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Gerald
Fit MASON
Gerald
Fit Mason (born c.
1934) is a criminal from the United States.
In 1957 in El
Segundo, Mason bound, blindfolded, and stripped four teenagers
before raping one of the girls, and robbing all of them, at
gunpoint. After leaving the scene in their car, he stopped at a
red light but then went through it anyway, and was stopped by
police officers Richard Phillips and Milton Curtis. He fled
after killing them both.
For the next
forty-five years, Mason was a law-abiding citizen, never getting
so much as a parking ticket. He bought a chain of service
stations and became wealthy, married and raised a family, and
was described by friends and neighbors as friendly and helpful.
Mason was not
arrested until 2003. The case against him relied on matching a
fingerprint and handwriting. Mason was also identified by a
bullet wound scar on his back. It had been one of the oldest
unsolved murder cases in United States history. He used an alias
while going on vacation in the south.
Mason pled
guilty and was sentenced to life in prison. At his sentencing
hearing, he tearfully apologized to the victim's families and
said he had committed his crimes while under the influence of
alcohol. He will be eligible for parole in 2017.
The Ghost of El Segundo
Cold-Blooded Crime Haunts Investigators For Half A Century
Oct. 2, 2004
(CBS) According
to statistics, Los Angeles County is the most dangerous place in
the U.S. to be a police officer. There, almost every day of the
year, a police officer is shot while on duty.
"It’s a violent world, especially in Los Angeles County, for
peace officers," says Deputy District Attorney Darren Levine,
who is also the chief instructor of an Israeli Army hand-to-hand
combat system that is used by approximately 300 police
departments.
Levine is part of the "Crimes Against Police Officers" unit, set
up to prosecute anyone who wounds or kills a law enforcement
officer. "We have to have a unit like this because in any given
week, we could have five, six, seven, eight, 10 police officers
shot at," says Levine. "Back then, it wasn’t like that."
Los
Angeles County used to be a much safer place. But a cold-blooded
cop killing in 1957 would haunt the police force in El Segundo
for nearly half a century. Correspondent
Bill Lagattuta
reports on this 48 Hours Mystery.
*****
Bob
Dewar, 64, was just 17 back in 1957. Dewar was one of four
teenagers coming home from a summer party one night, when he and
his friends decided to make a stop at Lover's Lane.
"I
rolled the window down. … And that's when the gun came through
the window,” recalls Dewar. "'This is a robbery.' I said, gotta
be somebody pulling a prank. But the gun was real."
Officer Levine said the gunman came prepared with surgical tape
and a flashlight. The gunman covered the teenagers' eyes with
tape and ordered them to take their clothes off. Naked, bound
and blind, Dewar, his buddy, and their 15-year-old dates had no
choice but to do what they were told.
"He
came around from the driver's side to the passenger side, opened
the car and raped the girl," says Dewar.
What had started as a night of innocent fun had now become a
horrible dream from which Dewar thought he and his friends might
never escape.
"He
asked us to get out of the car. He said, 'I think I'm gonna kill
you. I want you to march out into the field,'" says Dewar. "The
girls were crying, and I didn't know what to think. I mean, I
couldn't believe this was gonna happen."
"I
figured that it's just takes four bullets and we're all gone,"
Dewar continues. "And then we heard the car door close and he
drove away."
*****
One
girl was raped, and three other teenagers, including Dewar, were
robbed and terrorized. But the gunman's night wasn't over yet.
While making his getaway in the stolen '49 Ford, he made one
simple mistake that would add murder to his list of crimes.
"At
the corner of Sepulveda Boulevard and Rosecrantz, the suspect
stopped for the red light. And then, for an unknown reason,
proceeded through the red light," recalls Lt. Craig Cleary, who
was just 18 months old at the time of the crime.
Now, as an investigator for the El Segundo Police Department,
Cleary knows as much about what happened that night as if he had
been there. "There was a marked black-and-white unit parked off
the side of the road that obviously the suspect didn't see,"
says Cleary.
In
that patrol car were two young El Segundo policemen -- Officer
Richard Phillips and Rookie Officer Milton Curtis – who decided
to pull over the '49 Ford. Soon after, a second police car with
Officers James Gilbert and Charlie Porter drove by.
Not
knowing what had taken place minutes earlier at Lover's Lane,
these officers assumed that it was just another routine traffic
stop. "Officer Philips appeared to be getting ready to start a
citation, and as we stopped and looked the situation over,"
recalls Gilbert. "He waved a paper at us, like everything was
all right. So, we went ahead."
Officers Porter and Gilbert would be the last people to ever see
their fellow officers alive. Just seconds later, there was a
call on the radio. "Officer Philips said on the radio that
they'd been shot, and needed an ambulance," recalls Porter, who
raced back to the scene.
It
was too late. Phillips had been fatally wounded, shot three
times in the back. Curtis was already dead. He was shot three
times as well, while still sitting in his patrol car.
"To
have them killed like that, right in cold blood," says Gilbert.
"It was pretty hard to take."
The
call for help came over the radio at 1:28 a.m., and in the short
time it took for Gilbert and Porter to respond, the killer had
simply disappeared.
Hundreds of police officers from El Segundo and the neighboring
communities scoured the area all night. They found the stolen
'49 Ford, but there was no sign of the suspect.
"We
never gave up," says Porter. "We've always kept looking and
looking and looking. The case was
never closed."
*****
For
Jean Curtis, the memory of her husband, Milton Curtis, will
always be closest to her heart. "He was my first love. I never
got over the first love. I don't think anybody does, really,"
says Jean. All she has left is a plaque from the police
department with her husband's original badge on it.
What does she remember the night Milton was killed? "We had a
little argument, and I've always felt bad about that," says
Jean. "We didn’t get to say goodbye."
Just a few hours later, Jean would become a 23-year-old widow.
And on July 22, 1957, the residents of El Segundo would suddenly
find themselves at the center of one of the largest manhunts in
California history. It was a crime that would become one of the
oldest unsolved murder cases in Los Angeles County. And it was a
crime that would haunt Deputy District Attorney Darren Levine 46
years later.
"You can imagine the scrutiny and all the resources that were
put forth to try and solve this case back in 1957," says Levine.
But
there was one problem. "There has been no report of the '49 Ford
having been stolen," says Levine. "There's no report out on the
airwaves of this rape and robbery that had just occurred."
In
fact, at the time of the murders, the teenagers – naked and
terrified – had just been found wandering the streets, looking
for help. When their story was finally reported, investigators
were already arriving at the scene of this crime.
Howard Speaks, now 83, was the first to arrive that morning as a
crime scene investigator with the Los Angeles County Sheriff's
Department. "I took some pictures, I think, of the back of the
car," says Speaks. "Bullet holes in the trunk, two in the rear
windshield that shattered the windshield. So we know that the
car was hit three times."
To
this day, Cleary and all the members of the El Segundo Police
Department are amazed at how those bullet holes got there.
"Officer Phillips happened to be one of the top marksmen on the
department at the time," says Speaks. "After being shot and
actually in the process of dying, he was able to give off six
shots at the fleeing suspect vehicle hitting the vehicle three
times."
Phillips may have marked his killer for life. "Two rounds were
recovered from the interior of the vehicle, one was not," adds
Cleary. "The suspect might be carrying a bullet from Office
Phillips' handgun."
Did
the killer leave something behind in the stolen '49 Ford –
something that would lead investigators in the right direction?
Today, samples of DNA can point the way to a killer. But back in
1957, they would have to rely on the best tool they had the
time: the fingerprint kit.
Speaks searched the car from bumper-to-bumper, searching for
anything that might lead them to a suspect.
"I
was very hopeful knowing that he must have been highly nervous
and perspiring. He had to leave fingerprints on the steering
wheel," says Speaks. "I just dusted the steering wheel and moved
it around and found the ridges that were showing. I found two
latent lifts of the left thumb print."
Now, investigators needed to put a face on their suspect.
Fortunately, there were several witnesses who would never forget
the man they had seen that night. Dewar, who had been held at
gunpoint by the suspect for almost an hour, says he looked at
the man.
Officer Porter also says he had a good look at the suspect: "He
was about 6 feet tall, probably 200 pounds, short hair, and he
had a peculiar way he held his head. He was arrogant or
frightened. It looked a little bit of both."
It
would take authorities nearly half a century to find the man who
committed those crimes that night. But new technology would
finally catch up with this old mystery.
Homicide Det. Kevin Lowe and Det. Dan Macelderry inherited the
coldest case on the books. "Ice cold," says Lowe. "It was colder
than cold."
But
in September 2002, a phone call to the El Segundo Police
Department, from a woman who said she had some new information
on the murders, became the most promising new lead in years. The
call was from a woman who said her uncle had bragged about being
responsible for murdering two El Segundo police officers.
Their first order of business was simple: to see if the 1957
fingerprint matched up with their new suspect. "We gave the
information to the crime lab," says Lowe. "They worked it. They
cleaned up the print."
The
prints were sent to the Los Angeles Sheriff's Department crime
lab, which is easily the busiest in the country, handling more
than 70,000 cases a year. They used the same print that Speaks
lifted in 1957.
Dale Falicon and Don Keir, top specialists in fingerprint
identification, immediately knew that their new suspect was no
match to the old print.
But
they decided to try again, this time with the advantage of
modern science. Using everyday computer technology that was not
even dreamt of in 1957, Keir was able to digitally reprocess the
original photographs.
Even with a new digital image of the original fingerprint, you
still have to have someplace to search for a match. After the
events of 9/11, the FBI finally created a nation-wide computer
database that includes a copy of every criminal fingerprint in
every state in the entire country.
They loaded a digital copy of the killer's print into the
system. And just like that, a man that had eluded capture for
nearly half a century was found in a matter of minutes.
*****
The
print tied investigators to Gerald F. Mason, who was arrested
for burglary in 1956 in South Carolina. It was the only time he
had ever been arrested, and it was the only record they had on
file.
Some quick police work easily located Mason, who was,
remarkably, still living in his hometown of Columbia, S.C. He
wasn't a career criminal, but a retiree living with his family.
"We
thought we were gonna be looking at a guy with a serious
criminal history," says Det. Lowe.
But
Lowe and Macelderry would need a lot more than just a
decades-old fingerprint match to prove to a jury that Mason was
indeed a cop killer.
Lowe says the first thing they did was look through boxes and
boxes of evidence, collected over the years, which now had to be
re-examined to see if any other clue could be connected to
Gerald Mason.
"In
1960, the actual murder weapon was recovered in Manhattan Beach
in a back yard," says Macelderry. "It was uncovered by a man
that was doing some yard work."
"We
were digging up the weeds when I found the gun," recalls Doug
Tuley, who has lived in the same house since 1956. His house was
less than a mile from the scene of the murders, in the same
neighborhood police believe the killer used to make his escape.
"The finding of that gun was huge to this case also," says
Macelderry. "The serial number was traced by investigators back
then to Shreveport, Louisiana."
Officers Lowe and Macelderry followed the trail of evidence to
Shreveport, 1,600 miles and 46 years from El Segundo, Calif.
They found out that the gun was sold there in 1957, and sold by
Billy Gene Clark.
"I
pointed out that this was the least expensive one, at $29.95,
then that's he decided that's what he wanted," recalls Clark,
who was 18 at the time and working his first job behind the
sporting goods counter at a local Sears.
Investigators found one name, G.D. Wilson, in a record of
firearms sold at the store. Lowe says they started canvassing
the area around the Sears and tracked George D. Wilson to a
nearby YMCA.
The
case finally went cold in 1960, after investigators checked out
every George Wilson in the country and didn’t find a match to
the 1957 fingerprint. Obviously, G.D. Wilson was an alias. But
Officers Lowe and Macelderry knew that one piece of evidence
found here would close this case.
"They were able to locate the register from the actual piece of
paper where he signed in to the YMCA as George D. Wilson," says
Lowe.
*****
Paul Edholme once worked at the Beverly Hills Police Department,
and was one of the country's leading forensic document
examiners. He was enlisted to examine the evidence. "The
handwriting jumped off the page at me, and it was something that
I'm going, you know, 'I gotcha.'"
He
matched the handwriting of the George D. Wilson who checked into
the YMCA to a South Carolina eye examination report in the name
of Gerald F. Mason.
"If
you put one [handwriting] over the other, I mean, it's almost
identical," says Edholme. "I indicated to the sheriff's
department that I was 99.9 percent sure that this was done by
the same person."
Now
confident that their case against Gerald Mason was solid,
California detectives moved to South Carolina to finally get
their man.
But it wasn't over yet.
*****
When Gerald Mason answered a knock on his front door on the
morning of Jan. 29, 2003, he never expected that his past would
finally catch up with him.
"He
was just shocked. Completely shocked," says Lowe. "And he just
kept saying, 'I don’t understand. I don’t understand why you’re
here.'"
El
Segundo Police Lt. Craig Cleary, who took Mason into custody,
said he never denied committing the crime. "He never denied it.
He never reacted," says Cleary. "He just stared off and just
shook his head."
Even though Mason was almost 70 years old, police still
considered him potentially dangerous. A search of his house
turned up a collection of loaded firearms. But this 46-year
manhunt had turned up a fugitive very different than anyone had
expected.
There's no record that Gerald Mason ever committed another crime
after the 1957 police killings. Instead, he got married, raised
a family and started his own business.
But
the case against Mason was strong. Investigators had matching
fingerprints and handwriting, but there was one piece of
evidence investigators always wondered about -- one that would
eliminate any doubt forever.
When he was examined, it was discovered that Mason had a
bullet-shaped scar on his back. "He was in fact hit by gunfire
from [Officer] Phillips, shot," says Macelderry.
"The last thing that officer did before he died was mark the man
that killed him for life," adds Levine.
After a judicial hearing in South Carolina, Mason agreed to
return to Los Angeles, to answer for his crimes. "Officers that
hadn't been around for 20 years came in walking on canes," says
Levine.
He
was referring to officers like Howard Speaks, who lifted the
fingerprint that solved the case. "I've been waiting for this
date a long time, but the wait was well worth it," says Speaks.
Mason pleaded guilty to murdering officers Phillips and Curtis –
and he tried to make amends before being sentenced to life in
prison: "It's impossible to express to so many people how sorry
I am. I do not understand why I did this. It does not fit in my
life. It is not the person I know. I detest these crimes."
"He
was remorseful," says Levine. "But I think he was more sad and
more sorry for having been caught."
Mason will now spend what's left of the rest of his life in
prison. But one question still remains: Why did he do it?
*****
Why
did Mason, after just getting out of prison for burglary, end up
in California with a gun?
"I
didn’t have a family life. I didn’t have any place to go, and
things were not going well for me, so I took off to California,"
says Mason. "I bought a gun at Shreveport with the intention of
using it simply as a deterrent in so far as I was hitchhiking."
When asked why he attacked the teenagers and raped a 15-year-old
girl, Mason said he really didn't remember. But as far as why he
killed two cops in cold blood, Mason's answer was shockingly
simple: "I thought, 'If I don't get them, they're gonna get me.'
So when the officer turned away from me, I shot both officers,
got back in the car and drove away."
It
was a simple answer for an incredibly senseless crime – but
there was great comfort in knowing that after 46 years, these
victims were never forgotten. The investigators were presented
with pocket watches from the families of the slain officers. The
message on the watch says, "Thank you seems so small."
"We
carry these with us everywhere we go," says Lowe. "It's just a
reminder of this great case and how it came together, and these
great families that we feel such a part of now."
In
the end, what it took to solve the case wasn't one clue or one
break, but generations of police officers who were determined to
protect their own.
"I
didn't think I'd ever live to see it," says Speaks. "It'll live
with me the rest of my days," says Porter.
Adds Levine: "I hope we brought them some measure of comfort,
knowing that we got the guy."
The
town of El Segundo hasn't changed much since that fateful night
in 1957, but one thing has changed. The wounds that were
suffered almost 50 years ago have finally begun to heal.
"I'm not his victim anymore. My son is not his victim anymore,"
says Curtis' wife, Jean. "I'm so grateful, and I had to wait
this long. It's worth the wait."
Gerald Mason will be eligible for parole in 2017. He will be 83
years old. The State of California has vowed that he will never
be released.