Snapped: Women Who Murder - Deborah Perna

Episode Date: June 27, 2021

When a man is found shot to death on a suburban street, a wild investigation commences, featuring a high-speed car chase, dangerous gang members and a twisted murder plot that betrays family ...loyalties.Season 26, Episode 7Originally aired: October 13, 2019Watch full episodes of Snapped for FREE on the Oxygen app: https://oxygentv.app.link/WsLCJWqmIebSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hi, I'm Lindsey Graham, the host of One Piece Podcast American Scandal. Our newest series looks at the story of OxyContin, a popular painkiller that helps spur an epidemic of addiction and drug abuse, in which prompted a broad campaign to hold the pharmaceutical industry accountable. Listen to American Scandal on Amazon Music or wherever you get your podcasts. With a successful business and a loving family, one California man seemed to have it all. Mom, dad, you know, a little golden retriever,
Starting point is 00:00:30 the white picket fence. I loved to go into their house because they were always happy. Until early morning gunshots shatter an American dream. We do have a victim down, multiple gun shop wounds. It tore a hole through all of his family. As the investigation begins, detectives brace themselves for a wild ride. There was a high-speed chase complete with helicopters, television cameras. I've got the bad guys in front of me. I can't let them get away.
Starting point is 00:01:03 They watched one of them in hanging out the window guys in front of me. I can't let them get away. They watched one of the men hanging out the window flashing in gang signs. There was a lot of doubt. We love speculation. This had to be a lot more than just a random murder. She said, I need him taken care of. To us like no emotion, just evil. I know what you now, I'm coming after you.
Starting point is 00:01:23 I don't let killers go. October 2nd, 2002 begins like any other Wednesday morning in Boena Park, California. Boena Park is basically just a sleepy little suburban town, half hour from Los Angeles. Around 7 a.m., Detective Greg Peltin arrives for his shift at the Boena Park Police Department and is instantly met with commotion. The call came out at 658.
Starting point is 00:02:10 I was just walking in the back door of the police department and I see detectives rolling out. And I knew at that moment something happened. One of the secretaries said, yeah, they had a shooting down on Piniens Street. I said, OK, so I grabbed my stuff and I went out though. Detective Peltin's partner, Sean Morgan, also responds to the call.
Starting point is 00:02:33 It's a shots fired call. In a neighborhood, we don't have those kind of problems. My gut feeling telling me it was going to be a lot more than that. I immediately, literally, ran out of the building to my car and started in that direction. I immediately, literally ran out of the building to my car and started in that direction. Detective Pelton beats his partner to the scene. When I pulled up, I saw a white, full expedition.
Starting point is 00:02:56 Drive was door was open, and it was parked in the middle of the road. And off to my right, move on the sidewalk, I see a man-named face down. Where the body was discovered was not your typical neighborhood where you would find a dead body next to a car. Those you usually acquired as parts of Orange County. As Detective Pelton takes in the scene, a radio transmission provides more information about the morning's events. A patrol officer has just made contact with an eyewitness to the crime.
Starting point is 00:03:35 The witness saw one of her motor officers and let him know what he had just witnessed. He goes, I just witnessed a shooting. He was out collecting recyclables, cans, and stuff. He saw the two vehicles pull up. In broad daylight, a man bolted out of a vehicle and was, you know, rain away and suddenly one of the people inside the car got out and shot him. The witness tells the patrol officer that when the suspects fled the scene, he hopped in his own car and began a pursuit. He's following them. He gave us the direction travel they went in to everything. He got a partial play in the vehicle description.
Starting point is 00:04:15 The eyewitness report catches the attention of Detective Morgan, who immediately heads in their direction. I figured I was close enough. I might run right into them. We're getting updates that we do have a victim down, multiple gunshot wounds. It is a homicide. Back at the crime scene, Detective Peltin works to ID the deceased. The victim is a man with his right arm partially amputated, appearing to be in his 40s.
Starting point is 00:04:44 He didn't have a wallet, so initially they couldn't identify him. I'm walking the crime scene and looking, I'm saying, okay, we got bullet casings in the street, we got bullet holes in the fence, I got this. Vehicle here, is it somehow related to my dead guy? I don't know. Because there was a vehicle left in the middle of the street, they ran that plate and were able to get the owner's information. They were able to speak to his wife, Susan,
Starting point is 00:05:08 who was eventually able to identify who he was. The victim is 44-year-old David Montenair. The biggest identification point we had was, her husband lost his right arm, and so he only had one arm, and an off-victim only had one arm. She identified that at that point in time, they make the death notification. He was born on May 9, 1958. David Montemar was the second of four children. He grew up in Galveston, Texas, where he and his siblings, Deborah, Darren, and Michael, were raised to value family and
Starting point is 00:05:36 family. He was born on May 9, 1958. David Montemar was the second of four children. He grew up in Galveston, Texas, where he and his siblings, Debra, Darren, and Michael, were raised to value family and hard work. They got along. I mean, they came from a loving household and all the dynamics there for, you know, a good childhood. The family's life in Texas came with some woes as well, especially for David, who suffered a serious injury at a young age.
Starting point is 00:06:07 He was helping work in on some farm equipment back in the day, and he stuck his hand in some gear, and it just yanked it off. In the early 80s, the Montameer family moved to Southern California to cultivate a new endeavor, inter-frate transport. David's father, Pete, instilled an entrepreneurial spirit in his kids by involving them in the family business. They started in LA right off the 91, and there were small warehouse and some few trucks. And then as they were able to gain more drivers
Starting point is 00:06:43 like one of our operators, they expanded. All of them were involved. So it was really nice because Darren was a driver. My mom worked in the office and helped out in the beginning and then Dave helped out with dispatching and logistics. Debra, the oldest Montemeyer child, was the first to leave the nest. She got married and started a family. My mom married my biological father, 83, 84, and then they had me.
Starting point is 00:07:10 And then 18 months later, they had my brothers. So she was married for about a year after that, and then they divorced, and then she raised us from then on by herself. We didn't have any contact with my father at all throughout our lives. He was never around. So my grandpa always took that role
Starting point is 00:07:27 of a father. She was a single mom. She needed steady income and her family provided that stability that she really needed. She worked hard. She was always very much ingrained in like our sports. She was always team mom. We played football.
Starting point is 00:07:42 We played baseball. We just got dirt biking all the time. We'd travel. We had a team mom. We played football, we played baseball, we just got dirt biking all the time, we'd travel. We had a great life. Deborah's younger brother David was also doing quite well for himself. In 1989, he married a woman named Susan, and together they had three daughters.
Starting point is 00:08:00 David made a pretty good salary, and he owned a home in Orange County, which was pretty expensive even in Winnipeark. Every time I went to their house, I always remember feeling like that full circumference of happiness. Mom, dad, you know, a little golden retriever, the white picket fence. I loved to go into their house because they were always happy. David played a large role at the family trucking business, where he helped his father manage operations. My grandpa owned the company outright,
Starting point is 00:08:30 and at one point he wanted to step back and give it to his kids. The original intention of the father, as I understood it, was it was going to be a co-leadership role for Debra and her brother. And a lot of things in life, what happens is everybody settles into their respective roles. And David settled into a leadership role. Dave ran the show, and that was totally fine with my mom.
Starting point is 00:08:53 There was nobody else who can run the show like Dave, except for my grandpa, and he wanted out. Dave did a great job. While David kept operations running smoothly, Debra took the lead on the administrative side. But after sticking with the family business for five years, Debra grew tired of barely making ends meet. All she would have to do is ask my grandpa
Starting point is 00:09:17 and he would have read her a check. But she never utilized that. Handouts weren't really something that she ever wanted. At the end of the day, she wasn't making anything more than her. Whatever office rate was, so she left. Without Deborah, the family business suffered, and her father begged her to return. 92, she pieced out, 96, she came back.
Starting point is 00:09:40 It was the draw that her father needed her, and my mom came back. Once Deborah Pernas settled back into the family business, things were going quite well for the Montemayers. Until October 2, 2002, when 44-year-old David Montemayer is gunned down in his own neighborhood. He was only killed about a mile from his home. Was it somebody that he knew?
Starting point is 00:10:09 Or is it somebody random? Was it a car-jacking? Was it just a street robbery? We don't know at this point. As a team of officers from Winnipeg, PD, sorts through clues left behind at the crime scene, Detective Sean Morgan is on the hunt for a Chevrolet blazer. It's imperative to catch them. They're a danger to the public because they just
Starting point is 00:10:29 killed somebody who knows what else they're gonna do. I get up on the freeway and that's when I find them. With the suspected killers in sight, Detective Morgan fires up the siren in his unmarked car. Once they took off at a high rate of speed, now it's a dangerous situation. I've got to let the public know that something's going on, so they know to get out of the way, hopefully. And let the bad guys know, I know what's you now. I'm coming after you. Coming up, a high-speed chase puts a community on edge. Helicopters, television cameras, the whole nine yards.
Starting point is 00:11:07 As the car was slowing down, the weapons started being tossed out. He's not listening to commands. We think he's armed. All we're going to be able to take them into custody or they're going to shoot it out. The National National National National National National National National
Starting point is 00:11:29 National National National National National October 2, 2002, Buena Park, California. Detective Sean Morgan is behind the wheel of his unmarked police car and inching closer to a vehicle that had reportedly fled the location where David Montemar was shot to death.
Starting point is 00:11:51 I get immediately see three suspects inside the vehicle. They start to turn around and talk and are looking back in my direction. After this commotion in the vehicle, they pulled out onto the shoulder and took off at a high rate of speed. As Detective Morgan calls for backup, the pursuit becomes breaking news in the local media. There was a high speed chase complete with helicopters, television cameras, the whole nine yards.
Starting point is 00:12:16 You have the helicopters overhead, filming it live, and the commentators are telling you how dangerous this is because so many people are in arms way. So that really, you know, increased the interest in this chase. I'm requesting assistance because I'm the only unit in the pursuit of three armed suspects that already now has been confirmed as a homicide.
Starting point is 00:12:38 An Anaheim police unit was able to get into the pursuit. He takes over the initial part of the pursuit and eventually his motor blew and he had to pull out the pursuit so on now the lone vehicle in the pursuit. He takes over the initial part of the pursuit and eventually his motor blew, and he had to pull out the pursuit, so I'm now in the lone vehicle in the pursuit again. They watched one of them hanging out the window, flashing gang signs. And as the car was slowing down,
Starting point is 00:12:59 weapons started being tossed out. They realized that they were dealing with gang members. They also saw the suspects throwing two guns out the window. Did they have more? They didn't know. It really changed the dynamic as that pursuit continued. These guys aren't going away. It's just all we're going to be able to take them in the custody or they're going to shoot
Starting point is 00:13:18 it out. Seeing how they've already thrown the guns out the window, it's just a matter of time. Motor suspects don't get away in pursuit. Suddenly, the suspect vehicle starts to lose steam. The engine starts to smoke and they are noticeably slowing down. They can't maintain the high speeds they had, so they exit the freeway. Another one of our black and white's catches up. He takes over the primary part of the pursuit as a marching unit. He initiates the pitman over, spins the vehicle out of control.
Starting point is 00:13:48 It goes in reverse after it spins off to the right side and crashes into a telephone pole and a rock wall. After that happened, one of the people inside the car got out and it appeared he was holding something. He's running to a park where kids are playing it. We know people are there, we can see him. We can't let him get there. He's not listening to commands.
Starting point is 00:14:11 We think he's armed and officer involved shooting takes place. He's eventually hit in the shoulder and goes down. The suspect who had been shot because he had something in his hand, it turned out to be a phone. Police swarmed the injured suspect and seized the phone. Officers also secure the two men still in the vehicle. Once they saw their friend, I think they realized that they had no way out. They stayed and followed the officer's orders.
Starting point is 00:14:45 The suspect who was shot, he was taken to the hospital and treated for his injuries. They were all booked at Bonaparte Police Department. One of the suspects had the victims, David Monta Mayors, driver's license in his possession, which kind of solidified the fact that we had the right people. As the three suspects are booked, across town, David Montay's grieving family members gather at the perimeter of a bustling crime scene. When I first got there, it was early.
Starting point is 00:15:11 I mean, they hadn't even covered them up. I was just mortified that, you know, like, that's my uncle. That took a toll on me at that level. Detective Greg Peltin takes the lead at the crime scene. I need to secure my scene, secure witnesses, and start the process, a process in the scene, in the corner out there. We got bullet casings in the street.
Starting point is 00:15:36 We got bullet holes in the fence. I had detectives canvassing the neighborhood. And we had witnesses that had been calling it in. Witnesses around the neighborhood provide investigators with details of what occurred earlier that morning. They said that they saw one gentleman. He was being chased by three guys.
Starting point is 00:15:56 They were arguing. David Montemayor tried to get away again as he ran. They had all pulled weapons out and started firing at him until he was hit and went down. And then somebody fired a final shot into him. After speaking with several witnesses, detectives know how David was killed, but they still don't know why he became the target
Starting point is 00:16:19 of such a ruthless attack. Not only was it just a homicide, but these are gang members. So what's the connection? We're still trying to get information. Family members at the scene informed detectives that David spent his mornings working at his family's business in Compton. Detective Martinez went to the family business
Starting point is 00:16:42 and started interviewing employees there, trying to figure out what, if anything, he could find out. He talked to the employees and found out that when they arrived to work, you know, David was usually the first person they'll open the gates, opened up the business. And at this time, they arrived to work in the gates to open a David's cause gone.
Starting point is 00:17:01 He's nowhere to be found. So they're just like, well, what's going on? So Detective Martinez says what David's been modeled. Everybody seemed shocked that this had happened. No one knew why somebody would shoot their boss. The most distraught is the victim's sister, Deborah Perna, who works at the company as well.
Starting point is 00:17:25 Deborah, the office manager, told police, she had no idea what happened, why it happened. She gave police a list of other employees. As investigators question the list of employees, they begin to pick up on a collective suspicion of Deborah's secretary, 25-year-old Edelmeira Corona. A normal question that's going to be asked of anybody
Starting point is 00:17:51 in the workplaces, have you seen anybody suspicious hanging around? There were a number of people that pointed to some visitors that Edelmeira had that were sketchy. People at the business were like, you know, we have a temporary employee here at a Myro Corona. Who, at HodeDask, she had pictures of savvy-looking gangsters.
Starting point is 00:18:15 She had a picture of a fiance who's a gang member. The idea that we have this employee who has relationships with members of gangs and the fact that you just arrested three gang members for this killing, it obviously raises a big red flag and makes that person a definite person of interest. But when Detective speak to Edel Myra,
Starting point is 00:18:41 she gives them no reason to believe she'd been involved. Myra was somebody who was very temporary. I mean, she was in there for a few months, maybe. She was quiet. She just did her thing. She just helped out with paperwork, minded her own business. She had worked there before, and she had recently come back,
Starting point is 00:18:58 but nothing else relevant. Knowing that David made it to work that morning, investigators can begin piecing together a timeline leading up to his murder. David had made it to work, opened the gates, had turned off the alarm system before he had been attacked. Detective suspect the men ambush David and demanded he lead them to his house. We find another witness. Happens to be one of David's neighbors.
Starting point is 00:19:27 But he goes, I saw David drive past his house and he sees another vehicle. We later learned that that was the suspect vehicle. And he goes, I thought that was wild, because David's usually a wolf. Despite the fact that his life was in grave danger, David's actions and his final moments suggest he sacrificed himself in order to save his family.
Starting point is 00:19:49 They obviously didn't do their homework because coming back to his house, he knew his wife Susan and the kids were still there because she hadn't left to take them to school. He's like, if I take them there, they're going to kill my whole family. So he drove down to the next rest track and pulled in and then he bailed out of the truck and then that's where that confrontation took place. David was a hero. He saved his family. But how did David end up in this position in the first place?
Starting point is 00:20:18 Why did they have my uncle? We had no family ties, any gangs. Everybody was decent, hard work, and family people that we had known for a number of years. Rumors around the business suggest a possible motive. The running theme was, at the business, people used to joke about David having $50,000 in a coffee can at a sales.
Starting point is 00:20:40 And we're less like $50,000. And that's what everyone was telling us. MUSIC Coming up, detectives must consider the possibility that David had a dark side. Being a trucking business, maybe he was moving materials for them, and maybe that was a deal that had gone bad. But are they prepared for what they'll find along the way?
Starting point is 00:21:04 He's driving like a hundred miles an hour. We're calling the highway patrol trying to get them to stop them. They pull them over with guns drawn because this was dangerous criminal. The hardest true crime story to report on is your own. I'm Tiffany Reese, host of the podcast, Something Was Wrong. For 15 seasons, I've always aimed to validate and amplify the voices of those who have survived abuse and crime. But for season 16, I'm opening up for the first time about my own experiences as an abuse survivor and a murder co-victim. With the help of trusted friends, we'll unpack my journey to becoming a victim advocate
Starting point is 00:21:47 by examining my past. From the emotional and physical abuse I endured at the hands of my parents, and the bullying I received from my classmates, to the murder of my brother, and the securities fraud my father was convicted of, I'm covering it all, and even learning more about myself through this process. This is obviously a very personal journey for me, but I believe that this will play a part I'm covering it all and even learning more about myself through this process. This is obviously a very personal journey for me, but I believe that this will play a part in my healing, helping me to process the trauma that I endured.
Starting point is 00:22:13 Follow something was wrong wherever you get your podcasts. You can listen early and add free on the Amazon Music or Wondery app. After hearing rumors that murder victim David Montemayer kept tens of thousands of dollars hidden in his home, Buena Park detectives begin developing theories to explain how the alleged money might connect David to the three gang members who killed him. Being a trucking business with one of the thought processes was that maybe he was moving materials for him, whether it be stone materials or narcotics of some sort,
Starting point is 00:22:53 and maybe that was a deal that had gone bad. To test their theory, detectives turn to the gang members in custody. When we interviewed the three suspects trying to get details of the crime, they all refused to talk to us and they didn't give us any information. Later at the jail, we got more information on them, who they are, their tattoos, and were able to identify they were gang members on a pokoema, which is over an hour away.
Starting point is 00:23:20 Two of the shooters were adults, and then the one juvenile, I believe he was 17 at the time of the shooters were adults, and then the one juvenile, I believe, he was 17 at the time of the crime. The three men are identified as 26-year-old Armando Maseus, 24-year-old Alberto Martinez, and 17-year-old Harado Lopez. Thil Gang is one of the top five members of the Mexican Mafia. My partner and I were just like, how did these guys from an LA gang 40 miles away
Starting point is 00:23:48 end up with off victim in our city? Why would this local person be shot by somebody that far away? There had to be more to it than just a random killing. We started looking into the Mexican Mafia aspect of it. Was he doing something illegal? Was he running drugs for the Mexican Mafia? Was he in debt to them? As we got more and more information,
Starting point is 00:24:14 we had nothing to solidify that he was moving any kind of narcotics or stolen property. With that, we figured somebody had to have asked them to do this. But if David was the target of a hit, who ordered it and why? Luckily, police have some evidence to work with. Cellphones seized from the three suspects after the high-speed chase. I was able to write a search warrant, and through that process, I was able to learn that all these cell phones were purchased together by one person living in San Diego.
Starting point is 00:24:51 They came back registered as some other guy. We tracked that guy down. We said, hey, these phones are registered to you. He goes, yep, they are. He says he had bought the phones for Anthony Navarro. He said, Anthony Navarro is like, get these phones, and I did exactly what he told me to do. He was so afraid of Anthony Navarro. So we're like, who in what parts did he play in this?
Starting point is 00:25:15 When the police investigated, it turns out Anthony Navarro was the head of a local gang. I was able to see that one of the suspects was calling and talking to Navarro. So now we know he's got to be involved in this. So we need to talk to him. Detectives tracked down an address for Anthony Navarro in the LA neighborhood of Sun Valley, 40 miles north of Buena Park.
Starting point is 00:25:41 We found out where he was living, conducted a search warrant on that location. That's when we found the Grand Gang graffiti all spray painted in the garage with their names of our killers. Their nicknames are all listed in there. So that started to put more things together. Navarro wasn't there when we served that search warrant. His wife, Bridget, she didn't know where he was.
Starting point is 00:26:03 With Anthony nowhere to be found, detectives returned to Buena Park and do some digging. We had people looking for him. We ran our checks on him. We found out that he had been an informant for a number of different agencies. He does crime, and then as soon as he's about to get caught, he goes to his handwars, LAPD, ATF.
Starting point is 00:26:24 And Anthony kept himself at a jail, but was still profiting. We had talked to those different handlers, trying to get more background on them work, and we find them at nobody was able to locate them. After several days' effort of trying to locate Navarro, detectives Pelton and Morgan are eager to make some headway in the case. So about two weeks into the investigation, Greg and I were tossing ideas around and we're like,
Starting point is 00:26:51 let's just go up there. We're antsy, we gotta do something. So we drove all the way to Canyon Country to his house, which is over an hour away. We pulled up there in part in a unmarked car and we're sitting there watching it. There's a pickup truck in front of the single garage. We already know this vehicle. When we stood to such one, it was there as well, belongs to his wife. We weren't there very long either.
Starting point is 00:27:12 We saw Bridget come out and get in the pickup truck, and she backs out the driveway. We're like, OK, maybe she's going to him, we might have to follow her. Well, then the garage door opens, and a car starts backing out. We don't know who's in a car. It could be Navarro. We got to go follow him.
Starting point is 00:27:29 Once they get out of sight, we take off. It's very difficult to follow a vehicle when you're the only vehicle. We're having to lay back, stay behind semi-trucks, peek out, and then play catch up as he's driving. And he's driving like a hundred miles an hour. They don't know we're there. So it's like, where are they going in such a hurry? We're calling the highway patrol to try and get them to stop them if they can get a unit in the area.
Starting point is 00:27:52 But as he's getting on the phone, trying to get a hold of the CHP, they get off and pull into a 7-11 parking lot. Now, it's just like, let's just jam them now. We just come straight in at them and take them down a gunpoint. We just come straight in at him and take him down a gunpoint. They pull him over with a gun strung because this was dangerous, criminal. The detectives pat down Anthony Navarro and his passenger, Daniel Chidas, and confirm neither man is armed. Anthony consents to a search of his car.
Starting point is 00:28:24 I start searching his car. I start searching a car. They're going to glove box. Shub full of papers. I'm like, well, I got to be thorough. Paged by page, I'm pulling these out one at a time. Look on the tees. I immediately recognized David Montemayur's home address
Starting point is 00:28:41 and his phone number written on his piece of paper and another thing in Spanish as one of the deputies from the local area came to assist us, was able to let me know that that said one arm. As soon as I saw that note, to me, that was like a smoking gun. The stationery with David's address also matches paper used in his office, indicating that the hit might have come from within. As detectives were searching the car, they came across a photo of an inner freight employee named Edelmera Corona.
Starting point is 00:29:16 He has the person's address and a photo of somebody who works in the same office. There was obviously a strong connection there for the investigators. Though these two items of evidence are compelling, they aren't quite enough to warrant an arrest. But Detective Morgan doesn't have to look much longer to find something that does. I go back to searching the car,
Starting point is 00:29:43 and in the vet duct on the inside of the center console, there's a gun, a loaded gun. Anthony wasn't worried about the homicide. Anthony was worried about the fact that we found a loaded gun in his car. His Anthony is convicted felon. Now we have good reason to take him to jail. Detectives Hilton and Morgan take Anthony Navarro
Starting point is 00:30:05 and his passenger, Daniel Chaites, into custody. The investigators hope, nabbing Navarro, is the key to solving their case. Coming up, will a career felon outsmart law enforcement? He's been able to talk his way out of things for a long time. And a desperate confession leads investigators to a mastermind. She realized the gig was up.
Starting point is 00:30:33 She's a cold, cold moment. More than two weeks after the tragic shooting death of David Montemar, detectives feel they're getting close to solving his murder. After finding evidence in Anthony Navarro's car connecting him to the crime, police sit down with a known gang leader. I can tell already, Anthony's gonna want to talk to me. Anthony's a taco. One of the smartest crooks I've ever arrested. We were asked about David Montemail. Don't know about Adam Ayrochrona, Navajo Double.
Starting point is 00:31:22 But in a day plan in the back seat of his car, Sean found a pitroof Edomire Corona. I'm just like, thought you didn't know. Backed into a corner, Anthony Navarro finally breaks, revealing a crucial piece of information. Navarro told the police that, hey, we did this at the request of Edelmeira. Based on the information that Anthony gave me during his interview, I got to get Corona back in hell. After the interview concludes,
Starting point is 00:31:53 Navarro and his passenger, Daniel Chidez, are booked. Investigators now turn to their new lead, Edelmeira Corona. When Detective Martinez went to follow up to try to get more information as we were working the case, she was not available to be spoken to. She wasn't responding to calls or returning calls. I send guys out to find Edelmyra Corona. Can't find them.
Starting point is 00:32:20 I said, sit on a house. Check the ports of entries, make sure that she's not out of the country. They sit on a house she shows up, and they say, hey, you know, detect them like talk to you, can you come in? They give her a ride to the station on the one free will. Homo-Meyer's interrogation was pretty standard
Starting point is 00:32:40 from the standpoint that we're the initial denials. As is normally the case in an investigation, they slow-plated. Probably an hour, an hour and a half into it. The interview changed when I took out this note that we found in Anthony's vehicle. I put it down on table in front of the phone. We can tell me about this.
Starting point is 00:32:58 She looks down at it, looks up at me, says, I didn't write that. She wanted to leave. He's like, well, you're not, you can't leave, because we know something's up. So at that point, she was basically detained. She was marandized at that point, because she's now not free to leave. Ultimately, she realized that the gig was up.
Starting point is 00:33:15 The officers pointed out to her that you've painted yourself in this corner, and the only way out is to tell the truth. I was on the cusp of breaking my case. I need to know who wrote this note. She goes to Deborah Prona. Could David's own sister really be involved in his murder? Detectives press Edelmeira for more information.
Starting point is 00:33:39 Krona goes in to explain the story about a she went to work for the trucking company. As a temporary employee, she built a relationship with Deborah Prona. And Deborah was always complaining about David stealing from the company. He's gonna ruin this place, blah, blah, blah. And she said, I need David to disappear. I need him taken care of. Chrono was just like, I can't really help you out with that.
Starting point is 00:34:05 She goes, no, but you know people who can. She gave them the story that Deborah had solicited the murder of her brother through Edelmeiras, reputed gang boyfriend and his friends, who Deborah had seen around the trucking company. She started to tell us that, you know, her and Deborah was partied. Navarro was the person that's flight in the drugs.
Starting point is 00:34:28 Debra had asked her what about Navarro who comes and brings our drugs. He looks like a gang member. He can, can he help you out? Chrono goes in to explain this joy. Chrono. So it's like, well, I can ask him. But hey, I'm not going to do this for free. So Debra goes on, oh, David's been stealing from the company. He's got $50,000 cash at his house. Hidden in a coffee can, they can take what they want. He's just got to go away.
Starting point is 00:34:55 Corona was like, okay, I'll run it by Anthony. Corona had Anthony at $50,000. And then he's like, I'm your guy. As a result of that confession to police, they asked Edelmaira if she was willing to cooperate with them and she did. Edelmaira then did a cold call to Deborah Perna, which was recorded by the police.
Starting point is 00:35:20 When she calls Deborah and starts asking her about it, they found the note. Anthony's been arrested. What do I say? What do I do? Shut up, don't talk to me. Keep quiet, don't say anything. I'm not discussing this over the phone. I mean, she just put the nails into her coffin
Starting point is 00:35:33 with that phone call. Following the incriminating phone call, police immediately go to Debra Perna's home. There was like one one thirty in the morning and knock on the door and she answers the door. phone call police immediately go to Deborah Perna's home. There was like one 1.30 in the morning, and knock on the door and she answers the door. And she's like, what's going on? I said, oh, you're under arrest for the moto
Starting point is 00:35:52 of your brother. She's like, what? And I throw a handcuffs. They took her in for questioning. She denied knowing anything about it until they played the recording, which caused her to break down. Debbie was all freaked out.
Starting point is 00:36:11 I mean, so much so that she pedaled pants doing the Annovio. She wasn't upset about the motto of a brother. She was upset with the fact that she was being charged with the motto of a brother. Watching her get interviewed by Greg, listening to the conversation, she's a cold, cold woman. Do us like no emotion.
Starting point is 00:36:31 Just evil towards her brother. Debra claims it wasn't her intention to have her brother killed. There was a half-hearted effort on Debra's part as I remembered to say, well, I just wanted him hurt. I didn't want him killed. So she's pleading to a lesser offense, thinking it's taken her away from the homicide, but it's a felony crime committed in state of California.
Starting point is 00:36:57 And if a death occurs, no matter who it is, involved in a crime, then that's the murder rule. You're guilty of murder. On October 19th, just over two weeks after David Montemar was gunned down on the street, his sister Debra is arrested for planning the murder. Her family is stunned. We were adamant on the fact that they were wrong,
Starting point is 00:37:24 and they wouldn't tell us anything. They were just telling us that she wasn't going to go anywhere, and they gave her a no-bond. Coming up, Debra's fate hangs in the balance. There was a lot of doubt, a lot of speculation. This is a little bit anxiety, because I don't let pillows go. I mean, in the devastating, I just got up and I walked out. MUSIC
Starting point is 00:37:52 MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC Nearly three years after the murder of David Montemar, the alleged mastermind behind the plot Debra Perna heads to trial. The idea that this family, these siblings, would have such bad blood between them, that they would actually carry out a murder, is pretty unthinkable.
Starting point is 00:38:22 In the years leading up to her day in court, support from Deborah's oldest son, Never Weaver. I went to the main every week, you know, took care of her financially, visited her, you know, comforted her. There was a lot of doubt, a lot of speculation. There's no way she's involved. That's not how we get down.
Starting point is 00:38:41 So, yeah, I'll let Noah's on back in my mom, because, you know, her character number one, number two, she's my mom. The trial begins in October of 2005. Prosecutors present the case as a sibling rivalry and professional power struggle taken too far. The running theme was that Debbie Pona and David Montefonor
Starting point is 00:39:05 didn't get along. Everyone witnessed Debbie yelling and screaming at David. They didn't hide the animosity towards one another. They were unable to differentiate the personal from the professional. The lines were blurred and the trucking company was as a result of that discord fairly surviving. When Debra and David's father announced he wanted to retire, things between the siblings heated up. Debra finds out that Dad's going to sign the business of Debra.
Starting point is 00:39:35 And Debra's just like, you can't do that. Signed it over to both of us, but don't sign it over to David. Debra thought David was quandering money, and she thought there was gonna be nothing for her to take care of her and her children. But investigators were unable to find any evidence proving Debra's suspicions correct. David's wife, Susan, took care of the books,
Starting point is 00:39:57 so she was forthright in presenting that information, and as it was determined going through that, he wasn't squandering money. The company had been taking care of the whole family. When Deborah's defense attorney steps up to bat, he tries to divert the blame from his client to her gang-affiliated secretary. My argument was that Deborah was a low-hanging fruit
Starting point is 00:40:21 because she was the person everybody knew didn't like David because their battles were the most public and least throughout the company. The summary of my overall strategy was, that'll virus-full as f***. She had motive to kill David because of the money. But when prosecutors present the phone recording evidence, even Deborah's few remaining supporters find it difficult to defend.
Starting point is 00:40:46 I heard the recording of Maira, who was already working with the cops, the responses that my mom were giving were not responses to somebody who was innocent. Keep your mouth shut, what do you do? Who have you talked to, and then those were all I needed to hear. Because I know for a fact, you know, make those statements if you had nothing to do with anything. I mean, it was devastating. I just got up and I walked out, and she turned around and saw me,
Starting point is 00:41:13 and she cried my name. So it was kind of hard to just deal with, you know? On October 25, 2005, the case goes to the jury. We went through the whole six-week trial. Debbie's looking at life and prison. So my sister and I are going, did they convince one of these jewels? Yeah, so this is a little bit anxiety
Starting point is 00:41:39 because I don't let killers go. After three days of deliberation, the verdict is announced. She was convicted of conspiracy to commit murder, murder in the first degree, murder for financial gain, and she received life without the possibility of parole. Justice for David Montemar is all his wife Susan can ask for. Over the next decade, she watches fate unravel for the rest of the defense. Justice for David Montemar is all his wife Susan can ask for.
Starting point is 00:42:05 Over the next decade, she watches fate unravel for the rest of the defendants. There was a trial for each suspect in a case over the course of 10 years. Susan, who I sat outside in the courtroom with a number of times, cried with a number of times, very strong lady. And to go through all that over 10 years of trials,
Starting point is 00:42:27 she's a tough woman. In addition to Deborah, five others receive prison time. The minor who was involved in the killing, he got life without the possibility of parole. Mira, because she cooperated with the prosecution, she was convicted of manslaughter, and she got a shorter prison sentence. The Macias and Martinez both got the death penalty,
Starting point is 00:42:54 and so did Anthony and Avall. Even though this day, my mom hasn't even understand the caliber of what happened, of what she did. She's never confessed to me or even said sorry. This crime left a grieving widow, grieving children. It tore a hole through all of his family. She made decisions and ultimately put her life, her brother's life, her brother's life, put her father's life, put her kid's life,
Starting point is 00:43:26 all to the real that wheel. And, you know, we got snake eyes. David Montemar will always be remembered for his infectious joy and his heroic last moments. He was a good man and he was always smiling. It was really hard to not be infected by his happiness. David is actually remembered as a hero because he bolted from that car just a mile from his home. He knew that his wife and children were there and that these were very bad men who were going to do some very bad things.
Starting point is 00:44:01 So rather than put them in harm's way, he took the bullet himself and saved them. I literally had to tell myself that my mom was dead so that I could actually begin the coping with the loss that I don't have the mom that I was used to. And you know, she hurt me because I backed her. So, you know, now you're taking away from me and now I have to suffer the consequences of whatever you did. Deborah Perna is serving her sentence at the California Institution for Women. She will never be released.
Starting point is 00:44:43 For more information on snapped, go to oxygen.com.

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