Snapped: Women Who Murder - Joann Peterson
Episode Date: February 18, 2024When a father in Spokane, Wash., is found shot to death in his vehicle, detectives work for years to unmask a vicious killer who isn't afraid to silence witnesses; they eventually uncover a l...ong-kept family secret that breaks the case wide open.Season 31 Episode 03Originally aired: July 31, 2022Watch full episodes of Snapped for FREE on the Oxygen app: https://oxygentv.app.link/WatchSnappedPodSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
What does it mean to be black in America?
In NPR's Black Stories, Black Truths, a collection of stories that's varied, nuanced, and dynamic
as black experiences, you'll hear.
It means everything.
Search NPR Black Stories, Black Truths wherever you get your podcasts.
What does it mean to be black in America?
In NPR's Black Stories, Black Truths, a
collection of stories as varied, nuanced, and dynamic as black experiences, you'll
hear. It means everything. Search NPR Black Stories, Black Truths wherever you get your podcasts.
A shotgun blast through a windshield ends the life of a dedicated father in an instant.
When I saw the carnage in this car,
it reminded me of a mob-style execution.
An execution the victim's fear was coming.
He had been the target of an earlier shooting
where they didn't get him.
Whoever had done this first shooting had gotten away and had not been identified.
He knew somebody was trying to kill him.
He was wearing a bulletproof vest at the time that he was killed.
Investigators realize no witness is safe.
People were just scared that if they said anything,
they would either be killed or harmed.
One detective must risk it all to expose
a heartless mastermind.
She gave me instructions to meet her at the cemetery
and to come along.
Worst case was that somebody was going to be waiting there to ambush me.
Authorities uncover a meticulous plot crafted by a powerful criminal.
It was fairly astounding, the control she was able to exert over other people.
She was a woman that you need to be fearful of.
Because if you crossed her, she was gonna get you.
The New York Times
The New York Times
The New York Times
The New York Times
The New York Times
The New York Times
The New York Times
The New York Times The New York Times November 18th, 1991, Spokane, Washington.
It's 7 p.m. when a frenzy of 911 calls flood into the Spokane County Sheriff's Office,
reporting a shooting at the Willow Street Apartments.
I was home after a full day shift on a Monday night,
when I got a call that I was needed to respond to a homicide scene in the Spokane Valley.
When first responders arrive, they quickly gather information
from several of the witnesses who called 911.
People in the complex heard the gunshots
and then immediately called police.
The person that did this then escaped right away.
They direct officers to a vehicle
where they locate an unresponsive male
slumped behind the steering wheel.
The deputies found him shot dead in his vehicle.
And detectives, forensics, people were called out
and started their investigation there at the scene.
The crime scene was a small apartment complex parking lot.
There was a male in the car that was fully dressed,
still seatbelted into the driver's seat.
And he had a massive head and face wound.
The level of carnage is shocking, even for seasoned detectives.
He'd been shot point blank almost.
The shot had actually been through window glass.
He had died instantly.
When I saw the carnage in this car,
there was no question that he was a target
that somebody was making sure that they eliminated.
It reminded me of a mob-style execution.
It'd been done a lot of homicide scenes,
and we just didn't see those in our area.
homicide scenes, and we just didn't see those in our area.
Whoever pulled the trigger left a key piece of evidence on the ground just a few feet from the car.
The person that committed the crime
left the shotgun there.
The shotgun led us to initially feel
that was probably the murder weapon.
It was a Winchester 12 gauge. The only distinguishing things on it was a little chunk of wood that was broken out of the stock.
And there was some type of paint rub off on the stock as well.
While technicians continue processing the crime scene, detectives question residents of the apartment complex
to ID the victim.
He was identified as Peter Zion.
He was about 40 years old.
The witnesses from the apartment complex told us
that he was a resident there at the apartments
along with his girlfriend,
and that he had probably just
arrived home from work when the shooting occurred.
But none of Pete's neighbors have any idea why he would
have been the target of such a brutal murder.
Starting into this investigation,
there was many, many background questions
surrounding Pete's eye. And this was a target. And starting into this investigation, there was many, many background questions
surrounding Pete Zion.
This was a target.
This man was wanted dead by somebody,
and they made sure they got him.
Why would somebody sneak up on him in an ambush attack?
Born on June 27, 1951, Peter Zion came from modest roots.
Pete had grown up in Chirila, Washington.
They lived on a small farm where they had a mill.
Pete's father was a real hard-working guy that would work the fields
and knew how to do just about everything around the farm.
Pete's mom was on the city council. They were a strong base for Pete to grow up under.
With a work ethic as strong as his parents, Pete pursued a career in a highly demanded trade.
Pete and I met at Spokane Community College while we were taking industrial electricity.
Pete was good electrician, hard worker, friendly, outgoing, kind of almost bubbly.
At 35 years old, Pete was living in Spokane, Washington, when he met someone who would
change his life forever, 30-year-old Oren Goldberg.
An avid runner, she met Pete during a local road race.
Her parents, Mel Goldberg and Joanne, they had one son that was Thiel.
They had two daughters, Oren and Merv.
They were very well known.
Oren worked for her parents at their realty office in Newport, Washington,
one hour outside of Spokane.
Joanne Goldberg as the matriarch and the main head of the family.
She made the decisions. She insisted things be done her way.
Mel was pretty easy going and was really friendly,
was a really nice guy.
Pete and Oren dated for about a year
before moving in together.
Four months later, O'Reen became pregnant.
They married in 1988 after the birth of their daughter
and made their home in Spokane.
His eyes would just twinkle,
talking about this little girl.
He'd smile from ear to ear.
He thought she was just heaven on earth.
But by 1989, not everything in Pete's life was going as smoothly as fatherhood.
I think not long after the child was born that their marriage started to go south.
He was a good father. His daughter meant a lot to him. He made that very clear.
And I think that he would have stayed married just for the sake of his daughter.
When their attempts to reconcile failed,
Oreen left with their infant daughter.
When she left and took the child,
she moved up to Newport, Washington,
which is about 60 miles from Spokane.
That was to her parents' residence.
Orrin kind of kept a low profile
and let her mother, Joanne, really handle things.
Pete began traveling to the Goldbergs on the weekends
to spend time with his daughter
and eventually
filed for divorce.
That of course involved the request for visitation with his daughter and at least partial custody
of his daughter and that just didn't sit well with Joanne.
That's not the way that she imagined her family
with the granddaughter being able to be away
for any period of time.
The divorce proceedings, they became a bit ugly.
Joanne had basically told Peter that there's no way
you're going to get my granddaughter.
He was going through the custody battle.
He was sad, kind of depressed over the whole situation.
He wanted to get his mind in a position where he could go on with his life.
While Pete struggled for access to his beloved daughter,
he found solace in his work and eventually met someone new.
Thirty-four-year-old Helen Eakin.
We had some discussions about her and she was a very good person,
had a good responsible job.
In the fall of 1990, about a year after his split from Maureen, Pete was starting to settle
into a new life with Helen.
He was living with Helen at her apartment.
Her and Pete were waiting for the divorce to be final so they could move forward in
the relationship.
He was going through a hard time, going through a divorce, but he still had a good outlook
on life.
MUSIC
But Pete's attempt at a fresh start is cut short
on November 18, 1991.
Peter is shot point blank range with the shotgun
through the window, right at his head,
and he dies instantly.
The shotgun is dropped there at the scene.
The assailant fled.
Though the scene indicates an ambush,
what investigators discover under Pete's coat
swiftly calls that theory into question.
He was carrying a handgun.
Plus, he was also wearing a bulletproof vest.
It was not common for us to encounter people wearing
bulletproof vests at that time.
That he had one on was quite unusual.
Well, it told me that he was scared
and he was trying to protect himself.
Coming up, detectives discover this isn't the first time
the victim faced an armed assailant held bent on murder.
This person was chasing him, bullets hitting off
brick through the alley.
He was a changed guy.
Paranoia had said you.
November 18th, 1991, Spokane, Washington.
Investigators on the scene of Pete Zion's ambush style murder
are working to piece together a puzzling array of clues.
The crime scene essentially consisted of the card that the victim was in,
his body, and the shotgun on the ground.
There really wasn't any other physical evidence.
There was no video evidence or anything else at that scene.
While there are no surveillance cameras in the area,
police do find a potential witness.
At the time of the shooting, one of the tenants
in the apartment's paneler heard the shot, ran outside,
and saw a gold or tan colored vehicle
accelerating very fast out of the parking lot onto the street.
She couldn't really say for sure the people,
if there was more than one.
She just knew there was a noise and there was a car racing
out of there.
Her being able to identify the car specifically she did
was pretty helpful because a lot of witnesses
aren't that good.
Officers fan out in search of the vehicle
based on the description
while detectives begin tracking down Pete's loved ones.
At the time of his murder, Peter was living with his girlfriend Helen Eakin.
Investigators immediately locate the couple's apartment within the complex to break the
news.
It's just typical police procedure to interview boyfriends, girlfriends, significant others.
Meeting with Helen, her reaction to Pete being dead
was appropriate to someone who had just suffered a severe loss.
She was home for the evening.
She had heard the sound of the shotgun,
but didn't realize what it was and fortunately
hadn't gone outside.
When detectives ask Helen about the handgun and bulletproof vest found on Pete, Helen
reveals some startling news.
He had also been the target of an earlier shooting where they didn't get him.
Approximately two weeks earlier was October 25th at 7 o'clock in the morning.
He had gotten up for work, noticed that his tire was flat on his car, and he drove across
the street to a mini-mart.
He went to reinflate the tire at which time he noticed that somebody was standing by him.
And when he looked up, there was a figure
that had a Richard Nixon mask on.
That person was holding a revolver.
This person is completely disguised,
heavy clothing and something over their face.
And they immediately fire a round at him.
He reacts by jumping up, starts running.
This person keeps chasing him,
shooting rounds as they run.
This short, stocky person was chasing him,
bullets hitting off brick through the alley.
I was chasing him, bullets hitting off brick through the alley.
None of the rounds hit him, and the person finally
leaves and out of sight.
He gets on the phone, calls 911s, and I just got shot at.
Helen confirms that Pete filed a police report
two weeks earlier. Whoever had done this first shooting at Pete Zion
had gotten away and had not been identified.
The examination at the scene determined
that there was a hole in the tire in a place
that somebody had punctured the tire intentionally
to let the air out.
tire intentionally to let the air out.
In Pete's statement on October 25th, he offered up his own theory of who was responsible.
He told detectives that the reason why I think this happened
is because I'm in a bitter child custody dispute. Peter made it very clear that if anything happened to him,
that it would be his ex-wife's family
that they needed to look at.
I saw him a short time after that, and he was a changed guy.
I mean, paranoia had set in on him.
He was scared changed guy. I mean, he was... Paranoia had said in on him.
He was scared to death.
Because back in his mind, he knew somebody was trying to kill him.
He told them that, well, from now on, I'm going to start carrying a sidearm with me, and wear a bulletproof vest.
Though Pete felt confident he knew who was out to kill him, he died before investigators could substantiate his claims.
That case was still being looked into at the time the murder occurred.
Another detective handled that investigation,
and the issues with Pete's estranged wife,
Oren and the child custody
had been brought up.
But there hadn't been any interviews conducted yet.
There wasn't really much evidence to really narrow down.
After learning of Pete's accusations
towards his former in-laws, homicide detectives
reach out to Pete's longtime attorney
to learn more about the custody battle.
They appointed a guardian of the item, which is not unusual
in a divorce case.
So the guardian of the item is there to protect the child
and to give a candid opinion to the judge
as to who would be the best parent.
Her report said that Oren should have custody,
and that Pete would have traditional visitation, which
would include overnights on weekends.
Oren's family had sworn that he's never
going to see his daughter.
Joanne could not stand to have her granddaughter be given to Peter,
her son-in-law, even on the weekend.
She decided she would take care of it,
and her way to try and take care of it is she alleged sexual abuse by Mr. Zion on his own daughter.
Pete and I, these false allegations against him.
Child protective services got involved.
The Spokane Police Department got involved
and were conducting an investigation.
They said that there was a lack of probable cause
and the clinical psychologist thought it was unusual
that she met with Oreen and that there was never
any discussion about any sexual abuse with the child
and then all of a sudden it pops up afterwards.
So they came to the decision that there wasn't any substance to these allegations.
With his name cleared, Pete continued to advocate for visitation.
It was coming down to a pivotal time in the divorce proceedings,
because trial was forthcoming.
The final decisions were going to be made, who the child would go with, if there was going to be child support,
visitation, those types of issues that surrounded the infant child.
As homicide detectives dig into the police report from the first attempt on Pete's life, one detail immediately stands out.
In that first shooting, three weeks before Pete was murdered, there was another witness
in the parking lot that has seen this car leaving the scene. It was a tan or a brown-colored car,
and it had fled out of the area and out of view.
He knew that there was the connection with the getaway car
because of the fact that, you know,
it was described as a brown car
in the first shooting, second shooting as well.
Detectives released the witnesses' description
of the vehicle to the public.
It's a shot in the dark,
but you try to at least get something to start looking for.
Coming up, a flood of tips rushes in.
Witnesses came out of the same vehicle
that had been parked in front of their residents
for a couple of weeks.
And a killer tries to silence witnesses at any cost.
She was really afraid of providing more information.
They said, you know, not for nothing,
but we are extremely scared of this family.
Within a couple of weeks, their house would be set on fire.
MUSIC So far you're not losing. The only thing you're losing is my patience. Quickly, I see that. Ding!
The queen of the courtroom is back.
I didn't do anything.
You wouldn't know the truth if it came up
and slapped you in the face.
I see he's not intimidated by anything.
I can fix that.
New cases.
She wanted to fight me.
Leap her.
A loan.
Okay, so, um.
Not this is not a so.
This is a period.
Classic Judy.
Did you sleep with her?
Yes, Your Honor.
You married his cousin.
His brother.
That's not him.
Yes, ma'am.
I would make a beeline for the door.
The Emmy Award winning series returns.
How did I know that?
I have crystal ball in my head.
It's an all-new season.
It's streaming. You can say anything.
Judy Justice. Only on Free V.
From Wondery, this is Black History For Real.
I'm Francesca Ramsey.
And I'm Consciously.
What do most people think about when they hear the words Black History?
Well, in that case, uh, Rosa Parks, Reconstruction, MLK, February, Black History Mom.
Exactly, exactly. There are so many stories of Black History that we just are not really
talking about or thinking about, especially outside of February.
And we are about to flip the script on all of that.
Follow Black History for Real on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts.
Listen everywhere on February 5th or you can listen early and ad-free on Wondery Plus starting
January 29th.
Join Wondery Plus on the Wondry app or on Apple Podcasts. Less than 24 hours after the murder of 40-year-old Pete Zion,
a Bolo-issued for the getaway car
yields promising leads from Spokane locals.
Photos were publicly disseminated of the vehicle.
Witnesses recognized those photos
and made contact with the sheriff's office.
We got called that this car was sitting out pretty much
in plain view in front of this lady's house.
Approximately half a mile or so from where the murder occurred.
Investigators respond and find a car matching the description
of the getaway vehicle parked on the suburban street.
The vehicle was recovered, abandoned
in front of a residential house.
The license plates had been altered
to make them not identifiable immediately.
The altered plates raised the level of suspicion.
Inside the unlocked Chevrolet, investigators
find the vin and run it through their database.
Turned out the car had been stolen a couple of weeks prior to all this from an area north
of Ocant probably 10 miles from where the murder occurred.
And because of that, we were able to seize this evidence.
We still hadn't necessarily confirmed it as the murder vehicle, but we did take a picture of it back to Pamela
at the apartment complexes.
She identified that car in the picture
as the same one she had seen leaving the scene of the murder.
While crime scene texts sweep the car for evidence,
investigators interview Pete's estranged wife, Oren,
and her parents, Mel and Joanne, on November 19.
Police suspected the family members
because of all of just the rancor and the animosity
that had come up from the divorce proceedings.
Mel, Joanne, and Irene said that they would be willing
to sit down and answer any of our questions,
but only as a group.
And that that was the only way they would do it.
that that was the only way they would do it.
The family offers alibis for the night of Pete's murder. The family told investigators that they were to family dinner.
Joanne and Mel's daughter and son-in-law,
Mervyn Gregg alibi them for that late afternoon, early evening.
The family had shown up sometime in the afternoon
and stayed for dinner.
So from five o'clock to nine o'clock,
they were at Greg and Merv's house.
Family members all had strong alibis
and police couldn't connect the family
to the first shooting or the second shooting.
With nothing to hold the Goldberg family on, investigators let them go.
We could not say who actually pulled the triggers.
And detectives hit another dead end when the search of the suspected getaway vehicle yields no results.
We were feeling pretty confident we had the right car, but we didn't have anything in the car immediately to identify anybody that had used it.
Without any physical evidence and no new leads to follow, The investigation begins to stall in 1992.
It wasn't progressing much,
and I had other cases I was working on,
but I would make callbacks often
to everybody that we had talked to before
to develop further information,
but it was moving slowly. It really goes cold when there's not other tips or new information coming in to act upon.
In late November of 1993, Newport residents Bob Lam and Marcy Harrington reach out to the Spokane County Sheriff's Office with information that could break
the case wide open.
Bob and Marcy Harrington were neighbors of the Goldbergs
property up in the Newport area.
They said they were the owner of the shotgun that
wasn't used in this murder.
Of course, that got my attention immediately.
Detectives are curious.
After all, they've never released a description
of the murder weapon to the public.
Bob Lamb identified this shotgun specifically
with the particulars about the damage
to the wood stock and the paint rub off.
They had it stored kind of off the hallway
up against behind a door.
One day, Oren's brother, Thiel Goldberg, it showed up.
He picked it up and walked out with it.
It wasn't unusual because Thiel Goldberg was known
to borrow their stuff often.
But after Pete's murder, they say
Thiel started acting strange.
He went back to the neighbor and attempted
to buy the weapon from them, explaining that he
couldn't return it.
Investigators ask Bob and Marcy why it took them so long to contact police.
And they confess their guilt has finally outweighed their fear.
They said, you know, not for nothing, but we are extremely scared of this family.
And we didn't come forward to cooperate originally with any information because of our extreme fear of them.
After speaking with Bob and Marcy, it quickly becomes clear that the couple
had a good reason to be afraid.
Within a couple of weeks, Bob and Marcy's hearts burned down.
We were pretty convinced that it had been set on fire,
and it was because the conversations about Dempion
witnesses where they might be asked to testify.
Despite the assertions, nothing links the Goldberg family
to the fire.
And of course, as a result, Mr. Lamb decided they no longer
wanted to cooperate out of fear of what a result, Mr. Lam decided they no longer wanted to cooperate out of
fear of what might happen to them.
After the fire, Pete's case stagnates yet again, leaving investigators frustrated.
Someone is making sure that no one's going to talk because they're going to be fearful
for their life.
So without any hard evidence whatsoever,
the police are just stuck.
This case languishes for several years.
There is no break in the case whatsoever.
Then in 1999, eight years after Pete's murder, investigators get a big break.
I got a call from my office from a lady who was real mysterious, and she wanted to talk
about the Pete Zion murder. She knew somebody who had told her they had committed this murder.
She was pretty reluctant.
She mentioned being fearful.
Let's call her after quite a bit of convincing.
Finally said, I'll tell you my first name, which she did.
It was Shirley.
Shirley agrees to meet Detective Henderson,
but only under certain conditions.
She said, well, you come and meet me,
and it's going to be in the cemetery outside of town.
She said, if I see anybody else or any police cars around,
she says, I'm gone, and you won't ever talk to me again.
Coming up, to solve the case, Detective Henderson puts his life on the line.
The worst case that came to mind was that somebody was there to either ambush me or
was going to come in with guns of blaring. July 1999. It's been eight years since Pete Zion's brutal murder. Detective Mark Henderson
is heading to a cemetery in northern Idaho to meet a potential witness alone.
I did not think it was a smart idea, but I think it was a calculated risk
that I felt after years of chasing this case,
this may be the golden key.
Kind of was on alert until this pickup shows up
and I meet this lady.
And she starts telling me some details about the murder case.
She mentioned where the car had been stashed and gave the information on the gun.
She knows about this murder better than I do. Either she did it or she's talked to the person that did it.
When Detective Henderson asks Shirley who her source is,
she brings a longtime suspect back into the spotlight,
her new friend, Joanne.
Joanne and Mel Goldberg, her husband, got a divorce
relatively quickly after Pete's death.
And Joanne resettled up in Idaho.
Formerly Joanne Goldberg,
Shirley's neighbor since 1998
now goes by her maiden name, Peterson.
Shirley says over the past year,
the two women became fast friends,
but things took a turn recently
when Joanne began divulging a dark secret.
Joanne started to open up about her life
and things she had done.
And she started talking about the murder of Peter Zion.
And admitted that she was the mastermind behind it all.
Not only surely now have statements from her,
but Joanne offers to take her to Spokane for lunch.
And after they're done with lunch,
Joanne drives her short distance away
into this parking lot of this apartment complex,
stops, points to the slide, and says, that's where Pete got
shot and killed at.
stops, points to the slide, and says, that's where Pete got shot and killed that.
It was a very detailed statement made by Shirley.
She's got her pointing out the crime scene
and describing it to her to a T, basically.
Shirley's statement is shocking,
but detectives need to corroborate her story before they can bring Joanne in.
Then, a little over a month later,
they get an unexpected visit from her son,
Theo, and her daughter, Merv.
Theo and his sister decide that they got to talk.
So they go to the police and tell them
what had happened to Peter Zion
and that their mother had killed him.
The two then provide detectives with details
about the night of November 18th, 1991.
The night of the murder,
Merv and her husband
get a phone call from Joanne who says they're in Spokane
at a store and they're heading towards Merv's house.
This is probably 7.30-ish in the evening.
And they said, well, why?
They were going to demand that murder alliby them for that late afternoon or evening.
But Thiel Goldberg admits to a much bigger role
than the murder.
Thiel was the one who got ahold of the weapon
that ultimately was used to kill Peter Zion.
He got the shotgun from the neighbors
and then took it to his mother.
Theale confirms that in addition to the murder,
his parents were involved in the first ambush on Pete.
Theale confirmed Joanne was the trigger person and that all of them had been part of the
planning, including Irene.
Detectives ask why the siblings have decided to come forward now after all these years.
They became convinced that Joanne was going off the deep end and she was
coming after them and Mel. Joanne had started making some threats towards
Mel and Thiel was getting real concerned about being around her and he was
essentially getting scared of her. I think keeping this family secret for so long
was weighing on Thiel. He was just so overcome with that guilt and I think keeping this family secret for so long was weighing on Thiel. He was just so overcome with that guilt.
And I think with finally deciding he didn't want to be controlled,
like he was being controlled by his mother, that he finally decided to come forward.
Thiel says Arine continued to raise her daughter,
and the family intended to insulate her from any trouble,
but things haven't worked out as planned.
Aurene at the time was suffering from brain cancer
and she was at high risk of that ending her life.
In late October, 1999, officers move in on Joanne Peterson.
We took Joanne into custody on the federal weapons charge on that date.
When news of Joanne's arrest spreads, her ex-husband Mel Goldberg surrenders to police.
He basically opened up and said, yeah, I did this. Her ex-husband, Mel Goldberg, surrenders to police.
He basically opened up and said, yeah, I did this.
She did it, and I was involved.
I was the getaway driver.
Mel agrees to tell detectives exactly what happened
the night of the murder.
He filled in the blanks.
Mel and Joanne were waiting to see Pete pulling his parking lot. They had a place where they could watch him from discreetly.
After Mr. Zion had backed his car in, Mel drove up to Mr. Zion's vehicle.
Ms. Peterson got out of the passenger side of the vehicle with a shotgun.
Miss Peterson got out of the passenger side of the vehicle with a shotgun.
Mel tells police Go-Anne wanted to make sure
that Peter would know that she was the one that
was going to kill him.
And she looked him right in the eye
and then pulled the trigger.
right in the eye and then pulled the trigger.
After she had discharged his firearm into Mr. Zion killing him, she dropped the shotgun.
I don't think that shotgun was meant to be left behind.
I think she shot that gun and it surprised the hell out of her.
I think she shot that gun and it surprised the hell out of her.
Coming up, the case seems like a surefire win for prosecutors. At this point, really the case is going to be a slam dunk.
But the defendants have other plans.
We expect him to plead guilty because he fully confessed, but he didn't.
MUSIC
Following detailed confessions from Joanne Peterson's
estranged family, police file an array of charges
in the murder of Pete Zion.
Both Mr. Goldberg and Joanne Peterson
were charged with aggravated first degree murder.
And Thiel was charged with first degree murder
because he had obtained the shotgun knowing
what it would be used for.
Despite suspicions of her involvement,
Pete's ex-wife, Oren, continues to evade the law.
Oren, at the time of the prosecution,
was suffering from brain cancer.
It wasn't a slam-dunk case against her,
and the elected prosecutor ultimately
made the decision that she would not be charged
for those reasons.
In January 2000, Thiel Goldberg cements his fate. The Thiel pled guilty to a reduced charge of second-degree murder.
Of course, that was a negotiated plea.
He got the benefit of the fact that he came forward and broke this case.
Thiel Goldberg received a fairly lenient sentence
for his cooperation.
And he agreed to testify in trial against his parents.
At this point, really, the case is
going to be a slam dunk.
We expected Mel to plead guilty because he fully confessed,
but he didn't.
When the time comes for Mel Goldberg to submit his plea,
his decision is a shocked prosecutor's.
He decided I'm going to trial.
Mel Goldberg was scared to death at Joanne Peterson,
and he would have done whatever she requested him to do
during the time they were married. Goldberg was scared to death at Joanne Peterson. And he would have done whatever she requested him to do
during the time they were married.
But prosecutors argue he is far from innocent.
It was very clear to us as prosecutors
that he was highly involved in the planning.
And he was actively involved, of course,
in covering up the murder after it occurred.
Mr. Goldberg was sentenced to life in prison
without the possibility of parole.
As prosecutors prepare for Joanne's trial,
they work to pin down her motives.
Joanne's a person who was just totally self-involved
and controlling and wanted to control
every part of her own life.
And so that extended to her family.
And she just could not envision having her granddaughter
leaving her family to visit even with her own biological
father.
She decided to commit this murder so that he would not
get visitation in this custody case.
Prosecutors are ready to argue their case in December of 2000.
But suddenly they get word Joanne has changed her mind.
Joanne turns around and pleads guilty to the murder charges.
Completely surprised me and all of us.
There was no way that she was going to plead guilty.
Joanne was the talker and the person
who loved bragging about stuff.
It's like, didn't see that coming.
Joanne decided to plead guilty to first degree murder.
I'm sure that Joanne Peterson's attorney
advised her that she was at high risk of getting
an aggravated murder conviction, in which case
she would have gotten a sentence of life in prison
she would have never gotten out.
However, the impact of Joanne's manipulation will not soon be forgotten.
He was always a good father, very caring, loved his daughter dearly.
Not only were her grandparents in prison, her mom dies and her dad's dead,
this poor girl just ended up with no family.
She never did get a chance to know her father's dead, this poor girl just ended up with no family.
She never did get a chance to know her father's family,
and that was a real shame.
People had great respect for Pete.
Pete was just a wonderful person.
He was always happy in a good mood.
He was a hard worker.
He was friendly. It was hard to find fault with Pete.
The old Goldberg was released from prison in 2004 after serving three years of his four-year
sentence. Orrin Goldberg died of brain cancer in 2005 when her daughter was 18 years old. Mel Goldberg died in prison in April of 2020.
Two months later, Joanne Peterson died while serving her life
sentence at Washington State Prison.
If you're listening to this podcast, then chances are good.
You are a fan of the strange, dark and mysterious.
And if that's true, then you're in luck.
Because once again, Mr. Ball and Podcast,
Strange, Dark, and Mysterious stories is available everywhere you get your podcasts.
Each week on the Mr. Ball and Podcast, you'll hear new stories about inexplicable encounters,
shocking disappearances, true crime cases, and everything in between.
Like our recent episode titled White Dust.
After a middle-aged couple failed to answer their daughter's messages and calls, the
daughter drives the few hours to her parents' house to check on them.
But after arriving and seeing both her parents' cars in the driveway, the daughter gets an
uneasy feeling and just can't stomach going inside.
To hear the rest of that story and hear hundreds more stories like it,
follow Mr. Ballin podcast on Amazon Music
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Prime members can listen early and add free on Amazon Music.