Fred Schultz, on duty that night, went to the scene of the
crime. He called his new wife, Lawrencia ("Laurie") Bembenek, at 2:40
a.m., but the line was busy. She had been packing to move to a smaller apartment
that evening and had planned to go out with her friend, Judy Zess, but the date
had been canceled. Schultz then called her again. She picked up the phone and it
sounded to him as if she had just awoken. He took his partner, Detective Michael
Durfee, to his apartment, sixteen blocks away, and felt the hood of her car in
the presence of the other officer, and then examined his off-duty .38 pistol.
Durfee smelled it and looked it over, determining that it had not been fired
that night, nor recently cleaned. There was dust on the weapon. That eliminated
it as a murder weapon.
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Fred Schultz and wife Laurie at friend's
wedding
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Schultz asked Bembenek to accompany him to identify Christina
and took the off-duty pistol with him in a briefcase. Durfee left him as Schultz
went into a private meeting with his superiors and left to write his report, but
not before mentioning that the gun was in the briefcase. No one there recorded
the serial number, nor recorded the fact or content of the meeting, so in
retrospect, it could never be proven that such a meeting took place.
At 4:00 a.m. two detectives came to Bembenek’s apartment to ask if she
owned a gun or a green jogging suit. They also asked about Honeck and Schultz.
She told them she had no such jogging suit and never had owned one of that
color.
Kris Radish in Run Bambi Run described the situation with Lawrencia
Bembenek: " She was one of those radical women's libbers. The kind of women
who thought females deserved an equal chance. She was also one of the most
beautiful cops the department had ever seen. She was tall, with a great set of
legs, sky-blue eyes, long, slender finger, and a head of thick blond hair. She
was gone but not forgotten. She had been booted out of the department because of
some minor problem, and Chief Breier smiled when he learned of her connection
with the Schultz murder. The police department was no place for women. Let them
stay home. These women needed to be taught a lesson."
Christine’s autopsy report indicated radial expansion, in which the muzzle
of the gun left a circular imprint on the victim’s skin. That is, the gun had
been held against her back, touching the skin, when fired. The bullet entered
the back through the shoulder and made a direct path to the heart. Hairs were
found in the bandanna wrapped around her mouth and were consistent with hers.
It turned out later that there were other discoveries, but they were not
initially noted.
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