Cold Case Files - REOPENED: Midnight Attacker
Episode Date: April 10, 2025From 1997 to 2002, Long Beach, CA detectives attempt to track down a serial predator known as the Belmont Shore Rapist.Greenlight: Start your risk-free trial today at Greenlight.com/coldcaseS...ee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi everyone, if you go to the episode description, you can check out our sponsor deals.
Our sponsors make it possible for you to download cold case files each week for free.
So check out the promo code DEALS.
You might just find something you like, something you need, or a great gift for your friends
and family.
On to the show.
This episode contains descriptions of violence and sexual assault. Use your best judgment.
I talk a lot about people living in small towns being especially surprised when a terrible
crime is committed, because living in a small town gives people a sense of security. This case didn't happen in a small town.
It was in Long Beach, a city in Southern California,
with a population of around 450,000.
But even with nearly half a million people living in Long Beach,
it still felt like a small town in a lot of ways.
Many of the residents of Long Beach lived in large houses in
upscale neighborhoods. The streets were quiet and clean. People knew their
neighbors. And knowing that gave the people who lived there a feeling similar
to that small-town sense of security. No one expected someone to break into
their home. No one expected to get raped.
But it happened. And in this case, it happened in Long Beach
more than 20 times.
From A&E, this is Cold Case Files.
I'm Brooke, and here's the matchless Bill Curtis
with a classic case, The Midnight Attacker.
It got to be about 9.30 or 10 o'clock and I went out to return a video and I noticed that the deadbolt had been tampered with.
A Long Beach woman we will call Jane leaves home and walks to the local video store.
At the back of her mind, a hint of concern about the lock on her front door.
I thought maybe I should do something, you know, maybe someone had tried to get in and all the possibilities ran through my mind of calling a friend or calling the police, wondering what they would do and...
In the end, Jane does nothing, returns home and gets ready for bed.
I think I was pulling my nightgown on over my head
so my arms were up.
He leapt out of the closet and grabbed me
and threatened me, told me to be quiet
and cooperate or he would get ugly.
The intruder wears a mask, gloves and a pair of underwear.
He forced me down on the bed and eventually raped me.
At one point he asked me if I would forgive him for doing this.
I said that I would pray for him.
Two hours later, the rapist slips out the back door and into the night, and Jane calls police.
I went to the hospital as part of a sexual assault response team call out and met the victim there, who had been transported by patrol.
J. Craig Newland is a sex crimes detective with the Long Beach PD.
We had her examined, did a forensic medical exam and that evidence was packaged and preserved. She seemed to be coping fairly well, although she was
tearful and obviously afraid.
Initial testing yields a sample of her attacker's saliva. With no suspect
identified, however, DNA testing is put on hold. The evidence is packaged and
preserved. Meanwhile, Newland begins his investigation.
What I did was I issued a press release and just asked for the public's help of anybody
who might have been seen that was acting suspicious in the neighborhood or anybody who fit that
general description that people thought might have
been involved.
The press release generates a few leads, none of which pan out.
Six months after the attack, Jane's rape remains unsolved and her case is shipped to the cold
files. I didn't really feel that he had singled me out or was attacking me personally.
It felt like, you know, this is a crime that's been committed against women since the beginning
of time and I was unfortunately an easy enough target for someone with this criminal mind
to take advantage of.
A rape victim sits in her home very much alone and very much afraid.
Unfortunately, she is about to have a lot of company.
Obviously, this was an area here that was very close in proximity.
Detective Catherine Kriscovich works in the Long Beach Sexual Assault Unit and is at the center
of a growing investigation.
In the 18 months since Jane was attacked, 10 more women have been assaulted.
All of the attacks centered in the upscale towns of Belmont Shore and Belmont Heights
in Long Beach, California.
We needed to solve this case.
We did not want any more victims.
Detectives pull each case file and compare notes.
What they see is not one,
but two serial rapists on the loose,
each with a distinct MO.
The first, dubbed the Belmont Shore Rapist,
targets older women in Belmont Shore.
The Belmont Shore rapist targets older women in Belmont Shore. Women 40s up into 79.
And he would commit the sexual assault and flee.
The second rapist, known as the Belmont Heights rapist, works farther inland, targets younger
victims and likes to linger after the attacks.
He would actually spend time with the victims, in some instances several hours, and it was
a date to him and that is how he described it to the victim.
He would cuddle with them, He would converse with them.
Sketches are circulated but generate few leads.
Meanwhile, detectives warn the public
to be especially careful, to lock their doors and windows.
Some people listen.
Unfortunately, others do not.
It's disheartening that there's another victim, but in the same sense that adrenaline kicks
in to go out there and do whatever it is that we can.
It's just after 10 p.m. and Detective Kriskovic rolls out to the most recent attack.
A 54-year-old woman raped by a masked man. It is an MO that fits the
Belmont Shore rapist. Kriskovic cordons off the block and calls out the dogs.
At this point we were using as many tools as we could possibly come up with, and one
of the tools was the bloodhound team. And they collected several scent pads
from the area of the entry, as well as the suspect's exit.
And from that point, they used that scent pad,
and the dogs trailed them to an apartment complex.
Detectives begin knocking on doors and talking to tenants.
One in particular catches their eye.
A man who looks a lot like sketches made
of the Belmont Shore attacker, a man named Jeffrey Grant.
We believed that we finally had a break.
Ultimately, we had three victims,
positively, I deem Jeffrey Grant.
Grant is arrested, charged with rape, and put behind bars.
A sample of his saliva is sent to the L.A. Sheriff's Crime Lab for comparison with DNA
from three of the Belmont Shore rapes.
Everyone involved agrees.
Grant is their man, and science will cinch the case.
Basically our job is to screen for biological fluids.
We primarily analyze blood, saliva, and semen for purposes of DNA testing.
On October 1st, criminalist John Bachroth sends semen from two of the rape kits,
along with grant's saliva sample,
to an outside lab for testing.
Three months later, the results are in.
He was excluded as a suspect on the two cases
that came back as a match to each other.
DNA confirms the Belmont Shore attacks
are the work of one man, but not the work of Jeffrey Grant.
After three months in Stur, Grant walks out of jail a free man.
It was back to square one and back to digging and trying anything and everything that we can do,
because we knew that we did not have that serial rapist.
The digging begins back at the property room,
where detectives pull rape kits from the second string of attacks,
the Belmont Heights series.
In January of 2000, DNA analysis on that group is complete.
As expected, the cases yield the same profile and are connected.
But then the case takes yet another twist.
The profile also matches the Belmont Shore series of rapes.
It was surreal to have two series going on in your city,
split and then all of a sudden put together.
We realized that we had an extremely horrific series going
on.
One man responsible for attacking 18 women over the past four years, and he wasn't done
yet.
This message is sponsored by Greenlight.
Okay, let's talk about financial education for a moment.
Think back. Who was your money mentor? For most of us, learning about budgeting and saving came way too late.
But here's some great news. There's a tool called Greenlight that can give your kids a financial head start.
Imagine a debit card and money app rolled into one designed specifically for families. That's Greenlight. It's not just about
transactions. It's a platform where kids can develop crucial money skills like saving, investing,
and smart spending. For us parents, Greenlight offers peace of mind. We can transfer funds to
our kids and monitor their financial activities. Meanwhile, our children are building financial
confidence through engaging methods, including fun games.
One feature I'm particularly excited about
is the chores section.
You can create personalized tasks, one time or recurring,
and reward your kids with allowance
when they complete them.
It's a great way to teach responsibility
and the value of earning.
I've been meaning to start using Greenlight for my family
and I think it's finally time to take the plunge.
It's such a simple yet effective way
to raise financially savvy kids and navigate family finances together. With millions of families
already on board, Greenlight is clearly making a difference in financial education. Start your
risk-free Greenlight trial today at greenlight.com slash coldcase. That's greenlight.com slash cold
case to get started. Greenlight.com slash cold case. From A&E, the creators of Cold Case Files, comes your next true crime podcast
obsession, PD Stories.
Every week, law enforcement professionals join host Tom Morris, Jr.
from America's most wanted and live PD to share their experiences, insights and
perspective on policing.
You're not going to want to miss this show.
Be sure to subscribe on Podcast One, Apple Podcasts and many other podcast apps
so you can get new episodes every week.
With at least 18 confirmed victims, a serial rapist was on the loose in Southern California.
Investigators thought that they had found the perpetrator.
He was even identified by three of the victims. But in a surprising
twist, the DNA evidence didn't match his profile. With their only lead and only suspect
ruled out, the investigators were forced to accept that the perpetrator was still on the
loose and likely still hunting his next victim. It's kind of one of the few areas of the city that still has a town,
neighborhood feel. A lot of people that grow up there stay there and a lot of
people you know didn't have locks on their gates. A lot of people slept
without locking their doors you know when you just don't see that too often
anymore. Tracy Menzer is a reporter for the Long Beach Press Telegram.
Crime is Menzer's beat.
The Belmont Shore Rapist, her headline story.
You saw people putting in security systems, the little signs advertising security systems
were cropping up all over.
We joked like weeds.
They knew they had somebody in their midst who was watching them and preying on people,
and they did not know who it was.
The attacks began in 1996.
By 2000, at least 18 women have been assaulted.
We were like the funnel. Everything had to come through our task force office. In the spring of 2000, Estella Martinez and Catherine
Kriscovic act as point on the investigation.
Despite four years worth of legwork,
the ladies quickly realize in terms of leads,
they have a whole lot of nothing.
Everything that we normally depend on to try to solve cases.
Everything was out the door in this case.
This case was going to be solved by DNA.
And we were going to have to be awfully, awfully lucky to come across that one particular swab
that was going to match.
Krishkovich calls in reinforcements from CCAT, a covert surveillance unit, and asks them
to hit the streets looking for suspects and collecting DNA samples.
Our unit was eight detectives and one sergeant, so we had nine undercover vehicles.
Mike Dugan acts as the investigation's eyes and ears on the street.
He works the neighborhoods where attacks occurred, looking for anyone and anything unusual.
People dressed in dark clothing, walking down streets, looking at residences,
somebody walking up a driveway and then returning to the sidewalk.
Because there were so many descriptions of the suspect,
he was white, he was Hispanic, he was Italian,
he was light-skinned black,
we didn't know what to really look for.
If a suspect is ID'd, a marked car is dispatched
to stop the individual and question him.
We will request a swab from him,
and it usually was a consensual swab which most of the people submitted to.
Over the next two and a half years, cold case detectives swab and eliminate 81 suspects.
Meanwhile, the Belmont Shore rapist remains at large doing what he does best, stalking and attacking women.
doing what he does best, stalking and attacking women.
It's past midnight, and 71-year-old Margaret Gentry goes to sleep with her front door unlocked.
Around 1 a.m. she awakens to a pair of hands at her throat.
He kept pulling my head back and telling me not to scream. I want to live.
If it means not screaming, so be it.
You'll do anything when it's your life.
He took me around the bedroom, into the bathroom,
and stretched me out on the counter, raped me there.
Then he'd come back and put me back in the counter, raped me there. Then he'd come back and put me back in the bed
and rape me again.
So I was raped three times.
He rubbed my back, calm down, calm down, calm down.
You can't calm down.
When you're frightened half to death,
it's pretty hard to calm down.
After an hour and a half, the attacker is finished and leaves the house.
Margaret Gentry gathers herself, finds a phone and calls police.
I refuse to be intimidated. I won't let him get the best of me.
When that phone rang, the heart sank. It was, please don't let it be another hit.
Squad cars converge on Margaret Gentry's neighborhood,
but the Belmont Shore rapist has once again disappeared.
He will reappear for the last time six months later.
I wasn't able to breathe, so for a while I really thought, you know, this may be it.
On November 7th, Julie Adler awakens to a man on top of her.
A shirt is tied around his head, and he is ripping at her clothes.
And then I just told him, you know, I'll do whatever you want. I'll do whatever you want.
The man eases up, and Adler thinks fast.
Once I realized there was no knife or no gun, then I just kind of started stalling.
Headler asks if she can use the bathroom.
Once inside, she locks the door.
He started banging on the door, and the only option I had was just to scream out the bathroom
window and hope that somebody heard me.
And the next thing I knew is he's coming at me from outside.
He's reaching in the window.
Adler bolts out of the bathroom and heads for her front door.
She is tackled in the hallway and fights to stay alive.
At some point in the struggle, his hand slipped in my mouth, and I bit him.
Just total instinct, I just bit him, and that was enough for him to stop.
The attacker flees. Adler runs to a neighbor and calls 911.
Kriskovic arrives on scene.
In this particular area, the homes are so close. Everything is fairly compact
that it would be literally less than a block
would be the first perimeter,
then the second perimeter, then an outer perimeter.
Less than 10 minutes after the attack,
a shirtless man on a bicycle spins out of an alley.
An officer stops the man and notices he has a bloody finger. The biker identifies himself as Mark Wayne Rethbun
and agrees to provide a saliva sample.
We learned after all these years not to get too terribly excited because of the letdown.
And we were used to letdowns.
When Krzysztof runs Rathbun's criminal history,
however, pulses quicken.
His record includes arrests for peeping in women's windows
and residential burglary.
He works odd jobs, a lifestyle that would allow him to roam freely without raising eyebrows.
We were at that point sitting on pins and needles waiting for his analysis on that oral swab to come back.
Two days later, the DNA is in, and the police hold a press conference.
To the citizens of Long Beach, sleep well tonight.
Sleep well. We have the suspect.
Rathbun's DNA provides a full genetic match to semen collected in the Belmont Shore rapes.
He is charged with 47 counts of sexual assault and brought to an interview room for questioning.
After six long years,
Kriskovic comes face to face with her suspect.
I want you to speak from the heart.
I said I couldn't undo what I had done
and I just really regret it and I wish it never happened.
Okay.
In August of 2004, Rathbun is convicted of raping 14 women. I wish that would happen.
In August of 2004, Rathbun is convicted of raping 14 women and sentenced to more than
1,000 years in prison.
Podcasting isn't just about talking, it's about growing, engaging, and monetizing, and
that's where PodcastOne Pro comes in. Whether you're an independent creator or a major brand,
PodcastOne Pro gives you the tools you need
to take your podcast to the next level.
We're talking about premium hosting, advanced analytics,
dynamic ad integration, and expert distribution,
all designed to maximize your reach and revenue.
Plus, with access to Podcast One's industry-leading network, you'll be connected to top-tier advertisers
and a massive audience.
It's time to go pro and turn your passion into profit.
Visit PodcastOnePro.com to get started today. Podcast One Pro, the
power behind the podcast.
For Katherine Kriscovich, it is the end of a journey and the end of a nightmare.
Justice was served.
It was one of the best feelings in the world
to be able to say that there was an end,
that it's done. It is over.
I'm just glad that he's behind bars
and that he's going to stay there.
Whatever happens to him in jail is fine.
I have no qualms about if they kill him, great.
He's just an animal.
He's not human.
Margaret Gentry is a rape victim,
one of thousands each year.
For Gentry, telling her story is the first step
out of a world of shadow and back to living her life.
And I think that anybody that has been raped,
I think that they need to talk about it.
I think that as long as he's got you intimidated
till you can't talk about it,
you're never going to get over it.
On the day that Mark Rathbun was arraigned, his mother, who was 75 at the time, apologized
to his victims.
She then looked at her son and asked him why he did it.
She didn't get an answer.
Mark Rathbun is currently incarcerated in California.
He's 49 years old.
He'll be eligible for a parole hearing in 2030,
after his 60th birthday.
Cold Case Files, the podcast is hosted by Brooke Giddings,
produced by McKamey Lynn and Steve Dallamator.
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.
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.
Pluto TV has all the shows and movies you love streaming for free. That means laughter is
free with gut busting comedies like the neighborhood boomang, and Ferris Bueller's Day Off.
Mystery is free with countless cases to crack from Criminal Minds, Tracker, and Matlock.
And thrills are free with heart-pumping hits like The Walking Dead and Pulp Fiction.