Dateline NBC - Talking Dateline: The Thing About Helen & Olga
Episode Date: February 11, 2026Lester Holt talks with Keith Morrison about his original podcast series “The Thing About Helen & Olga.” A team of seasoned detectives uncover horrifying murder plots in Los Angeles orchestrated... by a pair of unlikely suspects: two elderly ladies named Helen Golay and Olga Rutterschmidt. Keith tells Lester who he believes was the mastermind of their devious schemes and plays extra sound from the manager of a mom-and-pop lighting store who had his own run-in with the “girls.” They’re joined by Dateline Senior Producer Susan Leibowitz, who shares a story about why she returned to the church where Helen and Olga volunteered “helping” the homeless long after reporting on the story.Have a question for Talking Dateline? DM us a video to @DatelineNBC or leave a voicemail at (212) 413-5252. Your question may be featured in an upcoming episode. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, everyone. I'm Lester Holt and we're talking Dateline. Today I'm here with Keith Morrison to talk about his original podcast series, The Thing About Helen and Olga.
And Dateline senior producer Susan Liebelowitz, who has been following the story with Keith for nearly 20 years. It's good to see both of you. Thanks for coming on.
Hello. Thank you for having us on, Lester.
Before we get into the discussion, let's tell folks that we're dropping the full series in the Dateline feed as a
bonus while Dateline is taking a break for the Witter Olympics. So go take a listen and then come
right back here. Later, we'll have an extra clip from an interview that didn't make the show with the
manager of a mom-and-pop lighting story in Los Angeles who had his own encounter with Helen and
Olga, and Susan has a story about the church where Helen and Olga volunteered. But to recap, in the late
1990s, Helen Goulet and Olga Rudder Schmidt appeared to be two kind of.
Finally, old ladies helping homeless men off the streets of Los Angeles.
But as private investigator Ed Webster discovered, along with the LAPD and FBI in the so-called
Granny Task Force, the women were actually singling out men for insurance policies, and staging
their deaths to collect big payouts.
They were convicted in the murders of Kenneth McDavid and Paul Vados and remained behind bars
today. So let's talk dateline, shall we? Keith, this story contains so much greed, betrayal, and good old-fashioned
detective work. It was kind of a typical dateline plot, but not. Let me let you kind of describe what we're
talking about. It's just the craziest story. I can never understand why nobody made it into a movie.
Helen and Olga are these two, you know, we say elderly ladies. You weren't that elderly when they
started their scabs, who just played the most interesting and patient games with men to try to
take their money away or try to take advantage of them and get money, farm them for money,
if I can put it that way. Strange, crazy story. There was sort of Thelma and Louise of crime.
It sounds like they kind of played the long game. You talked about they had patience. I mean,
this thing did play out over years, and the victims, it appears, were identified,
way in advance. Was that their secret weapon? Is that how they were able to do what they did over
such an extended period? You know, Susan, I don't know whether you heard about how they came up
with the notion of doing it that way, but they were very patient, and they, you know, they would
spend two years waiting for the time when an insurance company would trust them to, to give them
the money from the death of these homeless men who they took in, housed, fed, took care of for all
that time so that they could score from the insurance policy when the men, unfortunately,
suddenly died. And they would, of course, be the ones behind that unfortunate sudden death.
So they had to be patient because the insurance companies would flag a policy if somebody
tried to claim it. So they just had to avoid the appearance of criminal activity enough to,
so the insurance company wasn't going to pay attention to it. And since these were
not gigantic policies, maybe they wouldn't bother spending the amount of time it would take
to investigate it. And for a while it worked. And Keith, this starts unraveling because an insurance
investigator takes a closer look. He was the most interesting man. I've never encountered somebody
who is quite so, you know, calm, methodical, and deliberate. He just would not give up
until he solved this puzzle.
He was another character who could have been, you know, a lead actor in a movie in the
sense that when I'm talking about his character could have been, because he was like a Boy Scout
who wouldn't give up.
And without that determination of his, this might not have been solved.
He reminded me of like some 1970s TV detective.
You know, I don't know, is that Rockford or Mannix?
Maybe it was the mustache, but he also was so determined.
to get justice for these
his got, Kenneth McDavid
and then ultimately for Vadoes as well
there was Kenneth McDavid that got him
looking in there was something not right
and he could not let go of the idea that these women
were getting away with these terrible
murders of these men that other
people had
thought nothing of because they were homeless people
but he was determined he came out
here and he was just supposed to do
a double check on this that looked a little weird
and he was
he was hooked
and Helen and all good
didn't like him. Well, understandably so.
No, he only had bad news to give them.
Can you tell me what happened when he confronted them and basically said, we're keeping the money?
Well, that's all on video, which is awesome to see. And they think, you know, Helen meets with the investigator, and he's with a undercover LAPD detective who is recording all this.
and she thinks she's getting the big payout check,
and she gets a check that is a refund of what she paid for her premiums,
and she is not happy.
No, indeed.
If you're not going for claiming a full amount,
this has been a total weight of my type.
I am in the area, I'm happy.
A lot of griefs and Bernard Aiken South.
And then they go to Olga's and knock on her door.
Now, she probably knew what was coming,
and she never really opens the door.
She, like, sticks her hand out to get the envelope,
and slams the door.
This is money's check.
What is it?
What is it?
What is it?
It's a refund for the premiums that you pay.
No, we don't matter.
What is?
Read it.
Read it.
The policy there.
I don't see it.
Thank you.
Yes, that was because that's the end of, you know, several years of waiting.
And it was also recognition, okay, maybe this is, the jig might be up here.
We might not be able to do this anymore.
I was, I was curious.
What's the story behind this granny squad?
So Detective Dennis Kilcoyne asked for guys to follow these old women.
I remember they were trying to follow Olga, who was 75 at the time, 70-something.
And she would go on these crazy hikes in Runyon Canyon, which I don't know if either of you have done that.
It's very uphill.
And these the people follow, the cops following her, they could barely keep up with her.
They did encounter her at a kinko's where she was ordering credit cards and other people's names.
and they also saw her talking to another potential victim.
So, I mean, there was a good reason to follow them around,
but it was a funny thing to have to, you know, surveil women in their 70s.
Well, it sounds like the police were kind of,
had kind of figured out what was going on,
but they couldn't, they really couldn't make the case for a long time.
It's just, just proving your case can be very difficult with these ladies.
They were apparently trying to come up with a way to present the case
was the recreation in the middle of the night.
where they tried to recreate the running over of one of these elderly men in the back alley in Westwood.
And so at 2 o'clock in the morning, they're out there trying to recreate the scene in order to, what, I guess, come up with some kind of theory or evidence that they could use against these women.
I was going to ask, Susan, you were there at this recreation.
Yeah, it was a huge team of people.
They had some really grainy video of a car going through that.
at the time they believed Kenneth MacDavut was killed.
So they used the same type of car, what they thought was the same type of car.
And they wanted it to match the speeds.
It hit the different cameras.
So with the car and that surveillance video in hand,
Detective Kilcoyne asked for help from the California Highway Patrol.
Okay, here's what we're going to do tonight.
The CHB marked where the body was found, where the bike was, the glasses.
They added in the location to the cameras.
and what they could see on that fuzzy videotape.
And they put it all together to figure out exactly what happened in that dark alley to Kenneth McDavid.
They were, to be honest, I was telling you this.
I never completely understood what they were trying to prove,
but they were trying to figure out if there was something they could do to help make their case.
And yes, and I was there until 2 in the morning until the detective was like,
you have to go home because I was pregnant.
My daughter's about to go to college now.
Okay, you just dropped that in.
Yeah.
And the detective's like, you have to go.
I was like, okay.
Did that video or that recreation ever come of any use?
Not for them.
It was quite useful for us.
It was interesting to see how they do that, but it was not used in the trial.
They changed prosecutors, and the second prosecutor wasn't interested.
When we come back, we're going to play that interesting interaction involving the two
women at a lighting store in Los Angeles.
We're back after this.
We've been talking in Los Angeles terms of Runny and Canaan
and things like that.
Part of the story plays out actually in New England.
And can you explain that story?
So there's another man named Fred Downey.
And Fred Downey is not part of the criminal case that played out in Los Angeles.
He was, Fred Downey was this old 95, 96, 97, really old man.
alone who had no kids.
It lived in Cape Cod.
And he meets Helen Goli's daughter, Keisha, and they become friends.
Keisha is a 20-something, and he's a 90-something, and she spent all her time with Fred.
And Fred eventually moves to live with Helen and live out his last years in beautiful Santa Monica.
Which is inexplicable, by the way, to his family, because he, you know, he's crossing the country to live way over, far, far, far away from
them with this person they don't really know in Santa Monica on the other coast.
And he sells his house to Helen and Keisha for $100, house on Cape Cod.
And he writes letters to his niece Mildred about how wonderful it is.
It's amazing Santa Monica.
And then the letters become not so happy, and they're not feeding him very much.
And he's not sure he made the right decision.
And he gets run over by a car on Ocean Park Boulevard.
So we went to talk to Fred's niece and Keith made this amazing discovery while we were at the cemetery where Fred was buried.
Keith, you want to talk?
You remember that?
Well, I do remember that.
It wasn't such an amazing discovery.
We're standing in the cemetery and there are leaves in the ground.
It's autumn, I guess.
And just shuffling my feet around where the gravesite.
is, and there are two more gravestones there for Keisha and Helen, right? So they're going to be
buried beside poor old Fred Downey, and Fred's relative is very, very, very unhappy about that.
That is terrible. Look at that. Fred, Neuro, and Keisha, I never knew they were here.
That is horrible.
I'm going to put sand on them and gravel or something and put grass seed.
That is horrible.
Oh, I just can't get over that.
I had no idea.
No.
It's upsetting.
But she hadn't discovered that before.
And Susan tells me that those graves are still empty.
It's still kind of waiting for somebody who probably won't get that.
there. So you guys have immersed yourself in this story. Who was the leader of this group? Could they
have pulled this off singularly? I mean, certainly they were both apparently scheming and
conniving people who were looking for an easy mark. I got the impression that Helen was the one who
was scheming and coming up with these ideas. What's the backstory between how they linked up and became
friends? Well, Dennis Kilcoyne, the detective, told us he believed they met at the gym. But we don't know
We don't know the details of that.
Were they both on the bicycles next to each other?
I have no idea.
But they're unlikely friends.
Have I the other you been able to hear from friends or people close to Helen and Olga
who might be able to provide some extra insight?
People didn't want to talk.
Helen's ex-husband didn't want to talk.
Helen's daughter, who was in Cape Cod, didn't want to talk.
And we went and knocked down her door.
There was a guy who had maybe, who had dated Helen.
I talked to on the phone.
He didn't want to talk.
People wanted to keep them at arm's length.
I know that people in Olga's apartment building didn't like her,
that she was always yelling at people and complaining about their music being too loud
and things like that.
Olga's husband had left the country before we got on the story.
And I tried to talk to Keisha, but she didn't want to talk to me.
Yeah, we didn't get very far with people who knew them.
Do you think there's more to be uncovered in this story?
Yes, I do.
I think that there's other things that Helen did
and maybe other things that Olga did.
And I tried to find out.
There's a guy who Helen worked for,
who was some sort of real estate development guy.
At some point he dies,
and a lot of his property goes to Helen by quick claims.
His family sues her saying that she stole it,
And his family loses.
Is there more to that story?
I don't know.
Given what happens since, it makes you want to look at it more carefully, all right.
Right.
And I think these women were energetic, you know.
They were not sitting around counting their money.
They were sitting around thinking about how to get more money.
So going into more detail, if you will, about this interaction in the lighting store in Los Angeles.
What I remember, so I tried to get a hold of people who had been sued by them.
So this was the store called Royal Lighting.
I don't think it did this anymore, but maybe it does.
And I talked to one of the owners, and he said the two women were there.
They were just looking around, which he said was unusual in lighting stores.
Usually you come in and you say, I need a lamp to go next to my bed.
Or I need a standing lamp.
Like, you know what you want when you walk in.
And at one point he hears crash.
And one of them, I think it was Olga, has been hit by one of their lamps.
And then the other one was Helen, said,
Oh, my God, I have a camera.
Let me take a picture of this for you.
And then later on, the store gets a lawsuit.
Let's take a listen to that.
It was in the corner back here.
It was a lamp that we had that was either attached to the wall or a floor lamp.
And in order to have that lamp hit you, you'd have to, first of all, the lamp was too tall
in order for the top of it to hit you.
And you'd have to go out of your way and bend back.
Now that I think about it, actually was a very tall lamp.
And you'd have to go out of your way, bring the lamp low enough.
to have this hit you in the head to begin with.
So it just seemed peculiar at the time.
And they got money from the lawsuit.
That's what I heard.
Yeah, the insurance company paid that money, I guess.
Yeah.
Yeah, I mean, that was hard.
They were mom and pop store.
Like, you know, they hurt them more than a bigger place.
I think they also sued Jack Willane's gyms at the time.
And I don't know, a couple other, there were Vaughn's grocery store.
There were a bunch of lawsuits.
involving what potentially were staged incidents.
Yes, exactly.
That's what it seems to be.
And I tried to find all the lawsuits,
and I don't know if I found them all.
And I went to, there's this archive of old court records in the basement under the county record building.
And it's this creepy place where, like, the ceiling's falling down,
and you go into this room that's, you know, fluorescent lighting really low,
and then you ask for the cases.
And a lot of them, the documents had been removed.
You know, I got empty files.
Like someone else had taken them.
Maybe Olga went down there and took them.
Who knows?
Wouldn't put it past them.
But that's when things were kept on paper and things disappeared.
And I just remember it was like this creepy place to go to.
But I tried to find.
That's why I found Royal Lightings details.
We were able to interview them.
We should point out that Helen and Olga were never charged in connection with any civil lawsuits.
And we never got a chance to ask Helen and Olga about the Royal Lightings.
lawsuit or any civil lawsuits.
Although that scene in the
low-ceilinged room with the
fluorescent light and the
missing files would be a fabulous
little scene in the movie, don't you think?
I know. I guess I should
write that down.
You remember when we write the movie, Keith.
Right. So let's talk about the
trial. The police finally make their
case, and this just goes before a
jury. Any surprises
there? I mean, I think Helen
pointed to her daughter, which I don't know if that
was a surprise as the real culprit.
And we should say Kechagolay, Helen's daughter, has never been criminally charged in connection
to those lawsuits we've talked about or in the deaths of Fred Downey, Kenneth McDavid, or Paul Vottoes.
It wasn't a surprise, but boy, was it ever in character.
But the jury didn't seem to have any trouble reaching a verdict in Helen's case, but they talked
a little longer about Olga before they finally came to a conclusion.
The jury found Helen and Olga guilty for the murders of Kenneth McDavid and Paul Vados, and they were sentenced to life in prison.
Okay, after a short break, why Susan went back to the church where Helen and Olga found their victims.
Well, welcome back, everyone. Susan, there's an interview in the series with a pastor from the Hollywood Presbyterian Church where Helen and Olga volunteered.
This was not your last time at that church, was it?
No, and I'm not a Presbyterian, but it wasn't.
So when we're doing the interview, I just come back from maternity leave, and at the very end, the pastor said, you know, we have a preschool here, and I'm thinking, no way am I sending my child to the preschool where these women found their victims, and that's exactly where I sent her.
Because it was perfectly between work and home, and they were lovely people, and they fed the homeless on the north side of the church, and the preschool was on the east side of the church, and there was a security guard.
that stood in between making sure nothing went awry.
And the preschool kids made sandwiches with homeless,
and it was a wonderful, wonderful place.
But people would ask me, how did you find your preschool?
And I said, well, I was on this dateline,
and these women were killing homeless guys.
Oh, no.
No, you didn't.
I did.
Oh, goodness.
All right.
Well, reporting on these stories,
they become so much more than a day job.
We have a question about how we disconnect.
from work. So Keith, Susan, I'll put the question to both of you. How do you disconnect from
stories like the one you just told, Susan? Life can be tragic for people. And you live in those
moments. You feel tremendous empathy for people who are the victims of crime. And you feel
whatever you feel for the people who committed it. Sometimes more angry than other times. Sometimes
they're pathetic. Sometimes they're really treated quite evil people. But as Susan says, you've got
other things in your life, you leave it behind, and then move on to the next one.
Human beings are just endlessly fascinating in their variety, in their goodness, and in their
ability to be really bad when they want to be.
Susan and Keith, I know you've been kind of loosely, at least, tracking them and where
they are right now.
What do we know?
They're in two separate prisons in California.
Both they have never, as far as Enno, been in the same prison, perhaps for
good reason. And they have, you know, whatever else prison life has done for them, it has not harmed
their longevity. Helen has just turned 95. Olga is 92, about to turn 93, as far as we know.
And they're going on about their lives in prison. They've been there for quite some time now,
and there's no chance that they're getting out. They'll die there. But as...
They may die there a long time from now the way things go with them.
Have you been able to talk to either of them over the years?
No.
Susan has tried endlessly, and I would love to.
I've written to them in prison over the years and gotten responses like,
if you can loan me the money for my next appeal, I promise I'll pay you back when I get out.
And then maybe we can talk.
I have not loaned them the money.
I didn't think he did, but thanks for clarifying.
Yeah, that's right.
Well, Keith and Susan, what an amazing story. Thanks for coming on and sharing it.
Thanks so much. Lester, thank you. A delight to talk to you. And a delight to talk about this story, the thing about Helen and Olga. So thank you.
Well, that's going to do it. For a talking dateline this week, we are not on the air on NBC for the next two weeks for the Winter Olympics, but you can tune in to our Dateline 24-7 channel for our On Thin' Ice marathon streaming Thursday through Tuesday.
Monday, we'll drop another of Keith's original podcast right here, and he'll be back again next week to talk Dateline.
So get your questions ready for him.
DM us your audio or video on our socials at Dateline NBC, or leave us a voicemail at 212-413-5252 for a chance to be featured.
Thanks for listening, everyone.
