Snapped: Women Who Murder - Valerie Pape
Episode Date: May 8, 2022The identity of a Jane Doe found dead in a An Arizona socialite makes a gruesome discovery, which leads local law enforcement to ask questions about her troubled marriage; she claims she foun...d a man dead, but police have reason to believe otherwise.Season 22, Episode 6Originally aired: January 7, 2018Watch 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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Hi, I'm Lindsay Graham, the host of Wonder East Podcast American Scandal.
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Valerie Payt was a glamorous divorcee. She was blonde, she was petite, a very, very fashionable lady.
She had this beautiful friend Jack sent.
And she came to America hoping to put her failed marriage behind her.
She had some friends in Scottsdale, and she jumped on a plane to make a life here.
One that would be even more upscale and dazzling than what she left behind,
thanks to Aura. and she jumped on a plane to make a life here. One that would be even more upscale and dazzling
than what she left behind thanks to Ira Pomerance.
It was the playboy kind of guy.
He had airplanes, he had several jaguars.
Their courtship was swift.
On their first date, he took her to Las Vegas.
But barely four years later,
Ira would suddenly disappear.
They said, Valerie, listen,
we need to put in the missing persons report.
Was the wealthy playboy on the run?
He was involved with bad people.
Did Valerie know more than she let on?
The delivery driver had to see something being put into the dumpster.
And would the missing man ever be found?
It was a torso, no arms, no legs, no head.
There's no dental, there's no way to identify the body. -♪ -♪ -♪
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Scottsdale, Arizona is a glitzy town of 200,000,
just northeast of Phoenix.
It'd be like the Beverly Hills of Phoenix, I would say.
Upper class, kind of Phoenix, I would say.
Upper class, kind of shopping, art, restaurants, jewelry stores, and salons.
Scottsdale is the place where people want to live, the place where the movers and shakers
live.
People, like 60-year-old Ira Pomerans's, a successful businessman who enjoyed everything that life
in Scottsdale had to offer.
He loved to play golf.
He was a pilot.
He had a plane.
Loved people.
He loved being around people.
We were very, very close.
We were good buddies.
Which is why Lewis Milazo was worried about Ira on the morning of January 26, 2000.
The old friends hadn't spoken in almost a week, which was unusual.
I mean, I spoke to him four times a week, you know, and I was concerned.
So concerned that Lewis contacted Ira's wife, 47-year-old Valerie Pate.
I called Valerie.
I said to her, where's Ira?
She said, I don't know.
And I said, what was the last time you saw him?
She said, I think I saw him on late Sunday.
But I don't know where he is.
He didn't come home.
And I said, didn't come home.
She said, yeah, he probably went to Las Vegas
to something.
Ira Wood sometimes leave town without warning.
That's really how he had lived his entire life,
you know, very spontaneous, always on a whim,
taking off to Vegas, just doing things for himself.
Still, Lewis wanted to make sure nothing had happened
to his friend.
They said, Valerie, listen, I think we need to put
in a missing person's report.
Was Ira's friend simply overreacting?
Was it possible he'd really gone to Vegas?
Or was Lewis right to think that something was wrong with Ira?
Something bad enough to cut off all contact.
The police would eventually find the answer
and Valerie would lead them to it.
Born in 1952, Valerie started life far from Arizona in a picturesque town in the French countryside. She was the daughter of a French doctor, the person who really hadn't had to struggle
a great deal in life who was born with the silver spoon.
Essentially, she was kind of prim and proper brought up that way.
Growing up, she attended the best Catholic boarding school in the province.
She called it a white glove school in France,
which meant they wore white gloves with their uniform.
After graduation, Valerie married well and moved to Paris.
She was married to a wealthy man, a certified public accountant.
They lived in the Paris suburbs.
They had two homes.
She would take vacations to Italy where she enjoyed winter sports.
She was a lady of means.
And she was everything a sophisticated Parisian woman was supposed to be.
She was blonde, she was petite.
She was a woman who would be noticed, a very, very fashionable lady.
She always had beautiful clothes on,
designer clothes, designer bags.
She always was dressed to the teas.
She was basically living the good life in France.
But there was one thing lacking in Valerie's life, children.
She'd always wanted a baby and could not conceive,
and that always made her very unhappy
because she wanted kids really bad.
Eventually, Valerie and her husband adopted a little girl.
She loved her daughter very much.
But just as it appeared that Valerie finally had it all,
her life fell apart.
She and her husband divorced
and the final settlement cost Valerie her daughter.
When her and the husband divorced,
she lost custody completely, had no visitation rights.
Over 40 and suddenly alone,
Valerie decided to start over in the United States.
She had some friends in Scottsdale.
She jumped on a plane, I guess, and came over
and tried to make a life here. Once settled into Scottsdale. She jumped on a plane, I guess, and came over and tried to make a life here.
Once settled into Scottsdale, Valerie began taking Cosmetology classes at the local community college.
She had this idea of opening a very prestigious salon in downtown Scottsdale.
And thanks to Ira Palmer-Rance, Valerie would realize her dream and more.
13 years older than Valerie,
Ira wasn't from Arizona either.
He was from Montseller, New York, and then Brooklyn.
He'd been married in divorce twice,
failed marriages that were largely Iris fault,
according to the youngest of his two daughters.
Marriages probably be most difficult relationship there is.
So, if you're not willing to work at that relationship
every day, it's going to fall apart.
And my father being a free spirit and not wanting to be told where to be or what to do,
I think he had issues.
However, even as Ira struggled in his personal life, his career flourished.
He was in the garment industry.
He imported garments, you know, sold the fabric to manufacturers.
Manufacturers like his old friend, Louis Milozzo.
We were in the same industry, and over time,
we became friends.
And the relationship just grew.
And when Louis moved to Scottsdale in 1992,
he convinced Ira to follow.
Louis, tell my dad it's much more kick-back,
and you can kind of send my retire.
IRA was in his early 50s when he made the move to Scottsdale, but unlike Louis,
he wasn't ready to retire just yet.
He went and started up some businesses, restaurant businesses, nightclub businesses.
Although owning nightclubs was more than just a business venture for IRA,
it was also a chance to make the most of his midlife crisis.
He was a playboy, kind of guy.
Women were attracted to him.
He was a good-looking man.
And, you know, he really didn't have a problem getting
a date.
There were plane rides, there were fancy dinners, drive
around in his Ferrari.
He lived a lavish lifestyle.
However, it wasn't Ira's flashy car
or playboy lifestyle that led him to Valerie.
In 1994, as part of her cosmetology courses,
Valerie volunteered to cut in style hair
for residents at a Scottsdale assisted living facility.
And one of her clients just happened to be Ira's elderly father who'd moved to Scottsdale soon after his son.
Ira's father asked Valerie about her marital status.
And when he discovered that she was single,
he told her that I have a son who you have to meet.
The result was a whirlwind courtship.
On their first date, he took her to Las Vegas.
She had never seen anything like it before,
you know, all the glitz and glamour of the strip.
Valerie, with her conservative Catholic upbringing
and upper middle class Parisian background,
had never met a playboy like Ira before.
You had a boy's charm about him. He had a boy who's charm about him.
He was a lot of fun to be around.
Definitely like the life of the party.
And Ira was just as taken with Valerie.
And the way she spoke, she had this beautiful friend
Jackson, I think, you know, it was alloring to him.
Within six months, Valerie had moved into Ira's condo,
and within a year, he bought the couple a house
in a fashionable Scottsdale neighborhood.
It's huge, 4,000 square foot home with a pool,
and you know, it was everything for Valerie.
Her house was gorgeous.
Persian rogues, a lot of ride iron, very well decorated.
And soon after buying Valerie a home,
Ira bought her an engagement ring.
They got married at the house.
The wedding held before an intimate gathering
of family and friends was in November of 1995.
Ira, can you have a last word, here?
So long, ever.
Nice, though. Nice job.
Moving on, a big moment.
He's ready.
You mean I kiss the bride?
And soon after saying, I do,
Ira helped Valerie achieve her dream
of opening a salon too in Scottsdale's trendy old town.
It was, you know, it was like in the heart of Scottsdale.
It was happening in place.
He leased the place and did whatever they had to do to fix it up.
Although at the last minute, the salon almost failed to get off the ground.
She was supposed to open it with a girl from beauty school. And that fell through.
In need of a partner to help handle the workload
and with few contacts in Scottsdale,
Valerie turned to an old friend from France,
a man named Michelle.
They knew each other when they were children.
She called him in France and said,
come over, you have to help me.
So he came over to own half the business with her.
With Michelle's last minute assistance, the salon opened as planned.
And thanks to its upscale French flair, it was an instant success.
The salon was very popular. It was always busy when I was in there.
Besides hair, we had a lot of art and a lot of very boutique-type clothing.
We had a lot of parties in the atrium.
We'd have a band, you know, stuff like that.
And by the end of 1999, two years after Ira invested in her salon,
Valerie had made a name for herself in Scottsdale.
She was well-loved in the community.
But would she be able to hang on to her status and her salon
after Ira suddenly disappeared?
Coming up, a delivery driver makes a gruesome discovery.
It was a torso.
No arms, no legs, no head.
But are the dismembered remains?
Ira's.
There are no prints.
There's no dental.
There's no way to identify the body.
It was January 26, 2000, when 47-year-old Valerie
Pape walked into the Scottsdale Arizona Police
Department to report her husband, 60-year-old Valerie Pate walked into the Scottsdale Arizona Police Department to report her husband
60-year-old Iropomerans missing.
I called her and asked her to file a missing person's report
and I met Valerie at Scottsdale Police and filled out a
missing person's report.
She showed up and was in and out in five minutes
to fill out the report.
She said, maybe you want to Vegas,
that would be a good time.
And knowing Ira, Valerie, may have had a point.
My father had a zest for fun.
It was more of a free spirit
and wanted to come and go as he pleases.
However, Ira's friend, Louis Milazo,
and his daughters were still concerned.
None of them had heard from Ira in almost a week.
Maybe you didn't have to wait just to have a good time, but that's maybe a couple of days
worth of no calls, but not this is like the fifth day or fourth day or something.
Like there's something wrong.
And that wasn't the only reason they were worried.
According to friends, Valerie and Ira had always kept separate schedules.
He would work at night so he owned nightclubs, so he would start work at two in the afternoon
and work till very late, where Valerie would be in bed at 10 o'clock, so they had separate
lives.
She was up and gone before Ira ever got up during the day.
And the distance between them only grew when Valerie
opened her salon, especially once her friend
and business partner Michelle arrived from France.
He was a family friend from a long time,
but they knew each other when they were children.
So he had come over to help her with the salon.
And in return, Valerie and Ira helped Michelle
make the transition to America.
They needed a place to live and of course she insisted that he move in.
The house was big enough where he could have his own area.
It was an unusual arrangement, but it appeared to work.
They all connected and my father seemed to like Michelle.
Plus, since Ira was always working late at his clubs, having Michelle around meant that Valerie had someone
to escort her to the gallery openings, cocktail parties,
and other events that the salon owner's socialite status
demanded.
She liked to go out to nice restaurants.
She liked to socialize with her friends.
She liked to be involved and know it was when I was people.
The friend accompanied her to a lot of these things
that Valerie liked to do.
In fact, Valerie and her friend spent so much time together
at parties and events that Scott Stale's society gossip soon
took notice.
It looked like to a lot of people out there
that they were the couple.
According to his friend, Louis Milozzo,
it was starting to look that way to Ira, too.
Ira had told me what kind of relationship am I going?
And I'm having it.
She spends more time with him.
And the relationship just became estranged at that point.
He would say, I feel like an outsider in my own house now.
As a matter of fact, he moved to a separate bedroom.
And according to Ira's attorney,
that was only a preliminary step.
I am a certified family-law,
divorce specialist in the state of Arizona,
and he had discussed filing of an action
to terminate the marriage.
He was saying that he might have made a mistake,
and one way or the other, I just want to end this peacefully.
And according to Lewis, what Ira told him
wasn't the only reason he was worried.
It was when he'd told him, too.
That's the last time I saw him.
He was missing the next day.
But did that mean Ira had gone off to Vegas alone
to put some distance between himself and Valerie
before filing for divorce?
Or was it possible things hadn't ended as peacefully
as Ira intended?
The next morning, less than 24 hours after Valerie and Lewis
reported Ira missing, a driver
was making an early delivery to a supermarket in Mesa, a Phoenix suburb just south of Scance
dale.
This was like five o'clock in the morning.
Very early in the morning in January, it would have been dark.
And there was a delivery man.
And he was parked behind this supermarket.
Basically, he saw this woman pull up.
He saw her get out of her Jaguar, and he saw her pop open the trunk,
and lift up a very heavy-looking object and throw it into the dumpster.
And then, you know, take off.
The whole thing looked suspicious to the delivery driver,
but he had a schedule to keep.
He actually continued on his route, finished his route.
And it was only after finishing the day's deliveries
and talking over his suspicions with another driver
that he decided to find out if the mystery woman
had really been up to something.
They both went back and checked the dumpster.
And they quickly found what the woman had left behind.
It was in a plastic bag, looked like a garbage bag,
and it looks suspicious.
So suspicious that one of the delivery drivers
decided that rather than open the bag,
he'd poke it with a knife first.
It was an exact one.
I probably would have used to cut his packages open.
The blade went through the plastic easily.
And when it came out, the driver's suspicions
appeared to be confirmed.
He saw blood on the knife.
That time, he, of course, figured that it was something
that needed to be reported to the police.
So he flagged down the office
that he saw in the area that happened to be driving
through the area and asking them to come check it out.
And when the officer opened the garbage bag,
he made a gruesome discovery.
It was a torso.
And when I say torso, literally no arms, no legs, no head.
The head had been severed at the base of the neck.
You've been cut at both shoulders.
And his bottom half had been cut at the waist.
And his identity was a mystery.
When you find a torso from a criminal perspective,
there are no prints, there's no dental,
there's no way to identify a body.
You can get a gender and that's it. Unless the body contains visible scars, visible tattoos,
something to match up with a missing persons report. The police didn't have any easy way of finding
out who the dead man was, but thanks to their witness, they might be able to identify the woman who disposed
of the remains.
The delivery driver said that she appeared to be very slight somewhere around five feet.
He estimated her weighted about 100 pounds, 105 pounds somewhere long in there.
She was fashionably dressed, wearing a jumpsuit and high heels.
The quick-thinking delivery driver also provided a detailed description of the woman's car.
The car was a jay-war and he also got us the license plate, which he had written down.
So while the medical examiner's office began the grim task of removing the torso from the dumpster
so that they could all-tops see and hopefully identify the dead man.
The investigators followed up on the only lead they had.
We ran the plate as a part of our investigation and it came back to a woman named Fowler
your pay.
Coming up, the investigators locate a possible crime scene.
The police found a bullet lodged in the wall.
But that's not the most gruesome fun.
This would have been an excellent tool to use for the actual dismemberment.
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By Friday, January 28, 2000, it had been 24 hours since police had found a man's dismembered torso in a dumpster outside of Mesa, Arizona, grocery store.
We were alerted by a citizen, actually, was a delivery driver who said that he had seen something being put into the dumpster by a lady
when he was making a delivery. And the witnesses' tip led the police to Valerie
Paped Salon in Scottsdale's Tony Old Town neighborhood. The delivery man wrote down the plate,
gave it the police, and that's why they arrestedant. They got her about five o'clock in the afternoon.
I don't know if she was done for the day or in the middle of a haircut, but they came and
arrested her.
Not only had a witness placed the 47-year-old at the scene of the crime, Valorant had reported
her husband, 60-year-old Iropomerans, missing less than 24 hours before the witness spotted her, throwing what turned
out to be a man's dismembered body into the dumpster.
But did that mean the body was her husband?
The missing person's investigators had already uncovered trouble in Valerie and Iris marriage.
They were estranged and we thought that she had a lover. But for the moment, the police had no way
of identifying the dismembered torso.
We didn't have any fingerprints or any facial features
of things like that.
Confirming the body's identity would have to wait
on an autopsy and DNA test.
But since she'd allegedly been seen dumping the body,
the investigators had more than enough probable cause
to question Valerie. We contacted Valerie to try and establish been seen dumping the body. The investigators had more than enough probable calls
to question Valerie.
We contacted Valerie to try and establish if she would
at least admit that she was in the area,
which would give us a starting point for the investigation.
At first, Valerie tried to deny that she was the one
who dumped the torso.
We never believed her from the beginning.
Based on the witness's, witness account that they had seen any woman dumped him with torso. We never believed her from the beginning. Based on the witness's witness account
that they had seen any woman dump him with torso.
And when the investigators made it clear
that she'd basically been caught red-handed,
Valerie's story suddenly changed.
What she discloses is that she came home
and the body was there.
She had found her husband on January 24th
that she came home in the morning, found her husband on January 24th that she came home in the
morning, found her husband in a pool of blood laying face up on the kitchen floor.
But if that were true, if she had come home to find Ira dead on the kitchen floor,
why not call 911? She said that she did not call the police because she was afraid. She was afraid that she would be accused, and she did what she did,
because she thought she was protecting herself.
And according to Valerie, that fear led her to tell her husband's friend,
Louis Milazo, that Ira had probably gone to Vegas
and to file a missing person's report.
All of those things are just so far-fetched. I mean, you look at her, you look at the body,
you look at the circumstances involved,
and you say, come on, I mean, really?
Because what was more incriminating,
finding your husband dead,
or getting caught dumping his dismembered body?
She clammed up when it came to talking about the dismemberment.
She lawyered up, and so they had to end the interview right there.
However, she was adamant about one thing.
She denied responsibility for the murder completely.
Not that her denials made any impression on the investigators,
who proceeded to book Valerie into the Maricopa County jail.
She was charged with first degree murder.
It all clued in.
They were in the middle of a divorce.
So there was a lot of, you know, anger and resentment
between the two of them.
But while the investigators suspected
the dismembered torso was Iris, could they prove it?
A few days after
Valorys arrest the autopsy provided the answer they just took our DNA with
swabs and then they told us we all matched and it was our dad and that was just
devastating news you know I felt very surreal like this only happens in a movie
the torso's identity wasn't all that the autopsy revealed,
however.
Strations that they saw on the body indicated to them
that they thought the body had been killed earlier
and had been frozen.
And while Ira's head had been severed at the neck,
there were traces of a gunshot wound just below the cuff.
He had been killed by a gunshot to the back of the neck.
The theorize that the bullet had gone into his head by the trajectory of the wound.
But where was the rest of Ira's body?
If she had been doing what we anticipated, she was driving from dumpster to dumpster,
it would have been impossible to find a body at that point in time,
given all of the pickups and the large area of the city she could have covered.
Which meant the investigators were extremely fortunate
that any of Ira's body had been found.
The person who saw her putting in a dumpster's head,
he'd not been there, had he not seen that.
We may not have even discovered the torso and the trash
bin prior to it being taken away in dump.
Without a body, it's very hard to prosecute a murder.
But could the police find the murder weapon?
In the days following Valorys arrest,
the Mesa and Scottsdale police served a search warrant
on the couple's Scottsdale home.
Apparently there were guns all throughout the house.
That wasn't the only place they found guns, either.
The police found a gun hidden in the back seat of the Jaguar.
But was the gun from Valarys' car or any of the guns found in the house, the murder weapon?
Since no bullet had been recovered from Iris' body,
it was difficult to say.
Although the investigators did have one tantalizing clue.
During the investigation, the police found a bullet
that was lodged in the wall of the home.
The bullet wasn't just in any wall, either.
It was in the kitchen, exactly where Valerie claimed she'd
discovered Iris' dead body.
Leading the police to believe they'd found the crime scene.
They believed that the bullet that they recovered from the kitchen was fired from the gun
that they found in Valerie Papers' car.
The gun and the bullet both went to the crime lab for ballistics testing, but they weren't
the only intriguing pieces of evidence that the search warrant produced.
They had found receipts for a reciprocating saw.
This would have been an excellent tool to use for the actual dismemberment.
The police never found the saw, but she had bought it with her credit card.
And according to the date on the receipt,
she bought it before Iris murdered.
If you look at the fact that she bought the reciprocating
saw a month before the body was dismembered,
that seems to imply some premeditation.
Dismembrment seemed like the only way
she could have gotten Ira's body out of the house, too.
Ira was probably 5'10, 5'11,
probably close to 200 pounds.
Valerie was tiny, maybe 5' tall,
100 pounds tops.
And even Ira's dismembered torso alone
had almost been more than Valerie could handle.
Yeah, I would just say that it was a big struggle for her just to get it out of the car.
Which left the investigators pondering one more possibility.
So we believed to remove it from the house she had to have someone help in her.
There's no way she could have done this on her own.
And as far as the investigators were concerned,
there was one obvious suspect.
She had this friend, Michelle, who was conveniently
staying with her.
We believe that they had a relationship,
past being friends.
And that that was one of the reasons why we thought
that she got, that she committed the murder to begin with.
But had Valerie's friend been more than a possible motive
for killing Ira?
The police thought he may have helped her out
with at least the dismemberment.
But while the police suspected it, proving it
was an entirely different story.
There was no hard evidence that there
was a accompl was involved.
However, when the ballistics test on the bullet
embedded in her kitchen wall came back from the crime lab,
the evidence against Valerie kept piling up.
They concluded that it had been fired from a gun that
was found in her car.
The ballistic evidence, the reciprocating saw, and the body
in the dumpster.
Taken together, it was more than enough for the grand jury.
The grand jury comes down with a first-degree murder
indictment.
But since the prosecutors couldn't prove
that the bullet in the wall was the one that killed Ira,
would it be enough for a conviction?
This is all circumstantial evidence
because there was no witness.
Coming up, the investigators dig into Valerie and Iris finances.
Some of his business dealings had went south.
And that leads them to wonder.
Had the Vegas high roller gotten in over his head
in a desperate attempt to keep afloat.
He was involved with bad people.
He owed him money.
In February of 2000, 48-year-old Valerie
Papers at an Arizona's Maricopa County jail
held without bond, while awaiting trial for the murder of her husband, Ira Pomeranians.
From a prosecutor's side, she was a French citizen, she had committed first degree murder.
It gave her every reason in the world to flee.
So the court decided that she was non-bondable.
But was there another way Valerie could get out of jail?
Or at least, out of an American jail?
Valerie's friend Michelle,
after being cleared of any involvement in Ira's murder,
brought her case to the attention
of the French consulates' office
who took an immediate interest.
First degree murder could have put death penalty on the table.
And since France had outlawed the death penalty,
that could have caused an international incident
if the prosecutors pushed for it.
The decision that was made was,
OK, we're not going to seek the death penalty.
We're going to go for first degree murder
without the death penalty, which means life in prison
if convicted.
It was a bitter disappointment for Ira's daughter, Stacey.
I was very upset about that.
Because as far as I could see, they have enough of the criteria to seek the death penalty.
I thought they met that criteria easily.
Although for the prosecutors, their first priority was securing a conviction,
and they felt they had a strong case against Valerie.
At that point in time, the prosecution's case
is that was planned, and evidence of that planning
was obviously the purchase of a saw
weeks before the murder.
But as Valerie's trial date approached,
would new evidence put the prosecution's case in jeopardy?
At the time of Valerie's arrest,
what motivated the murder
had appeared obvious.
Our Ira's family thought that Valorys was a gold digger,
that the only reason that she was with their dad
was because of the fact that he had money.
And the police suspected that she had killed Ira
because the couple was heading for a divorce.
If there was still married when he was dead,
she stood to have his money.
That's what the investigators and prosecutors believed.
But when they looked into Ira's finances,
they made a surprising discovery.
Ira had filed for bankruptcy.
Some of his business dealings had went south.
And there's no question that there was some financial
to Rascar going on in the home.
In fact, while preparing for trial,
Valerie's defense team and supporters hinted that Ira,
who'd made his fortune in New York's garment trade
and made regular trips to Vegas,
might have gotten in over his head trying to stave off bankruptcy.
He was involved with bad people
is what I think was the problem.
He owed him money.
Was it possible Valerie was telling the truth
that someone else had killed Ira?
She said that she had found him dead in the kitchen.
She did not say that she shot him.
She said she found him dead.
But even as Valerie claimed, she had nothing
to do
with his murder.
She made a shocking accusation about her late husband.
Valerie had reported there was domestic violence
going on in the home.
Iris family was outraged.
I was like reading this article in one of the first articles
that hit the paper.
Specifically, the part where Valerie's state
that she was
the victim of domestic abuse, I was just like, what?
In all the years that I knew Ira,
the one thing he wasn't was violent.
He just wasn't violent at all.
But while Ira's family and friends dismissed the claim,
Valerie's accusation did win her considerable sympathy
in the community.
Valorys had a lot of friends in Scottsdale.
She was very well liked.
She hung out with all the right people.
And so she had her group of cheerleaders.
Ira had been a long time businessman here in Arizona.
And so he had his following.
And there was a huge dispute over whether or not
she actually was a victim of domestic violence.
And some of Valerie's friends said they had seen the evidence.
There was a day that Valerie came into work kind of upset.
And I said, what's wrong?
And she goes, look, I have bruises.
And she lifted up her skirt way up high.
She had a short skirt on.
And she showed me the bruises,
and I said, that's crazy, you know, that's not right.
Thanks to the defense, pictures of a bruised and battered
Valerie even made it into the local paper.
They showed this picture with her having two black eyes.
But was the picture really evidence of abuse,
or was it simply a calculated piece of character assassination
on the part of Valerie's supporters?
According to his daughter,
the photograph had nothing to do with domestic violence.
I saw the dates that she said this was from.
I called right away and told the newspaper,
I don't believe that the domestic abuse
was the cause of these black eyes,
but rather the facelift that she had the day before,
that picture was taken,
given the information that they needed to check it out,
and they've retracted the whole domestic abuse thing.
Pfft.
But did Ira's daughter know the whole truth about her father?
The bogus facelift picture wasn't all that the defense had.
There are records of, you know,
the police showing up to the house for various reasons.
Most of the calls were for domestic disturbances.
The scenario with Valerie, she would instigate an argument, and, you know, there would be yelling, and there'd be shouting and fighting, and, you know, two people in an argument.
But I don't think it would have gone physical.
He never hit us. You know, I never hit my mom, I never hit his second wife,
and never was violent with Valerie either.
That's what Ira's daughters claimed,
but Valerie's attorneys also had documents suggesting
that what was going on was more than just a shouting match.
Valerie had taken out an order of protection against Ira.
The protection order dated to 1999. a shouting match. Valerie had taken out an order of protection against pyra.
The protection order dated to 1999.
It was well before the murder, which
was verified by the police department.
But there were no other police reports,
reference to any sort of abuse.
Still, the order of protection, the couple's history
of domestic disturbances and Valerie's claims of abuse
were enough
to give the prosecutors' paws.
Demestic violence might have been a stumbling point.
You could see why a jury would not find first-degree murder.
If the jury comes back not guilty,
it's not guilty she walks, she goes free,
and there's no justice for the victim.
So in the summer of 2002, the prosecutors decided
to offer Valerie a deal.
They were gonna plea it out to second-degree murder.
The plea agreement terms allow her to be sentenced
for anywhere between 10 and 16 years in prison.
Considering what Valerie had done to Ira,
his family didn't think 16 years was nearly a nod, but they resigned
themselves to the deal.
The DA's office and was really pushing this thing, you know, there's no guarantees with
the trial.
It could go either way and it's a big trap shoot.
And I was just like, oh, would Valerie take the deal, or would she risk going to trial?
In the end, she ran into the same dilemma
that dogged the prosecutors.
You have one shot at a trial.
That's it.
You have one shot.
So rather than risk going to prison for life,
Valerie paid-appeared in Maricopa County Superior Court
on August 20, 2002, and pleaded guilty to second-degree murder.
It took almost three years before, from the time of her arrest,
until the time that she played guilty.
It was a shocking reversal.
Considering Valerie had always proclaimed her innocence,
a stance she strangely tried to maintain,
even while pleading guilty to murder.
Her words were that she fired a gun
in the direction of higher pomerance and hit him.
And I'd never heard wording like that.
And it sort of like took a little bit
of the culpability away from her.
It seemed to me me at least,
that she wasn't fully admitting to it.
There was no remorse or taking responsibility for what happened.
I think, you know, she took the plea because that was...
She was going to get something and that was the shortest jail sentence she could get.
And then, when Iris daughter made her own plea to Valerie
during her victim's impact statement to the court,
Valerie had even less to say.
I turned around to her directly,
and I'm like, just tell us where the rest of his body is,
so we can bury him whole, you know?
And she just looked at me dumbly and blankly and didn't say anything.
It may have been a mistake.
The judge was not too happy that she never said where the rest of the body was.
And his displeasure may have been reflected in Valerie's sentence.
The judge gave her the harshest he could give.
She ended up getting sentenced to 16 years.
Coming up, will a guilty plea be enough to keep Valerie in prison?
The US and other countries have these treaties
where they exchange prisoners.
They were very, very worried that France would release her
on parole.
By 2006, it had been four years since Valerie
paid fled guilty to the murder of her husband, Ira Hummer
is, a plea that surprised her friends and supporters.
She had to snap her, have some kind of a breakdown, too,
to do what she did, because that's not
the value that I knew and loved at all.
She's a very wonderful person and was a very good friend to me.
So it would be hard for me to think
of her doing anything
that would hurt a human being.
In prison, for second degree murder,
the 54-year-old had almost 10 years
remaining on her 16-year sentence.
She was given credit for the nearly three years
she spent in the county jail.
But Wood Valerie, who was a French citizen,
stayed in an American prison?
In 2006, there was an effort to have a Valerie transfer
to France to serve out the rest of her sentence.
The US and other countries have these treaties
where they exchange prisoners.
That didn't make the transfer any less of a surprise
to Iris' family, though.
When I repond Rant's daughter's heard about this,
they just were aghast.
I was like, oh, my God.
The courts here have no say so over what they do
with the prisons there.
They were very, very worried that France
would release her on parole.
I was on the phone immediately.
I called them, tell them no way to let them do this, don't let them do this.
We found out about it, like, in the nick of time, and she was already en route to back
to France.
The state of Arizona had basically signed off on this, and she had been transferred to
a federal holding facility.
But once the Arizona authorities found out
that the family objected, the transfer came to a halt.
She was returned to Arizona and served out
the rest of her sentence.
Although at the age of 62, Valerie finally did go home.
The Valerie completed her sentence in February 2016
and she was deported back to France.
And apparently that's where she's living now.
I don't know what she's doing in France now.
I really try not to think much about her.
It's disappointing.
I know this is our legal system, but you know, in this situation,
my father being murdered, I don't feel there was true justice for what happened to him.
The rest of Iris remains were never recovered.