‘Our scars remain’: Golden State Killer’s victims to tell their stories in court all week
SACRAMENTO — Jane Carson-Sandler says she has served an effective life sentence in the more than four decades since she was one of the first rape victims of a onetime police officer who eventually became known as the Golden State Killer.
Now it’s Joseph James DeAngelo’s turn.
Carson-Sandler will be among nearly three dozen victims or survivors who plan to confront DeAngelo this week during an extraordinary four days of court hearings before the 74-year-old is sentenced to life in prison.
Some plan to tell of their pain, others of their healing.
It’s the culmination of a plea deal that will spare him the death penalty for 13 murders and numerous sadistic rapes and burglaries that terrorized California for more than a decade. The perpetrator behind the reign of terror mystified investigators until they used a new form of DNA tracking to arrest him in 2018.
“Our wounds heal and our scars remain,” Carson-Sandler said.
The expected plea hearing for the man accused of being a prolific rapist and serial killer will be unlike any in memory.
Certain things always trigger flashbacks to that night in 1976 when DeAngelo confronted her with a butcher knife as she snuggled in bed with her 3-year-old son after her husband left for work at a nearby military base.
She can’t go skiing, for fear she’ll see someone in a ski mask like the one DeAngelo wore. The sound of a helicopter is another trigger, because “after the attack the helicopters would fly over every night with spotlights on the ground, looking for DeAngelo.”
Sacramento County Dist. Atty. Anne Marie Schubert has said the man then known as the East Area Rapist violently ended a more innocent era in the Sacramento suburbs.
DeAngelo pleaded guilty in June to 13 counts of murder and publicly admitted to dozens of rapes that were too old to prosecute. His attorneys did not respond to a request for comment.
All told, DeAngelo admitted to 161 crimes involving 48 people.
“He is the real-life version of Hannibal Lecter,” Sacramento County Dist. Atty. Anne Marie Schubert told reporters
Testimony from his Sacramento County rape victims alone will consume a full day Tuesday. Other rape victims will speak Wednesday, and family members of those murdered will speak Thursday before Sacramento County Superior Court Judge Michael Bowman formally sentences DeAngelo on Friday.
Kris Pedretti was 15 when DeAngelo attacked her in suburban Sacramento just before Christmas in 1976.
“This kid who liked to go shopping and do cartwheels on the lawn — that girl was gone,” she said.
She lost her friends, her once profound faith in God, switched schools three times, had two failed marriages and “did a lot of self-medicating, a lot of poor coping mechanisms.”
The HBO docuseries “I’ll Be Gone in the Dark,” executive produced by Patton Oswalt, documents the late Michelle McNamara’s quest to find the Golden State Killer.
It wasn’t until DeAngelo’s arrest two years ago that she sought therapy and changed her life again.
She’s now happily married, is described by other survivors as the “den mother” who helps organize potluck dinners after each of DeAngelo’s court appearances, and this year she started a Facebook group for sexual assault survivors. It now has more than 300 members.
“He didn’t win. I’m not a lost girl. I want to make that clear,” Pedretti said. “I just got so much love and support in the last two years that I’m in a really good place and I want to pay it forward.”
After attacking Pedretti, DeAngelo soon escalated from targeting single women and girls to humiliating their husbands and boyfriends.
He would tie up the man and pile dishes on his back, then threaten to kill both victims if he heard the plates rattle while he repeatedly raped the woman.
The killer was thought to have law enforcement or military experience.
That’s what happened to Bob and Gay Hardwick, who were living together in Stockton in 1978.
“That’s been with me for 42 years now, and in my view that’s a long life sentence for someone to serve who didn’t deserve to serve it,” she said. “Not one of us, the survivors, deserved to have this kind of violence and hatred and desecration put upon them.”
Victor Hayes, who with his then-girlfriend endured a similar assault in 1977, is now more angry with police and prosecutors than he is with DeAngelo. At the least, Hayes said DeAngelo should have been forced to publicly admit that he acted under color of authority by using his knowledge of police procedures to avoid arrest.
DeAngelo was a cop for the first six years of his onslaught — the first three years when he was known as the Visalia Ransacker for about 100 burglaries and one slaying in the San Joaquin Valley farm town, and then the next three years in the Sierra foothills city of Auburn northeast of Sacramento, until he was fired for shoplifting some dog repellent and a hammer.
When the law came for him after 40 years of hunting, he was doing a woodworking project in his garage.
DeAngelo killed two more people in Sacramento — a couple out walking their dog — but committed most of his murders after he left the police force and moved to Southern California, where he was dubbed the Original Night Stalker.
Some survivors plan to use props in court to try to break through to DeAngelo, who they think is pretending to be a feeble old man in a wheelchair to hide the fact that he remains a mentally and physically sharp, soulless killer.
Carson-Sandler wore a T-shirt with “Victim Survivor Thriver” to his previous court hearings, and drew applause and laughter during his guilty plea when a prosecutor included her observation that DeAngelo “had a small penis.”
“I can never cause him the fear that he caused me during the attack, but I can humiliate him and that’s my goal,” she said. She plans to wear a new T-shirt that “starts with ‘Itsy-Bitsy.’”
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The brothers of Keith Harrington, who was killed in 1980 with his new wife, Patrice, plan to include a video in their presentation Thursday. The family of DeAngelo’s last-known victim, 18-year-old Janelle Cruz, also of Orange County, plans a slide show to help illustrate her loss.
Jennifer Carole says she will concentrate instead on what she called the “silver linings” — the survivors who have grown so close to each other since his capture, for instance, and Pedretti’s virtual support group for rape victims.
Carole is the daughter of victim Lyman Smith, a 43-year-old lawyer who was slain in Ventura County in 1980. His wife, 33-year-old Charlene Smith, was raped and killed.
Yet Carole said she plans to urge everyone to “find a way to do good. I think it is within our power to do good things and take care of each other.”
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