Jane Doe No More (21 page)

Read Jane Doe No More Online

Authors: M. William Phelps

BOOK: Jane Doe No More
6.41Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
I would see Jeff driving around town in his company truck on occasion prior to my attack. I became more aware afterward and looked out for him after he became a suspect. I really felt like he was following me that day on Route 69 . . . my heart was beating out of my chest. I was scared. In my mind, I heard my attacker’s words, which seemed to echo every once in a while when fear came up and the anxiety began to take over . . .
If you call the pigs
. . . Was Jeff Martinez that same person? I was far from home, [with] a car phone that didn’t work, and no way of protecting myself. Watching Jeff pass by and not see me was like coming up from underneath the water after holding your breath.
Yes, I could breathe—for a moment, anyway.

CHAPTER
TWELVE

Hope

Despite a tough exterior and a belief that her case was finally moving in the right direction, Donna still experienced the burden of being twice victimized. All the emotional weight of having survived a sexual assault and then having law enforcement’s finger pointed in her face was crushing. Her belief that Jeff Martinez was now following her indicated that perhaps Donna was losing control of her judgment. Yet, when she thought about it, something told Donna that Jeff could be her assailant. After all, he had not been completely ruled out.

In March 1994, six months had passed since Donna’s attack. The WPD was no closer to solving the case than they were on the day it happened. One could even argue, notwithstanding Pudgie’s and Neil’s involvement, that the case had gone backward. In a letter to John Connelly that Donna wrote (but would never ultimately send) after attending a justice system lecture Connelly had given, Donna expressed her profound desire, simply, to get on with her life. She wrote how she had taken “many steps” in that direction, and in “some cases it has worked, in others, I have a long way to go.”

Donna’s nature was to give 100 percent in whatever she set out to do. “To organize and plan my project and then to go about achieving it the best and fastest way possible,” she wrote. This was one way in which Donna dealt with obstacles and challenges. In this particular situation, however, Donna added, “I find myself feeling quite helpless . . .”

A major growing frustration Donna couldn’t shake was the DNA. Where was it? When could she expect the results? The common feeling within Donna’s camp—Maureen Norris, John, and some of those in law enforcement—was that Jeff Martinez, who had finally been asked to give a sample of his blood in December 1993, was her attacker. It all fit. Now all they had to do was wait for the results of Jeff’s blood test against the known DNA.

“I have not been given a date,” Donna wrote, “in which to expect the DNA results, and the waiting has been extremely difficult.”

Concluding the letter, Donna said she was “truly grateful” to Connelly for personally making several calls to Dr. Henry Lee in hopes of expediting the results.

“But in the meantime, each day is a battle, and I will continue to live in fear until I get some answers.”

Maureen felt that, although they were trying, they were not getting anywhere with the WPD, and the SAO, as much as Connelly had said he was facilitating things, couldn’t crack that tough blue shell around the department.

“It was a disaster over there,” Maureen said, referring to the WPD. “They—the Moran brothers—were steadfast in their determination to say that they hadn’t messed up. The police department itself was steadfast in
its
determination to protect them. This is what I believed as we started to head into the spring of 1994.”

What became an issue for Maureen early in her law firm’s involvement was how discouraging working with the WPD became.

“I felt they were trying to pacify us,” Maureen commented. “I almost felt like they had the attitude of, ‘Okay, let’s just pacify them here with this because Donna is not going to go away. Let’s calm them down.’”

During this time, Donna contacted the Sexual Assault Crisis Center (SACS), a service that offered free and confidential intervention, advocacy, and counseling to victims of sexual assault and abuse. With one of the counselors listening on the other end of the line, Donna shared her story of being raped and then interrogated by Lieutenant Moran and accused of making false allegations. The woman she spoke to called what Donna was going through “two-part trauma,” the rape and then the assault by the police, and offered to assist her any way she could.

I was distraught when I reached out to SACS and uncertain that they could help me. I wanted to get to a place where I felt safe again. I was having a lot of flashbacks, both of the rape and the interrogation by Moran, but somehow in my mind the interrogation was more frightening, more incredible. The people at SACS were compassionate and caring. I established a relationship with a counselor who would call me at a certain time and we would talk about anything I felt like. It helped—and I would encourage any woman in the same position, or a woman questioning whether she was raped and if she should report it, to reach out. I tried a support group, but it wasn’t for me. I did not feel comfortable sharing intimate details to a group of people I didn’t know, and at that point the intense feelings I was having had more to do with not being believed than anything else. I also didn’t feel right about bashing the police. With SACS, I could speak over the phone to someone anonymously and that person didn’t know who I was. I could get advice without having to put myself out there.

SACS could help. But right now Donna had to deal with being believed by law enforcement. The good news was that Donna was developing resources, building a team, preparing to dig in and fight.

A few days after she wrote the unsent letter to Connelly—unsent because it sounded “too patronizing” to Donna—Pudgie called with some welcome news.

“They are trying to push the DNA through.”

“How long will it take?” Donna asked.

“Once they begin, it will take three weeks from that date.”

“Okay,” Donna answered.

“I’m meeting today with Detective O’Leary to talk about that ‘informant.’ I’ll call you back as soon as I know something.”

On March 22, 1994, at about four o’clock in the afternoon, Pudgie Maia and Detective Neil O’Leary arrived at Donna’s house.

After introductions, Pudgie mentioned that Neil wanted to talk about the so-called informant. Neil explained that he was the investigator who had acted as the liaison between the informant’s information and those in charge of her case at the time, Vice and Intelligence—i.e., the Moran brothers. Neil described the events to Donna. He had met the man at a social function one night. Regarding the rumor, Neil explained, “He told me he’d tell me about it but only if his name was kept in the strictest confidence and that his name would never be used.”

Neil went on to say that he ran into the informant a few days after the man had met with Robert and Douglas Moran and asked him how it went.

“What did he say?” Donna wondered.

“He said he ‘didn’t care for those guys . . .’ He thought they were kind of strange and cold, and they didn’t appear to be helped at all by his information. He said he didn’t even know if what he said meant anything to them . . . One of the things he told them was that he had heard you had a boyfriend, Donna.”

“Incredible.”

It was apparent that Neil was not a fan of the Morans. He told Donna and John that the Moran brothers were “no more qualified to head the Vice Squad than I would be as a nuclear physicist. And the detectives that went to your house on the night of the attack acted improperly. They should have conducted some forensic testing that night.”

“I appreciate your honesty and integrity,” Donna said.

“Those detectives work for me, and they screwed up. Then what the Morans did is inexcusable. The superintendent and the mayor know about it, and they are appalled by what was done to you.”

Donna was still guarded, but felt she had the right guy on the job now.

“Thank you, Neil . . .”

“Things are being done at this moment to rectify this situation. Doug Moran is going to be given a desk job—I think he should be fired. I’m going to work as hard as I can on this, although, I will warn you, it is difficult to pick it up now after so much time has elapsed. I had a three-hour briefing the other day in Connelly’s office about the case, and John is extremely upset with regard to how the case has been handled.”

Neil and Pudgie stood and asked Donna and John to show them around the house. They wanted to get a closer look at things for themselves and see if anything stood out. Donna realized, while escorting both officers around, that it was the first time since her attack that she had been asked to do this by law enforcement.

After Neil and Pudgie finished looking around, Donna asked about Jeff Martinez and where that end of the investigation stood at this point. Up until now, Jeff was the investigatory white elephant in the room—that person of interest everyone had in the back of his or her mind, but didn’t want to come out and talk about with any confidence or accuracy.

With Neil nodding his head in agreement, Pudgie said, “We both feel Jeff is a strong suspect.”

“I personally know someone he works with, and my source is going to check Jeff’s work record,” Neil added.

“We’re also investigating the informant,” Pudgie said. This also was something that had never been done. The WPD had taken the man at his word.

“If it were up to me, I’d give you his name,” Neil said, referring to the informant—also correcting what Pudgie had promised some time ago. “But I cannot break a confidentiality agreement. If it’s worth anything, I’d be extremely upset with this guy too.”

Donna was reluctant to ask, or maybe a bit overly confident, but she needed to know the answer: “Could I be there when you arrest Jeff if the DNA comes back a match?”

Pudgie and Neil looked at each other.

I liked Jeff. I had good memories of all of us growing up in the neighborhood. I did not want to believe that Jeff had anything to do with it, but it was hard to dismiss how he acted toward my sister. Waiting for the DNA was very difficult. There were times when I wondered if I would be better off
not
knowing. The thought that it could be Jeff sickened me, and I was trying to prepare myself that it could be my reality. If it was him, I wanted to be present at the time of the arrest because I had to know why. Why would he do this to me? I wanted to look him in the eyes and let him know that I was okay and the attack was not going to beat me—that I was a survivor, not a victim.

Other books

Island that Dared by Dervla Murphy
Exile on Bridge Street by Eamon Loingsigh
Turning the Tide by Christine Stovell
A Man Called Ove: A Novel by Fredrik Backman
With Wings Like Eagles by Michael Korda
The Floating Island by Jules Verne