Sins & Survivors: A Las Vegas True Crime Podcast - The Shocking Murder of Gina Martin
Episode Date: January 14, 2025An ex-boyfriend’s obsession turned deadly in broad daylight, leaving Gina Martin’s family and community reeling. This case uncovers the terrifying realities of stalking and domestic violence and t...he tragic loss of a devoted mother. This month is stalking awareness month, and while this case is a domestic violence homicide case, it also has a stalking component. Even years after the end of her relationship with the man who murdered her, he remained obsessed… watching, waiting, stalking her, and waiting for his opportunity.https://sinspod.co/61sourcesDomestic Violence Resourceshttp://sinspod.co/resourcesClick here to become a member of our Patreon!https://sinspod.co/patreonVisit and join our Patreon now and access our ad-free episodes and exclusive bonus content & schwag! Get ad-free access for only $1 a month or ad-free and bonus episodes for $3 a monthApple Podcast Subscriptionshttps://sinspod.co/appleWe're now offering premium membership benefits on Apple Podcast Subscriptions! On your mobile deviceLet us know what you think about the episodehttps://www.buzzsprout.com/twilio/text_messages/2248640/open_sms Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/sins-survivors-a-las-vegas-true-crime-podcast--6173686/support.
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Many of the stories we have covered are cases of domestic violence between married people.
But this week, we're sharing a horrifying recent case of a murder that happened here
in Las Vegas in broad daylight, where the murderer was an ex-boyfriend of the victim.
This month is Stalking Awareness Month, and while this case is a domestic violence homicide case, it also has a stalking component.
Even years after the end of her relationship with the man who murdered her, he remained obsessed.
Watching, waiting, stalking her, just waiting for his opportunity.
Hi, and welcome to Sins and Survivors, a Las Vegas true crime podcast where we focus on
cases that deal with domestic violence, as well as missing persons and unsolved cases.
I'm your host, Sean, and with me, as always, is the one and only John.
I am the only John in the room.
As we mentioned, January is Stalking Awareness Month, and we're taking the opportunity this
month to highlight stories of stalking and also share statistics and resources specific to this
horrifying, dangerous, and pervasive problem that can happen between married couples,
intimate partners, friends, and even strangers on the can happen between married couples, intimate partners,
friends, and even strangers on the internet. It's surprising how easy it can be for someone to locate and harass another person based on the information that's just available publicly.
There's a clear correlation between stalking and domestic violence.
Here are some statistics to help illustrate that. According to the National Center for Victims and
Crime,
between 60 and 80 percent of women who are stalked experience other forms of abuse,
such as physical violence or sexual assault. It's estimated that 1 in 6 women and 1 in 17 men in the
United States have experienced stalking at some point in their lives, according to the Centers
for Disease Control in their National Intimate Partner and Sexual Violence Survey. Most cases
of stalking last between six months and two years, but can escalate in severity if not addressed,
according to statistics from the Bureau of Justice. Victims of stalking, especially when
it's tied to domestic violence, consistently report high levels of fear and anxiety,
with many of them experiencing PTSD, depression, and even difficulty maintaining employment because
of ongoing harassment.
That's from the Domestic Violence Fatality Review Report.
We talked recently about the lethality assessment that victims of domestic violence can fill out
to get an idea of what level of risk they are facing for very serious bad outcomes,
including being victims of homicide. If you're interested in hearing that discussion,
you can find it on Apple Podcast or our Patreon, where you can subscribe for as little as $3 a
month to get access to our weekly bonus episodes. The Lethality Assessment itself is hosted at the
Laurel Center, which was founded in 1981 as a shelter for abused women in Virginia.
If you believe you might have risk factors, you can take the assessment for free
at sinspod.co.la. Of course, if you have any of these risk factors, you can take the assessment for free at SINSpod.co slash LA.
Of course, if you have any of these risk factors, we encourage you to reach out to the
resources we provide in the show notes or on our website and make sure you are safe.
Stalking is one of the top factors for domestic violence homicide.
In situations involving stalking, the presence of a firearm also dramatically increases the
likelihood of
lethal violence. Another topic we have touched on so many times is restraining orders, which are a
common and logical response to a stalking situation. 40% of women who obtain protective
orders against a stalker report that the stalking continues despite the order. With all of this
context, that brings us to the story we want to discuss today.
Do you want to start us off? Of course. Gina Roselle Martin was born on August 5th, 1987,
right here in Las Vegas. One of the frustrating things we found when researching this case,
possibly because it happened so recently, is that there's relatively little information about
Gina herself out there. We know she has a brother named
Sean and an 18-year-old son who had just graduated high school, and many, many friends who have a lot
of great things to say about her. Her loved ones have said that she would do anything for her son,
and he was her entire world. Her friend Ivan Williams told a review journal that Gina was
a person who motivated others and listened without judgment. Sean said his sister
was generous and the kind of person you could talk to about your problems. Gina attended ITT
Technical Institute and got a degree in criminal justice and corrections after working at Hilton
Grand Vacations for four and a half years. After she graduated, she went back into hospitality and
worked for Marriott. You may not have heard of ITT Tech, but it is a well-known for-profit college that went out of business in 2016
because of a combination of regulatory actions, financial difficulties, accreditation problems,
and accusations of deceptive practices. She moved to Denver in 2015 and moved from working
for major hotel chains into general hospitality, finally ending up at
Remington Hotels as a brand performance manager, and she had been there for about two years.
Based on her LinkedIn profile and career trajectory, it was clear she'd made a great
career for herself in hospitality, and in her current role, she worked with hotel chains,
helping them to improve their customer ratings. The job had her traveling to different
places every week, and she loved it. Her friends said she couldn't turn off her cheery customer
service personality even when she wasn't working. Gina dated a man named Frederick Blanche for about
a year and was engaged to him, depending on who you ask. Some of her friends claimed they weren't
really engaged, but her brother Sean said they were, and he had given her a ring. Sean said that he suspected Gina only accepted Frederick's
proposal because he put her on the spot or possibly because she felt bad. Friends of
her said that she and Blanche had a toxic relationship and he was obsessed with Gina.
And in 2022, she confided in Sean that at one point she had received over a hundred missed
calls in a two-hour time span from him. They also said that Blanche had threatened her life
countless times. I want to mention here that Frederick Blanche had a previous felony conviction
in Clark County. In 2005, he pleaded guilty to home invasion and robbery and served about five
years in Ely State Prison. Gina ended their relationship in 2022 and attempted to move on,
but Blanche continued his obsession with her. Her friend Ivan said,
it's just been a series of him harassing her. I know that for a fact. He's done it once when
she was with me, like constantly calling her, trying to figure out where she was. In 2024, she was in Las Vegas for her 37th birthday weekend in
August with her new boyfriend, Brian Marshall, and also seeing her son who had just graduated
high school. She was considering moving back to Las Vegas to be closer to her family and her son
after nearly 10 years in Denver. According to her friends, she was planning to celebrate her birthday with a pool party.
Gina and Brian were at the Avis on West Sahara on Saturday, August 3rd, around 12.30pm,
renting a car to use during their trip. After filling out the paperwork, they headed out back
to pick up the car. What they didn't know was that Frederick Blanche had figured out where they were
based on social media posts and was waiting for them. Blanche jumped out of his white Chevy Silverado pickup truck
and confronted them, pulling out a gun and loading a magazine of bullets. A quickly escalating
argument ensued and Brian was shot as he was running back to the office to try and get help,
and so was Gina. He fired several shots at Brian, but he was able to get back to the office and have them call
the police. Gina didn't make it. She fell as she was running away, and Blanche walked up to her
and shot her several times in the chest and head. Witnesses in the area said they heard at least 20
gunshots, and then saw Blanche get into his pickup truck and just drive away. First responders were
on the scene quickly and attempted to render aid, but realized Gina was gone. They found Brian suffering from multiple
gunshot wounds inside the Avis office. He was transported to UMC Trauma and underwent emergency
surgery, which happily saved his life. Leading up to the shooting, Ivan's last
communication with Gina was about Blanche. He told her, hey, Fred's in my Instagram
stories, just about an hour before he killed her, which makes it seem like Blanche was using social
media and Gina's friends to try and find out where she was and what she was doing.
Two hours before the murder, Blanche called Gina's brother, Sean, and told him he was going
to kill Gina. Sean asked Blanche to come to his house,
which he did, so they could talk and he could calm him down. When Fred was leaving,
he told Sean that he would just show up at her birthday party. Sean tried to reach Gina,
but he couldn't, and after the murder, Blanche texted him, she's gone. This whole event is
terrifying and heartbreaking. Shockingly, though, the entire incident was captured on a Las Vegas Metro Fusion surveillance camera.
These were deployed about six years ago in an effort to beef up the coverage and policing in Las Vegas
without having to have additional officers patrolling the streets.
The Fusion Command Center is manned by civilian specialists and police,
monitoring the remote cameras 24-7,
combating crime from behind a keyboard. If you've spent any time here in Las Vegas in the downtown
area or on the Strip, you've probably seen them. They're freestanding and look like small trailers
with flashing red and blue lights with high-definition cameras and recording equipment.
They can monitor for things like gunfire around the valley and triangulate locations,
and they have facial recognition technology and license plate readers.
In researching this, we found examples of the success of this program,
such as an assault taking place on a strip pedestrian bridge
where a man cold-cocked a woman, knocking her out.
Before anyone even called in the assault, police were on their way,
and the man was arrested, and the victim had her injuries attended to. They've also recovered cars that have been reported stolen and compared
faces to their database of mugshots. The camera behind the Avis picked up Gina's voice as Blanche
pulled out his gun on her and Brian. She can be heard saying, Fred, stop, don't. The cameras
tracked Blanche leaving and were able to track his movements
down Sahara and onto the 11 freeway heading toward Arizona.
Because they could track him, he was arrested in Buckeye, Arizona on August 4th, the very next day,
and extradited back to Nevada, where he was charged with murder with the use of a deadly weapon
and attempted murder with the use of a deadly weapon. Blanche's trial is
set for May 19, 2025, and he is currently being held in the Clark County Detention Center without
bail. Before we close, we wanted to share some of what we learned about Gina. According to her
friends, Gina was kind and funny and cared deeply about others. Here are some quotes from her friend
Ivan. He told various news outlets that Gina
loves everybody. She loved life and she loved her son. Gina had the most bubbly personality of
anybody I ever met. She was a person who motivated others and listened without judgment. If you knew
Gina, you loved her. There's no one aside from the suspect who could say they met Gina and didn't
love her. He also told
them she didn't celebrate herself a lot. So this year she was like, I want to celebrate myself.
I want to come to Vegas, hang out with my friends and family. Lastly, we want to share this quote
from Gina herself from her Facebook page. You really get a sense of how caring she was reading
her public posts that she made on Facebook.
Most people believe if they have a thing, more time, money, love, whatever, then they can finally do a thing, write a book, take up a hobby, go on vacation, buy a home, undertake a relationship,
which will allow them to be a thing, happy, peaceful, content, or in love. Having does not produce being. First you be the
thing called happy or knowing or wise or compassionate or whatever. Then you start
doing things from this place of being. And soon you discover that what you are doing
winds up bringing you the things that you've always wanted to have.
Stalking is a huge problem and it should always be taken seriously.
Of course, we by no means intend to blame the victim Gina here or anyone in her life
or to suggest that anyone in her life did any less than what they could. But we do want to
remind everyone that there are a few things that can be done if you or someone you love
is being stalked. We want to list some of them here. Some immediate safety measures you can consider
include reporting the behavior to law enforcement who can provide you with other avenues of
protection depending on where you are, obtaining a protective order that can provide a deterrent,
changing your daily routines to avoid being followed,
and creating a personal safety plan. If things don't get better, you can consider something more drastic like relocating to a new address or moving to a new city. Experts also recommend
keeping detailed reports of stalking behavior and notifying those in your life about what's going on,
such as employers and neighbors, and even sharing photos of the stalker
to increase vigilance. Experts also recommend having a no-contact policy and avoiding all
interaction with the stalker because even negative attention can encourage further stalking.
Social media can be a good way to keep in touch with friends and family, but it can be easily
weaponized by a stalker. Here are some simple things that we can all do to keep ourselves safer. On Facebook,
go to settings and privacy and perform a privacy checkup where you can change things like
who can see what you share, and you can set that to limit to friends only. And here I recommend
thinking about sharing your personal information only where it's needed. You can easily set it so
only your Facebook friends can see your posts and even limit your past posts, which may have been
public. You can also change how people can find you on Facebook, and here you can hide your contact
information and make sure that your profile isn't visible in search engines. You can also visit the
Privacy Center to change preferences for private messaging.
Instagram and Facebook both fall under the umbrella of meta, so you can edit your Instagram privacy settings here too. The biggest thing you can do on Instagram is to make your account private
and remove followers that you don't want seeing your posts. Another thing you can do once you
secure your Instagram account is consider changing your Instagram handle slightly to make it more difficult for people to locate it.
For example, if your Instagram is crimepodfan, you could change it to something like crimepod.fan.
You can also control who can tag you in posts, which can be very helpful in preventing people
from locating your account.
You should also activate two-factor authentication and make sure you're using strong passwords and make sure you don't use the same password everywhere.
If someone were to figure out a password that you use everywhere, they will have access
to all of your accounts.
For two-factor authentication, you can use Google Authenticator or Microsoft Authenticator,
and both of those are great and have nice backup and restore features when you change
devices.
Most platforms allow you to review what devices are logged into your accounts, too,
so it's a good idea to review those periodically and log out of the ones you don't recognize.
When you're posting, be mindful of sharing locations and tagging them in real time.
If you do tag a location, do it after you've left, like the next day. Also, never share any
information about your address,
daily routines, or places you frequent, or really anything a stalker could use to find you.
It's probably also a good idea not to broadcast any future plans you have either,
such as letting people know that you'll be traveling out of town for work, or how you're
looking forward to going to the movies later tonight, things like that. Also, do not be shy about blocking
suspicious accounts. Anyone who exhibits stalking or harassing behavior, you can just report the
account and block it. You'll also often have the option to block new accounts that that person
creates, and you should choose that as well. Platforms are getting better and better about
offering these types of protections. Back in season one, we covered some stalking cases, but the one that most often comes to
mind is the case of how Deja Washington was stalked and terrorized by Douglas Jackson.
Jackson was an extremely tenacious stalker who Deja just could not shake despite doing
everything possible, including moving, changing jobs, altering her routines,
and getting protection orders. You can listen to that episode at SinsPod.co slash episode 13. Also, January 18th marks the
National Day of Action for Stalking Awareness, honoring Peggy Klinke, who was murdered by her
stalker in 2003. Her sister, Debbie Riddle, is an anti-stalking advocate and co-founded this day
in Peggy's memory. Debbie has said that
Peggy had a radiant personality that lit up every room, but as the stalking persisted,
we saw that light dim. The Stalking Prevention Awareness and Resource Center, or SPARK,
has asked that on January 18th, people wear something sparkly or shiny, take a photo and
share it on social media to help bring back the sparkle for Peggy and all
of those affected by stalking. John and I want to invite all of you to join us in participating in
this campaign this year and please tag us on your photos so we can see them. Also, please use the
hashtags sparkle against stalking, NSAM 2025 and NSAM day of action. Last year, on January 18, 2024, we released a special bonus episode
about Peggy and also about Miley Cyrus, who is just one of the many celebrities that have been
affected by stalking. You can hear that episode at sinspod.co slash episode 12. If you're enjoying
the podcast, please spread the word. Consider subscribing if you haven't already. And if you
could please leave us a review on the platform you're listening on, that would be really helpful in supporting the show.
Thank you as always for listening. We appreciate it. And as always,
we remind you that what happens here happens everywhere. Thanks for listening.
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questions at sinsandsurvivors.com. If you or someone you know is affected by domestic violence
or needs support, please reach out to local resources or the National Domestic Violence Hotline. A list of resources is available on our
website, sinsandsurvivors.com. Sins and Survivors, a Las Vegas true crime podcast, is research
written and produced by your hosts, Sean and John. The information shared in this podcast is accurate
at the time of recording. If you have questions, concerns, or corrections, please email us. Links to source material for this episode can be found on our website,
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the podcast creators, hosts, and their guests. All individuals are innocent until proven guilty.
This content does not constitute legal advice.
Listeners are encouraged to consult with legal professionals for guidance.