The Lazarus files A cold case investigation

Matthew McGough

Book - 2019

"On February 24, 1986, 29-year-old newlywed Sherri Rasmussen was murdered in the home she shared with her husband, John. The crime scene suggested a ferocious struggle, and police initially assumed it was a burglary gone awry. Before her death, Sherri had confided to her parents that an ex-girlfriend of John's, a Los Angeles police officer, had threatened her. The Rasmussens urged the LAPD to investigate the ex-girlfriend, but the original detectives only pursued burglary suspects, and the case went cold. DNA analysis did not exist when Sherri was murdered. Decades later, a swab from a bite mark on Sherri's arm revealed her killer was in fact female, not male. A DNA match led to the arrest and conviction of veteran LAPD Detec...tive Stephanie Lazarus, John's onetime girlfriend. The Lazarus Files delivers the visceral experience of being inside a real-life murder mystery. McGough reconstructs the lives of Sherri, John and Stephanie; the love triangle that led to Sherri's murder; and the homicide investigation that followed. Was Stephanie protected by her fellow officers? What did the LAPD know, and when did they know it? Are there other LAPD cold cases with a police connection that remain unsolved?" -- Amazon.com.

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Subjects
Genres
True crime stories
Published
New York, New York : Henry Holt and Company 2019.
Language
English
Main Author
Matthew McGough (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xii, 595 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
ISBN
9780805095593
  • Part 1. Sheri, John, and Stephanie
  • 1. The Aftermath (February 24, 1986)
  • 2. Sherri Rasmussen (1957 to 1884)
  • 3. John Ruetten (February 1984 to May 1985)
  • 4. Stephanie Lazarus (1960 to March 1984)
  • 5. "Admit Nothing. Deny Everything. Demand Proof." (March 4, 1984, to March 30, 1985)
  • 6. Stephanie at Club Dev (March 31 to June 16, 1985)
  • 7. The Hospital Confrontation (June to August 1985)
  • 8. Night Stalkers (August 12 to October 12, 1985)
  • 9. Tying the Knot (November to December 1985)
  • 10. Warning Signs (December 1985 to January 1986)
  • 11. The Month Before the Murder (Mid-January to February 23, 1986)
  • Part 2. The Murder of Sherri Rasmussen
  • 12. Sherri's Final Day (February 24, 1986)
  • 13. The Chrono and Crime Scene (February 24, 1986, 6:30 to 9:00 p.m.)
  • 14. John's Interview (February 24, 1986, 9:00 p.m.)
  • 15. The Bite Mark Swab (Early Morning of Ftbruary 25, 1988)
  • 16. "The Day Was Boring and Nothing Happened That Was Worth Remembering" (February 25, 1986)
  • 17. The First 48 Hours Ends (February 26 and 27, 1986)
  • 18. "God Holds the Key" (February 28 to March 2, 1986)
  • 19. "A Well-Reasoned, Carefully-Documented and Insightful Investigation" (March 3 to April 8, 1986)
  • 20. The Burglary Suspects (April 10 to May 21, 1986)
  • 21. "There Is No Power on Earth More Formidable Than the Truth" (May 1986 to November 1987)
  • Part 3. The Murder of Catherine Braley
  • 22. Catherine Braley (Januarys 1988)
  • Part 4. Epilogue
  • 23. "We Do Not Condone Murder" (2008-2012)
  • Author's Note on Sources
  • Acknowledgments
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this engrossing true crime account, McGough, the author of a memoir, Bat Boy, and a former legal consultant for TV's Law & Order, exposes a horrifying Los Angeles murder that was not solved for decades-and an even more disturbing LAPD cover-up. In 1986, 29-year-old nurse Sherri Rasmussen was killed in her home by someone who battered her face and shot her multiple times, leaving the corpse to be found by her husband, John Ruetten. Though there was an obvious suspect-Ruetten's ex-girlfriend, Stephanie Lazarus, who had threatened Rasmussen-the investigating officers pursued the theory that burglars killed Rasmussen. McGough proposes a possible explanation for that choice: since Lazarus was an LAPD officer, some of her colleagues were less than diligent in exploring any possibility that led to her. Eventually, a cold case investigator tracked down DNA evidence from a bite mark on the victim's arm that implicated Lazarus. By then an LAPD detective, Lazarus was arrested in 2009 and convicted in 2012. Despite that verdict, readers will be left with a sense that justice has not been done, since no one at the LAPD was held accountable for the many mistakes that enabled Lazarus to get away with murder for more than 20 years. This memorable and powerful work deserves a wide readership. Agent: Andrew Blauner, Blauner Books Literary. (Apr.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

An in-depth examination of a well-known murder.The book is not a whodunit. Rather, Los Angeles-based journalist McGough (Bat Boy: Coming of Age with the New York Yankees, 2005) offers a police procedural about why a 1986 murder took more than two decades to solve and whether police knowingly protected the murderer: one of their own detectives. The victim was Sherri Rasmussen, a 29-year-old nurse and newlywed who was killed while alone in her home in LA. Her parents and a few of her friends knew that she had been harassed before the murder by a longtime girlfriend of her husband, John. The harasser, Stephanie Lazarus, worked as a young LAPD officer at the time of the murder. John and Rasmussen's father both told the author that they had informed homicide detectives about the harassment. However, because McGough did not start reporting about the murder until Lazarus' 2009 arrest, he could not find definitive information in the messy, incomplete police files about the case. What the author's painstaking digging clearly demonstrates, beyond a doubt, is that the detectives assigned to the case decided nearly right away that Rasmussen was murdered during a burglary gone wrong. Adoption of that theory led to tunnel vision, which meant that the idea of a fellow officer as the perpetrator never received serious attention until two decades later, when a detective looking at cold cases stumbled on the Rasmussen file. McGough does not discuss how the cold-case detectives nailed Lazarus until more than 500 pages in. Before that, he examines the quotidian lives of Sheri, John, and Stephanie while sometimes taking detours to examine dozens of other characters. Relying on extended citations from bureaucratic memos and other opaque documents, McGough delivers a fairly unremarkable narrative until the end of the book, when the investigation of Lazarus as the potential murderer begins.Despite the impressive research and mostly compelling final chapter, much of the book feels like an information dump filled with irrelevant and repetitious details. Its 600 pages could have been 250. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.