home and quickly turned off the lights.
She couldn't even see how he looked.
He started to attack her.
We made it to the living room.
It's where he had me, had his hands around my neck,
and he was choking me and was beating my head into the floor.
And he kept saying he was going to kill me.
Her attacker rips at her clothes and Christina's defense mechanisms start to work.
She disassociates.
Her brain convinces itself that her body and being are separate.
You pray.
You step out of your body. It's just my body. It wasn't me. It was just my body.
Three agonizing hours later, the man who broke into her home and assaulted Christina leaves.
She calls 911. She's taken to the hospital, and they examine her and collect biological
evidence left on her body by the attacker. The Columbus police begin their investigation.
And there just really wasn't much for them to go on.
And I knew that even with DNA, it's just like a fingerprint.
Unless you have a person to go with that, it doesn't help.
The case went cold in a matter of weeks,
and the unidentified predator walked around freely, deciding who his next victim would be.
Within a year's time, five more women were raped by the same person, all of them in the same area of Columbus.
The neighborhood was known as Linden, and this is where we meet Detective John Weeks.
A lot of the earlier attacks were in this close, concentrated area here.
You know, the distance here between, like, attack one and attack two
locations is probably a half a mile or less.
The assaults all followed a similar pattern,
the attacker trying to keep his identity a secret and his face hidden.
Some of the women, though, were able to provide a rough description.
This is Detective Weeks again. Male, black, usually six foot or taller, a little bit heavier build,
usually would commit multiple sex offenses, usually armed with some type of a household
knife. It was not uncommon for him to converse with the victims before, during, and after the attacks.
A composite sketch is made and circulated around the city.
The man becomes known by the moniker, Linden Area Rapist.
The investigation is at a standstill, and the police assume that the man will continue his sickening pattern of behavior until he's finally caught.
They're wrong, though, because in the fall of 1992, the attacks suddenly stopped.
We often thought that he was a resident somewhere in that neighborhood, a current resident,
but we kept, you would think over time that you would stumble onto him in that respect, and
we never did. So we didn't really didn't know where he was or who he was, obviously, and
didn't know what to think about him.
In February of 1994, years after Christina was assaulted,
the perpetrator breaks into a house of another woman.
This is Yvonne Murrell.
I'm sleeping, and then the next thing I felt was someone leaning on the bed.
I was scared, and then he just threw me to my side real quick
and told me not to look and had a knife.
And he was real close to me, his face was,
and then he had a knife by my throat.
Yvonne was 8 1⁄2 months pregnant.
She begged the attacker to have mercy on her, if not for her sake,
at least for the sake of the child she was carrying. I did tell him, don't hurt. You know, I'm pregnant. Please don't hurt the baby.
And then he kneeled on the bed and pulled my underwear down. So then at that time,
I knew what he was going to do. And I said, please, please, you know, I'm pregnant, you know.
But he went ahead.
Yvonne calls the police, and Sergeant Jeff Sackstetter joins the investigation.
After conferring with Detective Weeks,
they determine that Yvonne's assault was part of a larger pattern.
This is Sergeant Sackstetter.
His positioning of the victim, his entry into the house,
his language spoken to her.
And Detective Weeks.
He was back in that Linden neighborhood in the city.
We couldn't account for that gap of time between the 91, 92 attacks and then his sudden reoccurrence in 94.
We didn't know if he'd been sent off to prison, if he'd gone in military
commitment, whether a job had moved him out of town. We had no way of knowing. The detectives
released new sketches, and the number of officers patrolling the streets was also increased.
The Linden area rapist wasn't deterred. Seven more women were assaulted in their own homes,
and the detectives didn't even have a suspect. We didn't know who he was. We didn't know anything about him, didn't know where he was.
If you don't know those things, you don't know what the likelihood of him returning is.
By the year 2002, the number of women who were thought to be assaulted by the Linden area rapists
had grown substantially. In one incident, a woman was raped on Christmas night while her two-year-old son watched.
During a different attack, the Linden area rapist stayed for two hours after assaulting a woman named Lisa Woolley.
She was one of the few women who got a good look at him.
It's important for each case to be recognized as a person and as an individual.
That was Detective Dave McKee,
a detective in the Columbus Sexual Abuse Squad in the early 2000s.
On a slow afternoon, which I imagine are few and far between,
he decided to take a look at the string of unsolved rape cases
attributed to the Linden Area Rapist.
He reviewed the files put together by Detective Weeks and Sergeant Sackstetter
and agreed that the cases were linked.
To confirm that theory, they decided it was time to get science on their side.
So we took the DNA from the first series and compared it to DNA on the second series,
and it was determined that they were both the same suspect.
It feels like a very small breakthrough,
but this piece of information rekindled the interest of the previous detectives
and ultimately, without it, the cases may have never been solved.
This is Detective Weeks explaining their next steps.
We kind of came to that conclusion that the number of years that he kept disappearing
would be consistent with someone being sent off to be incarcerated somewhere.
A year and a half, six and a half, seven years, those are consistent with prison terms.
In Ohio, at the time, DNA profiles from people who had been convicted of a felony offense
was uploaded in Decodas, the national databank of DNA profiles.
If the Linden area rapist had been in prison for a felony,
it'd be easy to match the DNA samples from the victims
to the DNA in the database.
But we weren't getting any hits.
It was kind of the situation where everybody was geared up
and we were thinking, well, we're going to get a hit out of it,
and we didn't.
The detectives had once again resigned themselves
to a wait-and-see strategy.
In the most tragic of circumstances,
unless he raped again,
he likely wouldn't be caught.
Three years later,
and over 10 years since his attack on Christina Ruth,
another sexual assault occurred in the Linden area.
Detective Weeks was the one who got the call.
When you looked at the offense on paper
and you compared the description of the suspects
and his characteristics and his behavior and the location he had committed the attack
and the method he had entered the home,
you felt pretty certain that this was probably this man back again.
The DNA evidence taken from the victim was a match.
The linen rapist was at it again.
Columbus Police as a whole were more committed than ever to finding the perpetrator of these horrific attacks. They formed a task force with the purpose of finding the Linden Rapist.
They review all of the previous notes and they notice the attackers made some improvements in
his techniques over the years. Changed area, changed MOs.
When I say areas, just on the other side of the freeway to the campus area,
he really started hitting her at the end.
We realized how far he had spread out.
Like that No. 9 attack over there,
we thought for a number of years that he was concentrated just in this neighborhood.
Almost none of the women had gotten more than a glimpse of their attacker,
making it hard for investigators to know,
even physically, who they might be looking for.
It kind of demonstrates when you've got a victim in a situation like that
where they may, because it's so traumatic,
may not be able to completely give you a full description
or an accurate description.
I mean, you knew you had two.
Like, there were some instances where we had two attacks
where we knew it was him because of the DNA match,
but when you looked at the physical descriptions,
there was big disparities in it.
They kept hoping that he would make a mistake,
that no more women would have to be attacked
to figure out who this person was.
But that strategy didn't seem to be working out so well.
Hey, Cold Case listeners. But that strategy didn't seem to be working out so well. overpaying. As a FabFitFun member, you get exclusive access to shop thousands of curated products from top lifestyle products and brands like Fenty, Kate Spade, and Glossier, and many
more for up to 70% off. These aren't sample sizes, low quality products, or discontinued lines,
or even unsold merch that you would find at discount stores. So what's their secret? With
over 1 million members, FabFitFun helps brand growth
by placing massive orders with big promotions. In exchange, the brand offers up early access,
exclusive drops, and steep discounts on the most sought-after products. Enjoy name-brand,
full-size products of your favorites, new brands, and ones that you've always wanted to try at
discounted prices that you won't find anywhere else. I love FabFitFun. My box was amazing. I wear
my bracelet from Alex and Ani every single day. All the products are just so unique in quality,
and there hasn't been a single thing that I've received that I haven't completely loved and used
all the time. Join the shopping membership loved by over 1 million happy customers and named number
one by Glamour Magazine for 2023. Sign up for fabfitfun.com slash coldcase. Customize your
box and get access to discounts up to 70% off on brands like Fenty, Free People, and Our Place,
just to name a few. Not in love with this season's options? Take the credit to shop their exclusive
flash sales of up to 70% off and save on the biggest name brands out there. Check out FabFitFun
today. Do you know how much your subscriptions really
cost? Most Americans think they spend around $80 a month on subscriptions, but the actual total is
closer to $200. If you don't know exactly how much you're spending every month, you need RocketMoney.
RocketMoney is a personal finance app that finds and cancels unwanted subscriptions,
monitors your spending, and helps you lower your bills all in one place. It's an app that everyone can benefit from because 80% of people have
subscriptions they've forgotten about, and the chances are you're one of them. Rocket Money will
quickly and easily find your subscriptions for you. And for any you don't want to pay anymore,
just hit cancel and Rocket Money will cancel it for you. It's that easy. Rocket Money also helps
you manage all your finances in one place and automatically categorize your expenses. So you can easily track
your budget in real time and get alerted if anything looks off. Stop throwing your money
away. Cancel unwanted subscriptions and manage your expenses the easy way by going to
rocketmoney.com slash coldcase. That's rocketmoney.com.
Angie is the go-to place for everything home,
and they've made it easier than ever to connect with skilled professionals to get all your home projects done.
If you own a home, you know how much work it can take.
Whether it's everyday maintenance and repairs or making dream projects a reality,
it can be just hard to know where to start, and it really does seem never-ending.
But now, all you need to do is Angie that, and find a skilled local professional who will deliver the quality and expertise you need.
Angie has over 20 years of home service experience, and they've combined it with new tools to simplify the whole process.
Bring them your project online or with the Angie app, answer a few questions, and Angie can handle the rest from start to finish.
Or help you compare quotes from multiple pros and connect instantly, which means you can take care
of just about any home project in just a few taps. Because when it comes to getting the most out of
your home, you can do this when you Angie that. Download the free Angie mobile app today,
or visit Angie.com. That's A-N-G-I dot com.
On June 6, 2004, Diana Cunningham was sleeping in her own bed, in her own home, when she was startled awake.
I had no idea what was going on.
And at first, I mean, I was half asleep, pretty groggy.
You know, all I knew was that I couldn't breathe.
He was on top of her.
He had his hands around her throat.
She couldn't talk.
She could barely breathe.
You know, he's telling me to shut up or he'll kill me. And he had told me that if I opened my eyes, he would slit my throat.
He first demands money.
Then he raped Diana. When I just kind of realized that this is going to happen, there's
nothing I could do to stop it. I started crying. At first, he kept saying, shut up, stop crying,
that kind of thing. Although later on, when I cried a little bit, he would, like, wipe my tears away.
He assaulted her for over an hour, wiping her tears away,
reminding her that if she opens her eyes, she might suffer more severe consequences.
Diana stayed strong. She stayed smart.
There were times when I knew that he could not see my face,
that I did open my eyes and try to see anything that I could.
She tried to keep his picture in her mind,
making a mental sketch to share with the police.
Diana gathered all the information she could in her vulnerable position
to share with law enforcement.
During the assault itself, I don't know what he thought I was doing,
but I kind of felt around on his head, face, arms,
you know, found the scar on his arm.
That was another identifying characteristic.
I got the bald spot on the back of his head.
She didn't just get a visual and physical description.
Diana talked to the man.
She tried to keep a continual
conversation going. Diana Cunningham seems to be one of the bravest women on the planet.
I had actually read a magazine article from another woman who had been raped in her own home,
and that was one of the tactics that she had used, and I remembered that. It makes them see you as a person, just any attacker in general.
If you can get them talking and open up a little bit about yourself
and get them to open up a little bit if it's possible,
it just helps them to see you as a human being,
and it makes it harder for them to attack you, really.
It makes it harder for them to hurt you.
She used all of the resources available to her
while she was being assaulted. She prevailed during a traumatic event in which she could
have shut down without blame. No matter how this case ends, we have just met one of the heroes.
Diana's strategy worked. The attacker assured her that he was not going to kill her.
He had, however, become wise to the evolution of DNA testing.
There was one more thing she had to do before he left.
Basically, he said,
I'm sorry, but you're going to have to take a shower.
And he watched me wash myself to make sure that I did.
And while I was in the shower,
wiped my apartment for prints,
actually poked his head in the bathroom to let me know that he was leaving,
told me to lock the door to keep people like him out.
I knew there was a house full of college students,
all guys, across the street,
and so I grabbed a knife from my kitchen, went across the street,
knocked on the guy's door, told him what happened.
They sat with me and let me use their phone to call the police,
you know, stayed with me through the whole thing.
The police swarm upon Diana's neighborhood.
They recognize the Linden rapist's work, and they were intent on catching him.
How they do it? After the break.
This episode of Cold Case Files is brought to you by Progressive Insurance. Most of you listening right now are probably multitasking. After the break. there's something else you can be doing right now. Getting an auto quote from Progressive Insurance. It's easy and you could save money by doing it right from your phone.
Drivers who save by switching to Progressive save nearly $700 on average.
And auto customers qualify for an average of seven discounts.
Discounts for having multiple vehicles on your policy, being a homeowner, and more.
So, just like your favorite podcast, Progressive will be with you 24-7,
365 days a year, so you're protected no matter what. Multitask right now. Quote your car
insurance at Progressive.com to join the over 29 million drivers who trust Progressive.
Progressive Casualty Insurance Company and Affiliates. National average 12-month savings
of $698 by new customers surveyed who saved with Progressive between June 2021 and May 2022.
Potential savings will vary.
Discounts not available in all states and situations.
We've got a very different kind of sponsor for this episode.
The Jordan Harbinger Show, which is a podcast you really should be listening to. Jordan's show, which Apple named one of its best of 2018, is aimed at making
you a better informed, more critical thinker so you can get a sense of how the world actually works
and come to your own conclusions about what's happening even inside your own brain. In one
episode, Jordan talks to a hostage negotiator from the FBI who offers techniques on how to get people to like and
trust you, which sounds useful and disturbing at the same time. Another episode tells the story
of a cinematographer who discovered a lost city in the jungle and made one of the most important
archaeological finds of the century. Some episodes I think you'll love are the conversation with Danielle Mestianak and the conversation with Marina Nemet about surviving inside an Iranian prison.
The episodes are loaded with bits of wisdom that you can use to legitimately change your mind and improve your life right away. The Jordan Harbinger Show, that's H-A-R-B as in boy, I-N as in Nancy, G-E-R,
on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
Back at the Columbus Police Crime Lab,
Rena Clarkson is doing her part to aid in the investigation.
She's a forensic scientist.
And on Monday mornings, the DNA database is updated and compares new entries to past entries.
On Monday, June 4, 2004, there's a red star by the unknown DNA profile that's associated with the Linden rapes,
indicating that a match has been found.
It's 2225, and it also matches the 2225 in the unknown profile.
This match was a match at all 13 loci that we look at,
as well as the amyloid genin, which is the sex of the sample,
which is the best match that you can get.
I'm not going to pretend to understand exactly what Rena was saying,
but I did understand that she was positive that she had identified the Linden area rapist. His name was Robert Patton. Here's Detective Weeks. He's a convicted felon.
He'd been in prison in 1995. He'd entered Ohio prison systems. Like all convicted felons,
Robert Patton had been required to give a DNA sample. It turns out, though, that the sample had not been entered until much later.
This is Detective Weeks again.
So it had been stockpiled somewhere for some reasons that were beyond me to explain.
And it had never been taken and processed and entered into that indexing system until 2004.
While his DNA profile sat backlogged, waiting to be entered, Robert Patton continued to rape.
I don't always agree with law enforcement, but I think Sergeant Sackstetter is right on in his opinion.
I believe the system failed. Not advising law enforcement agencies that, yes, we're swabbing your suspects, but we're not running the test from the swabs.
And that was never given to us.
And that's the failure of the system.
Frustrations aside and warrant in hand, the detectives arrest and question Robert Patton.
Here are some of the clips of the interrogation by Detective Weeks.
I'm not only going to try to make your guy's job easier, right?
I want to make this whole process easier, right?
I mean, if I can get to the judge or whatever, listen,
we don't even have to go to trial or whatever.
My plea won't change. Guilty, guilty, guilty.
Did you hear that?
In less than five minutes, the suspect admits guilt.
He even offers to help expedite the process of his own conviction.
He then goes on to give Detective Weeks even more information,
sharing things that law enforcement hadn't yet discovered.
He says, well, you obviously know about these cases, but there's more out there.
There's more cases out there that I'm responsible for.
I mean, I'm not going to dispute any of them.
Well, some of them we know are you, without a doubt.
Okay, well, probably maybe all of them is me.
I'm not even talking about the burglaries. I'm talking about the other rapes.
All right, tell us where some of these other rapes are.
Patton does more than share information about the alleged other rapes.
He gets into a police van and leads a tour in which he identifies the locations of the crimes he had committed over the past 17 years.
And I didn't see him get upset, excited.
I didn't see him really show a whole lot of emotion.
He's pointing out things and telling us, turn down this street and stop here,
and we're one street too far, and that sort of thing.
By the end of the evening, Weeks and the other investigators
discover that Robert Patton had committed more than double
the amount of rapes that they had attributed to him,
along with burglaries galore.
He took us to 69 locations, and of those, 39 were the rapes and 30 of them were burglaries galore. He took us to 69 locations, and of those, you know, 39 were the rapes and 30 of them were burglaries.
And the list that we were looking at and working from primarily was 17 known rapes.
Robert Patton was eventually conclusively linked to at least 37 sexual assaults,
making him one of the most prolific serial rapists in the
country, maybe even the world. He was indicted on 37 charges of rape.
Robert Patton was prosecuted by Christian Damas from the Franklin County District Attorney's
Office in Columbus. Though Robert Patton was the most prolific rape case that Domas had ever been a part of,
Patton didn't react like the typical defendant he was accustomed to.
Here's Christian Domas to explain.
When he walked into the courtroom, the first thing he said was,
let's get this party started.
And he's got this smile on his face, and he's smirking.
And the judge asks him, how do you plea?
And he smiles and says, guilty as charged.
It seemed that Patton hadn't wavered from his original statement.
He was going to plead guilty.
It seemed that way at first.
But then something seemed to have changed his mind.
Robert Patton requested a public defender.
He made a statement, as told by Christian Damas.
And he said, well, I'm not going to plead anything.
I want my trial, and I want it today. Despite the immense amount of evidence, the DNA, the confessions, the tour
and the police van, Robert Patton wanted his day in court. I mean, this is America. So Christian
Damas prepares to prosecute Robert Patton for his alleged crimes. Seven months later, his day comes the jury selection process begins and his victims brace
themselves for the trauma to come the trial doesn't come though Patton changes his mind
again he pleads guilty he pled guilty to 58 counts of robbery and 76 counts of rape and assault.
And in the process, he requests, or more so demands,
that the judge sentence him to a lot of years in prison.
I've researched a lot of cases, but I've never heard such a request.
Neither had Christian Damas.
At one point he said 50 years isn't enough.
So the judge, after hearing that he wanted more than 50 years,
granted his request and gave him 68. I've never had a defendant ask for more time and actually get it from the judge. Many of Patton's victims sat in the courtroom and watched as the man who
assaulted them, the one who had tried to show dominance by rendering them powerless during
the attacks, was stripped of his own rights and power and freedom.
I hope they were able to heal. Among those present was Diana Cunningham, the brave woman who had memorized every detail she could during her attack. I imagine she wasn't troubled by his incarceration,
but there was one aspect of the case that did trouble her. Here's Diana Cunningham. When I found out that they had the evidence
to put him away in 2001, that just astonished me. That I'm still having a little trouble with.
It's very hard not to be bitter about something like that. But aside from that, what's important now
is just making sure that every state
reduces their backlog and keeps up on it.
Had they done what they were supposed to do
in the very beginning, it never would have happened. Thank you. is Ted Butler. We're distributed by Podcast One. Cold Case Files, the TV show,
is produced by
Curtis Productions
and hosted by Bill Curtis.
Check out more
Cold Case Files
at aetv.com
and by downloading
the A&E app.
Also,
please take a minute
to leave us a rating
and review
wherever you listen
to podcasts.
It really helps people
find the show.
Thanks for listening.
Stream the biggest blockbusters this summer
with Popcorn Summer Movies on Pluto TV.
Indulge in hilarious rom-coms like The Backup Plan
or delve into award-winning dramas like Forrest Gump and Minari
with thousands of other free movies.
Pluto TV has something for everyone.
Available on live TV and on demand.
Download Pluto TV on all your favorite devices and start streaming now.
On the Jordan Harbinger Show, you'll hear amazing stories from people that have lived them.
From spies to CEOs, even an undercover agent who infiltrated the Gambino crime family.
You're about to hear a preview of the Jordan Harbinger Show with Jack Garcia, who did just that.
My career was 24 out of 26 years was solely dedicated working undercover.
I walk in, I'm in the bar. Now, there's a barmaid there, good-looking young lady.
She's serving me a drink.
What would you like?
I usually, my drink was, give me a kettle, one martini,
three olives, glass of water on the side.
I finished the drink.
The guys come in.
I'm going to go, go in my pocket,
take out the big wad of money.
Bam, I give her a hundred dollars.
If you're with the mob, I say, hey, Jordan,
you're on record with us.
That means we protect you. Nobody could shake you down. the mob, I say, hey, Jordan, you're on record with us. That means we protect
you. Nobody could shake you down. We could shake you down, but you're on record with us.
For more on how Jack became so trusted in the highest levels of the Gambino organization,
check out episode 392 of The Jordan Harbinger Show.