LOS ANGELES – Two women convicted of befriending homeless
men, then murdering them to collect $2.8 million in life insurance,
were sent to prison today for the remainder of their lives by a
judge who told the defendants they sacrificed the victims on “altars
of greed.”
Helen Louise Golay, 77, and Olga Rutterschmidt, 75, sat
impassively as Los Angeles Superior Court Judge David S. Wesley
sentenced each to two consecutive sentences of life in prison
without the possibility of parole. He also sentenced each of the
women to two 25-year-to-life sentences for conspiracy to commit
murder for financial gain. Those sentences were stayed.
The judge noted that probation officers in reports on both women
said they had “no conscience and they are a serious threat to the
community.”
“This is the final chapter for these defendants, who will spend
the rest of their days in prison for the killings that were spawned
out of greed,” said District Attorney Steve Cooley in a prepared
statement. “Justice has been served in the murders of these two
victims.”
After imposing sentence, Wesley told the defendants that victims
Kenneth McDavid and Paul Vados “needed only food, water and shelter.
They needed a helping hand…Instead these unfortunate men were
sacrificed on your altars of greed.”
Both women were convicted by a jury of killing Vados, 73, on Nov.
8, 1999. He was run over by an automobile in an alley in Westwood.
It was a hit-and-run killing that that went unsolved until the June
21, 2005, murder of McDavid, 50. He was run over by an automobile in
an alley in Hollywood.
The defendants provided housing for both victims prior to their
deaths. They applied for dozens of insurance policies in the men’s
names and were involved in activities relating to the victims after
the men were killed.
Wesley imposed sentenced after denying a defense motion for a new
trial for Golay. He also heard impact statements from Sandra Salman,
McDavid’s sister, and Stella Vados, daughter of the eldest victim.
Also speaking was the attorney for both women, Gloria Allred, who
said that Stella Vados discovered that the defendants buried her
father in an unmarked pauper’s grave. She thanked the District
Attorney for helping move Vados’s remains so he “could finally have
his wish and be buried next to his beloved wife at Forest Lawn.”
Cooley praised the work of prosecutors Truc Do and Bobby Grace of
the Major Crimes Division. He also noted the hard work done by
investigators to put the case together. He singled out Detectives
Dennis Kilcoyne and Rosemary Sanchez of the Los Angeles Police
Department’s Robbery-Homicide Division, as well as Special Agent
Samuel Mayrose of the FBI, and Rob Brockway of the California
Department of Insurance.
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