Murder: True Crime Stories - 40 Years Later: The Murder of Sherri Rasmussen 2, with Vanessa Richardson
Episode Date: February 19, 2026On the 40-year anniversary of Sherri Rasmussen’s murder, Murder: True Crime Stories continues the story of a case that refused to stay buried. Carter and Vanessa examine the decades-long fight for j...ustice, as ignored evidence, stalled leads, and mounting frustration finally give way to a shocking breakthrough. As forensic science advances and old assumptions are challenged, the investigation exposes deep flaws within the system meant to protect victims. This episode reflects on the cost of delayed accountability—and how perseverance ultimately brought long-overdue answers in a case that defined institutional failure for an entire generation. If you’re new here, don’t forget to follow Murder True Crime Stories to never miss a case! For Ad-free listening and early access to episodes, subscribe to Crime House+ on Apple Podcasts. Murder True Crime Stories is a Crime House Original Podcast, powered by PAVE Studios 🎧 Need More to Binge? Listen to other Crime House Originals Clues, Crimes Of…, Serial Killers & Murderous Minds, Crime House 24/7, and more wherever you get your podcasts! Follow me on Social Instagram: @Crimehouse TikTok: @Crimehouse Facebook: @crimehousestudios 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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On the Crime House original podcast, serial killers and murderous minds,
we're diving into the psychology of the world's most complex murder cases.
From serial killers to cult leaders, deadly exes, and spree killers,
we're examining not just how they killed, but why?
Is it uncontrollable rage, overwhelming fear?
Or is it something deeper?
Serial killers and murderous minds is a Crimehouse Studios original.
New episodes drop every Monday and Thursday.
Follow wherever you get your podcasts.
This is Crime House.
As children, we are taught to apologize when we do something wrong.
That admitting to our mistakes is the first step toward forgiveness.
But out in the real world, accountability isn't always so straightforward.
And the 1986 murder of Sherry Rasmussen is a prime example.
After Sherry was found dead in her Los Angeles home,
the LAPD rushed to label her murder a burglary gone wrong.
But when they started searching for suspects, no one stood out.
And eventually, Sherry's case went cold.
According to the Rasmussen family,
that was because the LAPD was looking in all the wrong places.
For decades, Sherry's family begged detectives to widen their suspect pool.
The authorities didn't listen until 23 years later.
And when they finally reopened the case in 2009, their findings left the people of Los Angeles wondering,
could they really trust the officers who were meant to protect them?
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.
And sometimes the final chapter arrives far too soon, and we don't always get to know the real and the real and the real.
the real ending. I'm Carter Roy. And this is Murder, True Crime Stories,
the Crime House original, powered by Pave Studios. New episodes come at every Tuesday, Thursday,
and Friday with Friday's episodes covering the cases that deserve a deeper look.
And I'm Vanessa Richardson, host of Conspiracy Theory's Cults and Crimes. Crime House is made
possible by you. Follow Conspiracy Theory's Cults and Crimes and Murder True Crime Stories
wherever you listen, and subscribe to Crime House Plus on Apple Podcasts for ad-free, early access to each two-part series.
40 years after the murder of 29-year-old Sherry Resmussen, we're looking back at the case to see what went wrong and why.
Last time, we met Sherry and discussed her tumultuous relationship with 27-year-old John Routon.
When a couple tied the knot in 1985, John's ex-girlfriend and LAPD office,
surname Stephanie Lazarus was determined to sabotage their marriage.
Their bitter love triangle came to a head on February 24, 1986,
when Sherry was found dead in her Los Angeles condo.
Today, we'll examine the decades-long investigation into her death.
From the beginning, it seemed like there was an obvious suspect,
but instead of making an arrest, the LAPD let the case go cold.
When the authorities finally took a second look, 23 years later, the truth was undeniable.
And it made the LAPD look really bad.
All that and more coming up.
On February 24, 1986, newlywed John Routon pulled into the driveway of his Los Angeles condo around 6 p.m.
The 27-year-old could tell something was wrong right away.
The garage door was wide open.
His wife, 29-year-old Sherry Resmussen, should have been home, but her BMW was nowhere to be seen.
Even more alarming was the shattered glass that covered the floor of the garage.
John rushed up the stairs to find Sherry sprawled on the living room floor.
Her face was covered in bruises and her body was stone cold.
A shattered vase and a broken shelf littered the carpet around her.
It was clear to John.
Sherry had been murdered.
Shocked and terrified, he rushed to call 911.
Once the paramedics were on the way,
John decided he couldn't stand next to his wife's body any longer.
He covered her bloody face with a hand towel and waited by the front door.
At 610, the EMTs arrived and officially pronounced Sherry dead of an apparent homicide.
20 minutes later, the LAPD cleared out the condo and a site.
the case to detectives Lyle Mayer and Steve Hooks.
With more than 20 years under his belt,
Mayor was the more experienced investigator.
Hooks was a lower rank and had been with the department for about eight years,
but both of them had seen their fair share of murders.
And from the beginning, their instincts told them Sherry was the victim of a burglary gone wrong.
The pile of electronics next to her body suggested the culprit intended to rob the place
and the fact that her BMW is stolen, bolstered their theory.
After talking with John, the detectives came to believe the murderer had entered through the front door.
The lock showed no sign of forced entry, and John told them he might have forgotten to deadbolt it the night before.
That said, it was only a theory.
John was clearly in shock, and it was difficult to keep him focused on the questions.
At various points during the interrogation, it looked like he was about to vomit.
His behavior convinced both detectives that his grief was genuine.
At least for the moment, they didn't suspect him of being directly involved in the crime.
After they were done talking, officers, mayor and hooks carried out a more detailed search of the condo
and turned up some valuable forensic evidence.
Between the living room and the entryway, they found a thin white rope and a discarded spruce.
speaker wire. It looked like the killer had tried to tie Sherry up. And following the trail of blood,
detectives picked up two stray fingernails near the front door. A closet door, the adjoining wall,
and the stairway all showed clear signs of a struggle. Next to a cluster of bloodstains was the pile
of electronics, including a CD player stacked on top of a VCR. There was a clear red fingerprint
on the CD player, and nearby, someone had tossed a colorful blanket on top of a living
room chair. After taking a closer look, investigators found several bullet holes in it. The
killer had probably used it as a kind of silencer to soften the sounds of their gunshots.
Further back, behind the spot where Sherry's body was found in the living room, there was a section
of wall-mounted shelves and an end table. The shelves were shattered into pieces, probably in the final
fight between Sherry and her attacker. A drawer from the end table had also been ripped out,
but that seemed more deliberate. The way the contents were scattered on the floor made it look
like part of the potential burglary. On the other hand, the second floor of the condo seemed untouched.
Sherry's jewelry box hadn't been rifled through and neither had anything else in the bedroom.
The last clue the officers noticed was back downstairs. A glass door leading to the balcony
was totally shattered. The sheer white drapes that covered the door had two bullet holes in them
about six feet off the floor. With that, the detectives finished their sweep of the crime scene.
Hook stayed behind to bag and tag evidence while mayor took John to the police station in Van Nuys
for a longer interview at 9 p.m. During questioning, John recounted the day and night leading
up to Sherry's death. On February 23rd, they went out to see a movie. They got out.
home at around 10 p.m. and entered through the garage door. Earlier that day, a friend had come to
visit through the front, and John couldn't remember whether he'd locked it after that. The next morning,
he left for work a little after 7 a.m. Sherry was still in bed at the time and told him she wasn't
feeling well. He wasn't able to reach her over the phone all day, but he assumed she was either
too busy or sleeping off her illness. When he was done, Detective Mayer told John they didn't think he
was involved in the murder. At that point, the two of them had only been speaking for less than an
hour, but Mayor was confident enough to lay out his theory that Sherry had been killed when she
accidentally interrupted a burglary. After that, Mayor asked if John and Sherry had been having
any problems in their marriage. John said no. He didn't mention that the two of them had
recently been fighting about their finances, and he didn't say that his ex-girlfriend, 25-year-old
Stephanie Lazarus, had been stalking them for months. When asked whether he'd been getting
any prank calls recently, John said someone had been ringing them about once a week, then
immediately hanging up. He and Sherry thought it was a problem with the phone line. Detective
mayor didn't ask any more follow-up questions. Instead, he encouraged John to call his in-laws and
come back to the station the following morning for another interview. As John waited in the lobby for
his parents to pick him up, he was overcome with guilt. He thought Sherry's death was his fault.
He hadn't turned on the burglar alarm before he left for work. He hadn't deadbolted the front
door, and he hadn't come home soon enough to stop her from getting killed.
He couldn't bring himself to talk to Sherry's parents himself.
It wasn't until 1 a.m. on February 25th that John's father called to deliver the news.
Sherry's family was devastated. As they frantically scheduled a flight from Tucson to Los Angeles,
her father, Nels, tried to think of potential suspects. He knew the police's working theory.
about the burglary, but he wasn't convinced.
Off the top of his head, he could think of two people who might want Sherry dead.
One was a nurse who worked under her.
She'd recently been angling for a promotion, but Sherry had chosen someone else instead.
The second was John's ex-girlfriend.
Nell's knew she was an LAPD officer who had been meddling in the couple's relationship,
but Sherry had never told him her name.
While the Rasmusins flew to California on the morning,
of the 25th, detectives interviewed John's neighbors.
A housekeeper named Evangelinea Flores told them she heard screams from next door on the morning
Sherry died, but because they were so brief, she didn't think to report them.
She said she hadn't heard any gunshots at all.
But a retired couple who lived across the street said the garage door was closed at 8.30 a.m.
When they went for a walk, by the time they came back at 9.45, it was open and empty of cars.
That gave investigators a tentative time of death, but they would have to wait for an autopsy to confirm the details.
In the meantime, detectives' mayor and hooks went over the evidence they'd gathered so far.
Back in 1986, fingerprints were considered the gold standard.
Just one year later, the advent of DNA technology would change forensics forever.
But for the time being, that meant the police had their work cut out for them.
They dusted for prints the old-fashioned way, and ended up.
ended up pulling 18 samples from John and Sherry's condo.
Eight were either smudged or only partially clear, making them useless.
Almost all the others matched John or Sherry, which wasn't surprising.
But there were a few that looked like they might belong to someone else.
For some reason, though, investigators missed the bloody print Detective Mayer had noticed on top of the CD player.
Still, they had the white rope and the speaker wire that had been used to try to tie Sherry up,
plus the two fingernails that were lodged in a tuft of carpet.
With the autopsy results still pending, detectus felt like they had a strong foundation for their case.
The initial round of evidence supported their idea that Sherry was killed in a burglary gone wrong.
But in the months to come, their theory would come under serious fire.
and the search for Sherry Rasmussen's killer would last longer than anyone expected.
On February 24, 1986, 29-year-old Sherry Rasmussen was murdered at her condo in Los Angeles.
The following day, Dr. Lloyd Manny completed an initial medical examination of her body.
He determined that Sherry had sustained three gunshot wounds.
Two of the bullets entered above her left breast, apparently fired from some distance away.
The third and final wound was in the center of her chest.
Powder residue indicated it was a point-blank shot.
There were no signs of sexual assault, but she had severe injuries to her face,
including a swollen, bloody eye.
Dr. Monny managed to gather some stray hairs and fibers from her robes,
and he noticed a clear bite mark on her left forearm,
probably sustained during the final struggle with her attacker.
The bite mark seemed like especially strong evidence.
Although DNA testing wasn't around yet,
forensic experts could determine someone's blood type based on their saliva.
With a strong suspect,
and that kind of connection could be enough for a conviction.
So Dr. Moni took a saliva sample and bagged it up,
with the rest of the evidence.
By the time he was finished,
the police were speaking to the retired couple
who lived across the street from Sherry.
They remembered seeing the garage door open
sometime after her husband,
27-year-old John Routon, left for work that morning.
Later that afternoon, two Spanish-speaking men
in work clothes came by to give them Sherry's purse.
The couple assumed she'd lost it or left it outside,
and the men were trying to return it.
After wrapping up their interview with the neighbors,
the police spoke to John.
once again. He seemed a little calmer than the previous day, but was still obviously distraught.
This interrogation wasn't recorded, and in Sherry's case file, the only mention of it is a brief
summary. Because of that, we don't know whose memory is correct, but more than 20 years later,
John and the detectives would disagree about what was actually said.
According to Detective Lyle Mayer, he pressed John harder about his past.
He asked John several times if he was cheating on Sherry or if he had an ex-girlfriend who was still in the picture.
Mayor claimed that John didn't hesitate to say no.
If that's true, then John was lying.
Because about 10 months earlier, right after he and Sherry got engaged,
he had slept with his ex, a 25-year-old LAPD officer named Stephanie Lazarus.
It's possible John did know Sherry thought Stephanie was.
following her around in the weeks before her death,
but he was definitely aware that Stephanie had come to their house
at least twice to bother them.
He also knew that she wanted to sabotage their relationship,
and allegedly his lies didn't end there.
Although John did call out Stephanie by name,
he didn't tell mayor that she was his ex.
Instead, he described her as a former acquaintance,
college, who was now a police officer.
When asked whether they were sleeping together, John was firm.
He said he hadn't seen Stephanie since he got married and that he wasn't having sex with her.
Detective Mayer came away from that conversation feeling confused about why John mentioned her at all
if he didn't think she was a likely suspect.
None of that was noted in the case file.
But afterward, at around 10.30 a.m., detectives accompanied John,
on a walkthrough of his condo.
They wanted to determine whether the killer had actually stolen anything before fleeing the scene.
John didn't think anything had been taken, but later, he remembered that part of the day
differently from Detective Mayer.
He maintained that he didn't talk about Stephanie at all during his interview at the station.
Instead, he mentioned her during the walkthrough after he learned the medical examiner had found
a bite mark on Sherry's forearm.
According to John, detectives made an offhand remark that a woman was more likely to bite someone in a fight than a man.
That's what caused John to bring up Stephanie.
He recalled asking the police to look into her.
He also reportedly told them that Stephanie had confronted Sherry at the hospital a few months before her death.
The one thing John and the detectives agreed on was that he did mention Stephanie Lazarus,
but never admitted to sleeping with her.
and he didn't describe Stephanie's full pattern of harassment leading up to the murder.
A few hours after the condo walkthrough, Sherry's parents flew in from Arizona.
Their first stop was the police station where they were both interviewed.
This conversation wasn't recorded either, and once again, detectives remembered the interrogation
differently than Sherry's parents.
Her father, Nell's, was confident that he mentioned John.
John's ex-girlfriend, who he didn't know by name, as a potential suspect at least three times.
Though investigators explained their burglary gone wrong theory, Nels didn't believe them.
He insisted they check up on Stephanie.
In response, the police allegedly told him it was a dead end.
They were confident that a robber was responsible for Sherry's murder.
Detective Mayor, on the other hand, claimed Nell's.
never mentioned Stephanie at all.
Instead, Mayor came away feeling like Nell's was a controlling father,
someone who had instilled a win-at-all-cost mentality in his favorite daughter.
In Mayer's opinion, that attitude could have encouraged Sherry to fight back against her attacker,
which may have escalated the situation and ultimately led to her death.
Either way, the police ended their first day of the investigation more committed than ever
to their burglary theory. And because Sherry's car was stolen, they believed at least two people were
involved, one to drive to the condo and a second to leave in the BMW. For them, the next step was
taking a closer look at the forensic evidence. They believed the fingerprints and the saliva sample
would help them hone in on a potential suspect. They also held out hope that Sherry's missing car
would be found. If it didn't turn up, there probably wasn't much chance of catching
the murderers with stolen property. Only Sherry's mom, Loretta, thought something had been taken
from the condo, specifically from Sherry's purse. Remember, weeks earlier, Sherry and John had gotten
into a fight about money. Afterwards, Sherry decided to keep their savings account separate
instead of opening a joint one as planned. When she heard about the argument, Loretta told
Sherry to keep her marriage license in her purse just in case she had to prove her
identity to the bank.
Detective Mayor told Loretta
it wasn't in the purse.
John couldn't locate a copy in the condo either.
That's when Loretta started to think
the killer took the license
for some kind of personal reason.
It was a compelling theory,
but the LAPD officers didn't buy it.
They still thought the most likely suspects
were the burglars,
people with no obvious reason to steal a marriage license.
Even so, they did follow up on one of the Rasmussen suggestions.
On February 28th, four days after the murder,
Detective Hooks conducted a series of interviews at the hospital where Sherry worked.
His main target was the nurse Sherry hadn't given a promotion to,
the one Nell's had mentioned.
According to investigators, these interrogations were tape-recorded,
but for some reason, there were no records of them in the case file.
Regardless, the authorities quickly decided the hospital lead was a dead end.
They reportedly spoke to the nurse in question, as well as her coworkers,
and though she clearly didn't get along with Sherry,
she didn't seem like the type to resort to murder.
So after the next few days,
the police continued to focus on burglary suspects in the area where Sherry died.
Anytime someone was arrested for theft,
they took their fingerprints and compared them to the same.
samples taken from the condo. No matches were found in the week after the murder, but detectives
believed it was only a matter of time. They were still waiting on the full medical report and some
forensic analysis, which they hoped would yield some new leads. By March 4th, they had everything
they needed. During the autopsy, two bullets were recovered from Sherry's body. Experts determined
they were either 38 or 357 caliber. And both were common types.
of ammunition. In fact, they were so common that 38-caliber bullets were the only kind LAPD officers were allowed to carry.
These bullets had a jacket of copper coating and an exposed lead tip.
They also had a single canneller, which created a distinctive set of grooves around the cylinder.
The two bullets recovered during Sherry's autopsy had this exact kind of jacket and canneller.
That said, police officers certainly weren't the only people who carried this kind of ammunition.
So rather than investigate Stephanie Lazarus, detectives remained laser-focused on their burglary theory.
They felt vindicated three days later when Sherry's BMW was finally discovered in Van Nuys.
On March 7, a patrol officer happened to notice the car parked on a street just about two miles east of the condo.
Not only was it unlocked, but the keys were still in the ignition.
It may have been there for over a week since the day Sherry was killed, but there was no way to be sure.
Officers towed the car to the station and swiped it for prints, but even before the results came in,
Detective Mayer felt like he was on the right track.
He called the neighborhood where the car was found a bad old area, one where drug dealers were known to operate.
Though the BMW hadn't been stripped for parts or tamper,
with, Mayor speculated the killer slash burglar, had used it to flee to safety, then abandoned it.
Based on that, Mayor redoubled his efforts to take fingerprints from every criminal arrested in Van Nuys,
hoping to get lucky and match them to Sherry's murder.
Meanwhile, 25-year-old Stephanie Lazarus encountered some problems of her own.
Two days after Sherry's car was recovered on March 9th, she filed a police.
police report in Santa Monica claiming someone had broken into her vehicle. She logged several items as missing,
including her official police sidearm, a Smith & Wesson Model 49 revolver, a relatively small gun
with a two-inch barrel that used 38 caliber ammunition. Those were the same kind of bullets that
ended Sherry Rasmussen's life, which meant that two weeks after her death,
a potential murder weapon disappeared.
And the best chance to catch Sherry's killer went up in smoke.
A master murderer. Israel Keys lives between two worlds.
There's the person that everybody knows and loves,
and then there's the guy who spends every waking hour planning on how he's going to kill someone.
On mind of a monster, the cross-country killer,
we find out how this deadly predator went unnoticed for so long.
I've had some confessions in my history, but nothing to that detail.
I'll give a little by-go if you want.
Listen to Mind of a Monster, the Cross Country Killer, wherever you get your podcasts.
By April of 1986, it had been more than a month since 29-year-old Sherry Rasmussen was murdered at her condo in Los Angeles.
So far, police hadn't identified any suspects or conducted any official interviews with Sherry's friends or family.
Their only tape-recorded conversations were with her husband, 27-year-old John Routon.
They did keep in contact with Sherry's parents, Nells, and Loretta Rasmussen.
Both of them, especially Nells, begged the cops to look into John's bitter ex,
25-year-old LAPD officer named Stephanie Lazarus.
But the detectives assigned to the case, mayor, and hooks, told them there was nothing there.
In their opinion, the better course of action was to investigate every suspected burglar they could get their hands on.
And on April 10th, the authorities uncovered more circumstantial evidence that supported their theory.
That afternoon, a condo about a quarter mile from John and Cherry's place, was robbed.
The homeowner, a woman named Lisa Ravali, walked through her front door to find two Latino men ransacking her living room.
When they saw Lisa, one of the men pointed a revolver at her and fled the scene.
For Detective Mayer, the incident confirmed every suspicion he had about Sherry's murder.
Lisa's condo had a security gate similar to Sherry's.
In both cases, the thieves stacked valuable electronics by the door,
and based on Lisa's description of the revolver, it could have been a match for the weapon that killed Sherry Rasmussen.
Police created a composite picture of the suspects and sent it out to cop.
all over L.A. on April 23rd, an officer put a man under surveillance who matched the photo.
The next day, they determined his fingerprints didn't match the samples collected at Sherry's
condo. It was another dead end. And it marked the last serious update in Sherry's case.
On September 10th, more than six months after she was found dead, the police were back at Square 1.
Detective Mayer was so desperate that he even spoke to a psychic about her case.
Unfortunately, the consultation didn't yield any results.
Come October, the Resmussen's held a press conference and offered a $10,000 reward for any information that led to the capture of Sherry's killer.
They contributed $8,000 to the fund, while John's parents donated an additional $2,000.
Sadly, not even money could prompt any useful leads.
Apparently, the LAPD didn't get any new tips after the reward was announced.
A few months later, it seemed like authorities had all but given up on solving the crime.
Meanwhile, John was trying to start over.
By March of 1987, he'd moved into a new condo.
Since Sherry's death, his relationship with his in-laws had...
had deteriorated. Nels believed he knew something about the murder that he wasn't telling the police.
The tension drove a wedge between them. Even then, the Rasmusins continued to pressure the police
for updates on Cherry's case, but as time passed, they became less and less frequent. By 1991,
it had been five years since any progress had been made on the case, and in September,
Detective Mayor retired from the LAPD. His former partner, Detective Hill,
books remained with the force, but he shifted his focus and stopped investigating murders
and Van Nuys around the same time.
That left practically no one to investigate Sherry's murder.
The resumes were devastated.
They felt like their daughter had been abandoned by the people who were supposed to bring
her killer to justice.
Getting any answers about the status of the case was like pulling teeth, and eventually they couldn't
take it anymore.
At some point, the Redmond.
Asmussen stopped checking with the LAPD, and Sherry's file was relegated to the department's records and identification division.
It took 22 years for a curious officer to dig the old binder out of its cardboard box and take a look.
According to Detective Jim Nuttall, he just happened to notice Sherry's file in the homicide squad room one day in March of 2008.
At the time, he was about to go on paternity leave, but something about the case caught his eye.
He'd always wanted to solve a cold case.
He put the box aside and resolved to look into it further when he got back to work.
And when he did, it made him question everything.
In 2009, Detective Nuttall read Sherry-Rasmussen's case file from front to back.
A few things stuck out to him right away.
One was that several blood samples had been collected from the crime scene.
That meant there could be strong forensic evidence available that the department wasn't able to analyze back in 1986.
The second good sign was that a few DNA tests had already been performed.
Back in 2005, a recently certified analyst at the LAPD named Jennifer Francis
was assigned the cold case as a sort of training exercise to practice her.
testing skills. Jennifer's analysis focused on the bite mark found on Sherry's forearm.
She determined that saliva from the wound fit a woman's DNA profile. That was a surprise to her,
since female murder suspects were rare. She passed the results on to a cold case detective named
Cliff Shepard. Like his predecessors, Shepard focused on tracking down female burglary suspects,
but he failed to make much progress. Four years later, as detective,
not all read over the case file. It seemed like the previous investigators had made a serious oversight.
Based on the injuries Sherry sustained during her final struggle, he believed the motive may have
been more personal than a burglary gone wrong. So a week later, on February 10, 2009,
he called 51-year-old John Routon to discuss his former wife. By that point, John was happily remarried
to a woman he met in 1992 and was living in San Diego,
but he had never forgotten about Sherry,
though the prospect of talking about her tore open old wounds,
he agreed to be interviewed over the phone.
And one of the first questions Detective Nudal asked
was if there was any woman who might have wanted to hurt Sherry.
John immediately brought up Stephanie Lazarus,
though he didn't admit that the two of them slept together
while he was engaged, he did recount the story about Stephanie harassing Sherry at the hospital.
That conversation single-handedly reignited the investigation into a murder.
Nuddle spoke to his supervisor, Rob Bub, and got the other two officers in his unit,
Detective Martinez and Barba, on board.
All four of them knew how sensitive the case was.
They didn't want to believe a fellow officer could be guilty of
murder, but based on the preliminary evidence, they had to admit it was a strong possibility.
By that point, 48-year-old Stephanie Lazarus was doing pretty well for herself. She still lived in
L.A. and was married to a fellow police officer. In fact, the two of them had recently adopted a
daughter. She'd also made it pretty high up the chain at the LAPD. She was one of only two detectives
assigned to the prestigious art theft detail. This special specials,
unit focused on cases that involved fine art. Since those were likely to grab headlines,
the job often involved public-facing responsibilities, like doing media interviews. It also
meant that Stephanie enjoyed some special perks, because art thefts were relatively rare. She
wasn't the kind of detective who usually had to work weekends or respond to calls right away.
To get assigned to a position like that, Detective Bubb knew she had to have some friends in high
places. With that in mind, he knew they had to tread carefully. He swore Nuddle and the others to
absolute secrecy. He even created a generic case number in the LAPD's database that they could
use to log evidence. That way, if Stephanie was keeping tabs on the status of Sherry's investigation,
she wouldn't realize the cold case had been reopened. From there, the officer set out to
eliminate every other possible suspect before moving on to Stephanie. They re-interviewed previous
witnesses and ran down all the previous leads their predecessors had already discounted. Two months
later, they felt like their initial suspicions were justified. Stephanie Lazarus was by far the
strongest suspect. On April 30th, Detective Martinez searched her name in a database of registered
gun owners in California. He discovered that 13 days after Sherry's murder, Stephanie officially
reported her sidearm stolen. The last thing left to do was test her DNA. Detectives officially
placed her under surveillance to try to discreetly take a sample. That turned out to be surprisingly
difficult. Stephanie was an experienced officer and extremely careful about where she went and what she
did. It took the officers until May 28th, three months into their investigation, to finally score a hit.
Seconds after Stephanie threw away her soda in a Costco trash can, the surveillance team swiped her
cup and straw. They used those to get a viable DNA sample. Things moved quickly after that.
Officers brought the items to analysts at the LAPD's Scientific Investigation Division for testing.
The next day, experts had officially matched.
Stephanie's DNA to the saliva in the bite mark on Sherry's forearm. The evidence was irrefutable.
After 23 years, the LAPD had finally caught Sherry Rasmussen's killer, and the culprit was one of their own.
Now they had to figure out how to catch her. On June 5, 2009, officers told Stephanie they had a potential art
thief down at the jail who they wanted her to interview. When Stephanie went down to the interrogation
room, she found it empty. That's when she realized she was the one being investigated. A couple of
hours later, she was officially booked for murder. The news sparked a firestorm in the media.
The LAPD maintained that Stephanie's arrest proved the system worked, that even police officers
weren't above the law. But many, including Sherry's
family believed the department had spent years covering up her involvement. While they were relieved
Stephanie was finally in custody, they wondered why their allegations weren't taken seriously two
decades earlier. It was a question that a lot of people wanted to know the answer to, but for the
time being, the focus was on Stephanie's trial. In December 2009, Stephanie had a preliminary hearing
and was ordered to stay on trial for murder. But it wasn't until her 50th birthday,
on May 4th, 2010, that she officially retired from the LAPD.
In the 11 months between then and the hearing,
the department never fired her.
And as a 25-year employee,
she was entitled to a full pension,
yearly cash infusion that grows larger every year.
Well, she definitely needed some of that money for her legal costs.
On February 6, 2012,
her five-week trial began.
Stephanie pleaded not guilty and refused to testify in court.
Throughout the highly publicized proceedings,
she never made a public statement of any kind.
And despite her official plea, the evidence was clear.
On March 8th, she was found guilty of first-degree murder
and was sentenced to 27 years to life in prison.
She wasn't eligible for parole until 2000.
2003, when a new California law loosened the requirements for certain offenders.
And while her conviction may have officially closed the case, Sherry's family still had a bone to pick with the police.
The Rasmusins lodged a legal claim against the city of Los Angeles, which is the precursor to a civil lawsuit.
In the filing, they claimed the LAPD engaged in a conspiracy to cover up Stephanie's involvement in their daughter's murder.
The city government eventually denied the legal claim.
In response, the Resmucens filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the city, the LAPD, and Stephanie Lazarus.
On May 24, 2011, a superior court judge dismissed this suit, too, citing governmental immunity.
Soon afterwards, an LAPD internal affairs investigation was closed without recommending any penalties for the officials involved with sharing.
Mary's case.
Since then, the department has continued to deny any cover-up in the murder of Sherry
Rasmussen. According to them, the case was not mishandled and no one involved engaged in
any kind of misconduct. No one at the LAPD has ever been held responsible for any mistakes
made during the investigation. The one bright spot is that Stephanie Lazarus remains behind bars
for what she did.
In 2023, she became eligible for parole for the first time,
and after years of denying her guilt,
the 63-year-old officially confessed to the murder at her hearing.
John Routon was among the people who argued against her release,
claiming she couldn't be trusted.
Neither he nor Sherry's mother believed she had shown any genuine remorse.
Stephanie's request was denied in 2023,
and again in 2025.
Though she may be granted parole in the future,
her confession provided a small amount of closure
for Sherry's mother, Loretta.
Sadly, her father, Nell's, passed away in 2020,
but he did live to see his daughter's killer
finally locked away.
Today, on the 40th anniversary of her murder,
we remember, Sherry.
Her story should remind us all
how important transparency is during a criminal investigation, because everyone has blind spots,
even seasoned homicide detectives who are trying to do their job.
The truth is, our society places a lot of trust in the police, and if this tragedy can teach
us anything, it's that this trust should go two ways.
Thanks so much for listening.
I'm Carter Roy, and this is Murder True Crime Stories.
Come back next time for another murder and all the people it affected.
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We'll be back on Friday. Murder True Crime Stories is hosted by me, Carter Roy, and special guest
Vanessa Richardson, and is a crime house original powered by Pave Studios. This episode was brought to
life by the Murder True Crime Stories team.
Max Cutler, Ron Shapiro, Alex Benadon, Natalie Prozofsky, Lori Marinelli, Sarah Camp, Tara Wells,
Sheila Patterson, and Russell Nash.
Thank you for listening.
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