Money Crimes with Nicole Lapin - 40 Years Later: The Murder of Sherri Rasmussen Pt. 1 | Murder: True Crime Stories
Episode Date: February 26, 2026On the 40-year anniversary of the murder of Sherri Rasmussen, we revisit the beginning of a case that would haunt Los Angeles for decades. Carter and Vanessa explore Sherri’s life, her new marriage,... and the volatile love triangle unfolding just out of sight. What was initially labeled a burglary gone wrong quickly reveals deeper warning signs—obsession, jealousy, and investigative blind spots that shaped the case from day one. Four decades later, this episode examines how early assumptions and missed red flags set the stage for one of the most troubling failures of justice in modern true crime history. If you’re new here, don’t forget to follow Scams, Money and Murder to never miss a case! For Ad-free listening to episodes, subscribe to Crime House+ on Apple Podcasts. Scams, Money and Murder is a Crime House Original Podcast, powered by PAVE Studios 🎧 Need More to Binge? Listen to other Crime House Originals Clues, Crimes Of…, Crime House 24/7, Serial Killers & Murderous Minds, Murder True Crime Stories, and more wherever you get your podcasts! Follow me on Social Instagram: @Crimehouse TikTok: @Crimehouse Facebook: @crimehousestudios X: @crimehousemedia YouTube: @crimehousestudios To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hi, it's Vanessa.
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This is Crime House. There are certain cases that stick with us long after they've
been solved. Stories where the evidence points in one direction, but the investigation goes in another,
where even a verdict doesn't clear everything up. Today, I have a special guest to help me
dig into one of these cases, my friend and fellow crimehouse host, Vanessa Richardson. Now, Vanessa,
it's so great to have you here. Thanks, Carter. I can't wait to get started. Today's story is
truly one of the most frustrating we've ever covered. It's the murder of Sherry Rasmussen, on the
40th anniversary of her death.
That's right. Back in 1984, 27-year-old Sherry met her future husband, 25-year-old John Routon.
It was her first serious relationship, and I think we can all relate to how scary that can be.
Absolutely. Even when you meet someone you like, you can't help but wonder if you're getting to know the real them.
Everyone has a past. And ultimately, choosing to love someone means taking a leap of faith.
there's no way of knowing every single one of your partner's secrets.
Sadly, Sherry learned that the hard way.
On the surface, she and John seemed like a perfect match.
They were both high achievers with a bright future ahead of them,
and when they tied the knot, Sherry was excited to start a new chapter.
But before long, John's hidden past came back to haunt them.
And on February 24, 1986, Sherry,
paid the ultimate price for it.
People's lives are like a story.
There's a beginning, a middle, and an end.
But you don't always know which part you're on.
Sometimes the final chapter arrives far too soon,
and we don't always get to know the real ending.
I'm Carter Roy, and this is Murder True Crime Stories,
a crime house original powered by Pave Studios.
New episodes come at every Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday,
with Friday's episode covering the cases that deserve a deeper look.
And I'm Vanessa Richardson, host of conspiracy theories, cults, and crimes.
Crimehouse is made possible by you.
Follow conspiracy theories, cults, and crimes and murder true crime stories wherever you listen.
And subscribe to Crimehouse Plus on Apple Podcasts for ad-free early access to each two-part series.
40 years after the murder of 29-year-old Sherry Rasmussen, we're looking back at the case.
to see what went wrong and why. Today, we'll introduce you to Sherry, a brilliant young nurse who
could do anything she set her mind to. In 1984, Sherry met a man named John Routon, and a year
later they were married. But soon, Sherry learned John had some skeletons in his closet, and what
should have been the happiest time of Sherry's life turned into a nightmare. Next time,
We'll break down the earliest moments of the investigation
and the assumptions that steered it off course.
Because four decades later,
Sherry's case still raises disturbing questions about who was protected
and who wasn't.
All that and more coming up.
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Sherry Erasmussen always stood out.
Though she was a middle child, the second of three girls,
she never had to beg for her parents' attention.
From the day she was born on February 7, 1957,
Her father, Nels, adored her.
Nels was a self-made man who started as a logger in the forests of Washington.
Later in life, he switched gears and became a successful dentist.
His wife, Loretta, worked full-time as his office manager and receptionist.
Their thriving careers meant their daughters could grow up in comfort at their home in Tucson, Arizona.
All three girls were bright and capable with sunny personalities, but Sherry was argued
was arguably the smartest of them all, so much so that she ended up skipping two grades and graduating
high school in 1973 at the age of 16. Her father wanted her to become a doctor, but Sherry
was drawn to nursing instead. She thought she could do the most good that way. Plus, Sherry already
knew she wanted to have a family of her own one day, and it seemed like nursing would be more flexible.
And so she followed in her older sister's footsteps and enrolled in the nursing program at Loma Linda University in California.
It didn't surprise anyone when Sherry breezed through the program.
In 1977, the 20-year-old earned her nursing license and went to work at the UCLA Medical Center.
The next year, she enrolled in a master's program with a focus on cardiac care.
With a full-time job and a schedule packed with classes, she never had much time for Rome.
Though she occasionally went on dates, Sherry prioritized her studies, and by 1980, it paid off.
Sherry was 23 years old, an ICU nurse with expert knowledge of the heart, and one of the brightest stars at the hospital where she worked.
In no time, she got a promotion and became one of the youngest head nurses at the UCLA Medical Center.
Most people probably would have had a hard time being in charge of their much older colleagues.
But Sherry managed to get along with just about everyone.
And her ability to work under pressure quickly earned her co-workers' respect.
One afternoon, a woman in Sherry's unit passed away.
Afterwards, the patient's husband showed up in the waiting room with a gun.
Overcome by grief, he threatened to kill the doctors who'd been taking care of his wife.
Without hesitating, Sherry went out to the lobby and gave the man a hug.
In a matter of minutes, she'd talked him down.
and persuaded him to give her the gun.
That was the kind of woman, Sherry, was, and her bravery was rewarded.
In 1983, she was nominated as the Nurse of the Year at UCLA.
The next year at age 27, she became a director of critical care at a smaller hospital called Glendale Adventist.
Sherry's life was on track to become what she always wanted it to be.
She had a job she liked, a massive office.
and her own personal assistant.
Deep down, that wasn't what she really yearned for, though.
Sherry had always wanted a steady relationship.
But now that she had more time to pursue it,
she wasn't so sure where to begin.
Luckily, a fellow nurse named Anita had a reputation as a matchmaker,
and she had the perfect man in mind for Sherry.
In May of 1984, she invited Sherry to a party.
She wanted to set her up with a friend named,
John Bruton.
John was smitten with Sherry right away.
He was 25, two years younger than Sherry,
and was blown away by her passion.
While he had a solid job at a computer company,
he wasn't the kind of person to have a detailed five-year plan like Sherry.
He was awed by her ambition, her skills as a nurse, and her success.
So from the beginning, he pursued her with everything he had.
And in time, Sherry found herself won over by his easy charm and love for the outdoors.
They were serious after their first few dates and only grew closer as time went on.
About a year after they met in 1985, the couple officially got engaged.
Ever practical, Sherry wasn't interested in a huge, flashy ring.
Instead, John spent his savings to get her a BMW.
In truth, the car wasn't her usual style, but Jerry loved it because it had come from John.
It seemed like he was totally devoted to her.
But John had a skeleton in his closet, named Stephanie Lazarus.
If you asked John, he would have said that Stephanie wasn't really his ex.
She'd been more like a friend with benefits.
But Stephanie didn't see it that way.
She believed the two of them were soulmates, and while she knew they weren't exclusive,
she didn't know that in John's mind, the two of them had already broken up.
After all, their official relationship status had been murky practically from the beginning.
They'd met seven years earlier back in 1978 at UCLA when John was a sophomore,
and Stephanie was a freshman.
Stephanie was an extrovert with a biting sense of humor.
She was also the kind of person who went after what she wanted,
And from the day she met John on the college basketball court, she wanted him.
Even though Stephanie made it clear that she was interested, John kept his distance,
but eventually she wore him down.
After a year or so, they were doing everything together.
They went to sports games, attended parties, took road trips.
John even introduced her to his family.
And yet, John never described her as his girlfriend.
Still, that wasn't enough to discourage Stephanie.
The summer after John graduated in 1981, Stephanie came over to his apartment and shared her feelings with him.
That night, John slept with her for the first time.
It was a decision he later regretted, but apparently not enough to stop doing it.
Over the next three years, he and Stephanie met up every few weeks and occasionally had sex.
Despite that, John never saw himself getting serious with her.
Stephanie must have sensed that he wasn't going to commit,
which is probably why she didn't push him to put a label on things.
Besides, by 1983, 24-year-old Stephanie had other things on her mind.
Once upon a time, she dreamed of becoming a lawyer,
but a year after graduating college, she changed her mind.
Looking for a job with shorter hours,
she applied to the Los Angeles Police Department instead.
At the time, female officers were rare.
Stephanie knew she faced an uphill battle, but she felt more than prepared.
She had a strong personality and wasn't afraid to be assertive around men.
She was also extremely athletic, more than capable of meeting the department's fitness standards.
By the end of the year, she'd completed most of her training and was on the verge of becoming a full-time officer.
Her work life was going just as planned.
But her situation ship remained as uncertain as ever.
She and John still kept in touch and sometimes slept together.
That December, he even invited her to his computer company's Christmas party.
But a few months later, John met Sherry Rasmussen.
According to John, he stopped sleeping with Stephanie once he and Sherry got serious.
But Stephanie told friends that she and John were still going out,
and she was pissed that he was dating Sherry.
In Stephanie's mind, John was two-timing her.
Even then, she never gave him an ultimatum,
and he never explicitly ended things between them.
A year later, in May of 1985, John and Sherry got engaged.
Stephanie heard about it a week later on June 4th.
That day, she wrote in her diary,
I found out that John is getting married.
I was very depressed.
This is very bad.
Sometime after midnight,
she woke up her roommates,
a man named Mike,
and sobbed by his bedside.
She said things between her and John
were officially over.
Mike stayed up to comfort Stephanie,
and by the end of their conversation,
she seemed to be doing a little bit better.
Stephanie put on a brave face,
but deep down she was
devastated. Despite how he'd treated her for years, John Routon was her ideal man. She believed the two
of them were meant to be together, and Stephanie Lazarus wasn't the type of woman to back down
so easily. She decided to fight for John, to get him back by any means necessary,
even if that meant playing dirty.
By the end of June, 1985, 26-year-old John Routon had been engaged to 28-year-old Sherry Rasmussen for about a month.
Meanwhile, John's ex-girlfriend, Stephanie Lazarus, was still heartbroken about losing him.
One night that month, she called John in tears and begged him to come over.
She said they needed to talk about their relationship, and so John went over without telling his fiancé.
When he arrived, Stephanie was a wreck.
She told him she was head over heels in love and wanted him to choose her over Sherry.
This was her final chance to tell him how she really felt.
John wasn't sure what to say.
He'd always known that Stephanie liked him and wanted a committed relationship,
but over the past seven years, he thought she'd come to understand
they were never going to be anything more than friends with benefits.
He broke the news to her as gently as he could, telling her that he'd chosen to be with Sherry,
but no matter what he said, Stephanie couldn't accept it.
She continued telling him she loved him and begged him to have sex with her one final time.
John convinced himself that sleeping with her was the only way to calm her down.
When they were finished, he left Stephanie's apartment and went home.
A few weeks later, he moved into Sherry's condo in Van Nuys.
He never mentioned his last night with his ex.
Meanwhile, Stephanie did her best to move on.
In July, she went out on dates with several other guys,
but she couldn't get John out of her head.
Eventually, she decided she would do whatever it took to get him back,
including sabotaging his relationship with Sherry.
One afternoon, either in July or August,
she showed up at Sherry's hospital unannounced.
She deliberately dressed provocatively in a tank top in the shortest short she owned
and marched towards Sherry's office ready to make a scene.
Sherry vaguely remembered hearing about Stephanie from John.
She was surprised to see her at the hospital, but welcomed her inside.
The next five minutes were the most humiliating of her life.
Stephanie didn't hold back.
She told Sherry that she and John were still seeing each other,
and still sleeping together.
She warned Sherry that if she couldn't have him, no one else could either.
She finished by saying that when Sherry's marriage with John inevitably failed,
she would be waiting to pick up the pieces.
Sherry was stunned.
She told Stephanie that she and John, quote,
wouldn't be needing her services and threw her out of the office.
A few minutes later, she left work early in tears.
That night, Sherry confronted John. He confessed that he'd gone to see Stephanie a few weeks earlier and admitted that they slept together. He begged Sherry to forgive him and swore that he'd cut off all contact with Stephanie. For Sherry, the first priority was getting Stephanie out of their lives. She wanted John to tell Stephanie that things were over for good. But he convinced Sherry that would only make the situation worse. He thought ignoring Stephanie was the best course of action.
There was no need to have a discussion or tell her off.
He wanted to act like nothing had ever happened.
Unfortunately, that proved impossible.
A couple of days after visiting Sherry at the hospital,
Stephanie wrote a two-page letter to John's mom.
In it, she confessed her love for John
and said she was heartbroken about his engagement.
At the same time, she seemed to accept the truth.
She finished the note by saying that one day
she hoped to meet someone who cared about her as much as she cared about John.
Meanwhile, Sherry tried her best to forgive John.
She didn't tell her parents much about their relationship,
but they could tell the couple was having problems.
She was more open with her friends,
even telling one that she wasn't sure whether she wanted to marry John anymore.
But as the months passed and the wedding date grew nearer,
she decided to see things through.
On November 23, 1985, the couple married at the first congregational church in Pasadena.
They honeymooned at a sandals resort in Jamaica.
Before they left, they installed a new security system at their condo.
They set the four-digit passcode to be their wedding anniversary.
While they celebrated the beginning of this exciting new chapter,
Stephanie Lazarus was still trying her hardest to forget
John. When she wasn't on patrol with the LAPD, she was arranging dates and trying to stay busy
any way she could. But no one she went out with could compete with her ex. In her personal diary,
she debated placing a personal ad in a local newspaper looking for a partner. On December 20th,
she even sketched out a draft of what the ad might say. She wrote,
25-year-old UCLA grad, very athletic, loves to travel, seeks tall athletic male,
25 to 31 years old, who likes to travel and has a good sense of humor.
Though her requirements were pretty general, every word of them applied to the man she was trying so hard to forget.
And by the end of the year, Stephanie couldn't take it anymore.
Since John wouldn't see her anymore, she decided to force her way back into his life.
One afternoon, probably in late December, she showed up at John and Sherry's condo uninvited.
Stephanie's excuse for coming by was to drop off a pair of skis.
She asked John to wax them for her.
It's not clear if he'd done that kind of thing in the past, but Stephanie acted like it was normal.
While John and Stephanie talked, Sherry went into another room.
Later, Sherry told her parents that Stephanie seemed to relish, dragging out the visits and stayed way longer than she should have.
until eventually Sherry put her foot down and told Stephanie it was time to go.
After Stephanie left, Sherry was livid.
She wanted John to man up and tell Stephanie she wasn't welcome at their home.
But John insisted that was the wrong way to go about things.
He thought Stephanie was itching for an argument
and said making a big deal out of her visit would give her exactly the kind of reaction she was hoping for.
John said a better solution was to wax her skis like nothing.
was wrong to show that they weren't threatened by her presence. This non-confrontational approach
hadn't gotten Stephanie to back off in the seven years she'd been pursuing John, but this time
he was sure she would get the message. The one thing Sherry got John to agree to was about returning
the skis. She insisted he should make Stephanie come get them herself. For obvious reasons,
she didn't want him to be alone with her. So about a week after her previous visit, Stephanie dropped by
again. After she got her skis, they quickly ushered her out the door. Sherry hoped that was the last time
she had to see Stephanie, not just because of the difficult feelings she brought up, but because Sherry
and John had their own issues to deal with. Early in 1986, the couple booked a ski trip to a resort
in northern California. But they never ended up hitting the slopes because on the way there,
they got into an argument about money.
When it came to their spending habits,
John and Sherry couldn't have been more different.
Sherry was incredibly practical,
a compulsive saver who scrutinized every purchase she made.
John, on the other hand, was reckless with his cash,
spending it practically as soon as he got it.
He recently bought a new car,
and on the trip to the resort,
Sherry realized just how much he was spending every month
to pay it off. That was in addition to her new BMW, a gift that she appreciated but one she'd
never asked for. It wasn't that they weren't going broke or anything. Both John and Sherry had
well-paying jobs. Even so, Sherry felt they were wasting money.
Things got so heated that by the time they finally arrived at the resort, they were no longer
speaking to each other. They stopped by their room just long enough for Sherry to use the
the restroom, then immediately turned around and drove the five hours home.
Sherry told John she was going to the bank the next day.
She wanted them to have separate savings accounts.
So far, marriage was proving to be a lot more difficult than Sherry expected.
For someone who was used to excelling in every aspect of her life,
it must have been hard to accept the friction with her new husband.
And although she shared some of her troubles with her family and friends,
she never told anyone about John's infidelity.
Just saying it out loud was probably tough.
Unfortunately, over the next few months,
their issues would only multiply
until eventually Sherry's happily ever after
became a living nightmare.
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By the middle of January, 1986, 28-year-old Sherry Rasmussen had been married for two months
and it already seemed like she and her husband, 26-year-old John Routon, had blown past their
honeymoon period. John's spending habits were a major hurdle for Sherry. But the bigger problem
was John's ex, a 25-year-old LAPD officer named Stephanie Lazarus. For the past few months,
Stephanie had been doing everything she could to sabotage John's relationship. And in mid-January,
she struck again. This time, she showed up at the couple's condo in her police uniform at 10 a.m. on a weekday.
Sherry nearly jumped out of her skin when she walked into the living room to find Stephanie standing there.
There had been no phone call, no knock at the door, no warning at all.
Sherry didn't even understand how Stephanie got inside.
Their townhouse was protected by an electronic gate.
When Sherry asked what she was doing, Stephanie said she'd come to see John.
Besides being totally out of line, this explanation also didn't make sense to Sherry.
John was at work, just like he always was at 10 a.m. on a weekday.
Sherry normally would have been, too.
She just randomly happened to be home that day.
Sherry wondered what Stephanie would have done if no one had been there.
Terrified and confused, she told Stephanie that John didn't ever want to see her again.
Stephanie just glared at her and left without saying a word.
That night, Sherry called her parents and told them what had happened.
She also mentioned that apparently this wasn't the first time Stephanie had gotten inside their house without a key.
Sherry wanted to report the incident, but she believed the LAPD wouldn't take her seriously since Stephanie was one of their own.
And telling the police would only escalate the situation, which might not be the best idea.
Unfortunately, the harassment only intensified over the next.
few weeks. Sherry told friends she thought she was being followed. Whenever she went to the gym,
Stephanie just happened to be at the same one. As she dropped off her clothes at the dry cleaners,
Stephanie's police car would be idling right out front. One Friday night, she and John went out to
dinner and noticed someone watching them from across the restaurant. Sherry felt like she was going
crazy. As her 29th birthday approached, she and John decided to get away from Los Angeles for a while.
In early February, they took a trip to see her parents in Arizona. At dinner, Sherry took her father
aside and told him she was having a big problem in her personal life. She couldn't tell him
what it was, but she said she was going to call him if she couldn't solve it in the next two
weeks. When her dad pressed her for details, she wouldn't budge. All Sherry said was that
that she wanted to give him a heads up that something major was going on.
She promised to tell him more the next time they met.
Sherry and John flew back home on February 9th.
Sherry's parents dropped them off at the airport.
That was the last time they saw their daughter alive.
On February 24, 1986,
Sherry woke up just after 7 a.m. like usual,
John rolled out of bed next to her and shuffled to the shower.
Normally Sherry would have been right behind him, but when he finished getting dressed,
he found her still snuggled under the covers.
Sherry told him she wasn't feeling well and thinking about calling in sick to the hospital.
John kissed her forehead, told her he'd called later to check in, then left for work.
He was out the door at around 7.20.
When he left, he walked right past their new burglar alarm.
He and Sherry had settled on a routine.
they only used it when both of them were out of the house or while they were sleeping.
So John left it off, popped in his car and pulled out of the garage.
Before he left, he made sure to watch the door come down.
Then he cruised through the electric gate that separated their condo complex from the street.
On his way to work, he stopped at the dry cleaners,
finally making it to the office about 10 minutes before 8.
About half an hour later, a retired couple who lived across from John and Sherry took their morning walk down to a nearby golf course.
When they got back an hour later, they noticed that John and Sherry's garage door was open and both of their cars were gone.
Meanwhile, John waited until around 10 a.m. to check on his wife.
He called her several times, but never got an answer.
Even stranger, he couldn't leave a message. That meant Sherry hadn't turned on the answering,
machine before heading out, of rare mistake on her part. Still, John figured she must have decided
to go into work after all, so he rang her assistant instead. The assistant said Sherry was
scheduled to teach a class that day. She hadn't seen Sherry yet, but that might have been
because she drove straight to class without stopping at the office. John wasn't the only one
trying to reach Sherry that morning. Her younger sister, Teresa, also called the hospital. The
assistant told her that Sherry had called in sick, and after Teresa rang the house, she was somehow
able to leave a message on the answering machine. Meanwhile, the retired couple across from John and
Sherry started wondering what was going on with her neighbors. At noon, a pair of men in work clothes
knocked on their door. They only spoke Spanish, so the couple couldn't understand what the men said,
but they handed over a brown purse with Sherry's wallet inside.
The couple figured Sherry had somehow lost it outside and the men were trying to return it.
They agreed to take the purse and planned on giving it back later in the day.
Back at work, John called Sherry at the hospital one more time and didn't get an answer.
He didn't think anything was wrong, just that she was too busy to get back to him.
So at 5 p.m., he headed home, stopping to do a couple of errands,
along the way. At six o'clock, he finally made it back to the condo, and immediately he could tell
something was off. The garage door was open, and Sherry's BMW was nowhere to be found. When he got
out of his car, he noticed the driveway was covered in shards of glass. Searching for a way to make
sense of it all, he imagined Sherry had clipped her taillight when she backed out, then gone to a
mechanic to get it fixed. But that didn't explain why the burglar alarm wasn't on, or why the
The door at the top of the stairs was wide open.
Now on guard, John crept into the entryway.
That's when he saw Sherry sprawled on her back in the middle of the living room.
A broken shelf and a busted vase littered the floor next to a pile of electronics.
John rushed to his wife's side and gently shook her.
As her head slumped to the side, he gasped.
Her face was covered in bruises.
blood smeared her forehead and sealed her right eye shut.
Her left eye stared back at him, wide open and glassy.
With tears running down his face, John jumped to his feet and ran to the phone.
Sherry Rasmussen was dead.
Thanks so much for listening.
I'm Carter Roy, and this is Murder, True Crime Stories.
Come back next time for Part 2.
on the murder of Sherry Rasmussen 40 years later.
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This episode was brought to life by the Murder True Crime Stories team,
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Hi, it's Vanessa.
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