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Inmate's tip leads to arrest in 1979 Lynnwood murder
April 23 2011
A tip generated by a deck of "cold case" playing cards has helped solve a killing that occurred more than three decades ago, investigators said.
A 57-year-old Seattle man was arrested Friday night at his home and booked for investigation of first-degree murder in the fatal shooting of Susan Schwarz, 22, who was killed in her home near Lynnwood on Oct. 22, 1979.
"My God, isn't that something - I'm breathless," her 82-year-old father, Henry Schwarz of Kirkland, said Saturday when The Associated Press informed him of the arrest. "That was the whole expectation for this deck of cards."
The cards, first circulated in 2008, offer rewards for information that helps solve the cold cases. Schwarz was the queen of hearts.
The Snohomish County Sheriff's Office declined to identify the suspect.
[...]
http://lynnwood.komonews.com/news/crime/inmates-tip-leads-arrest-1979-lynnwood-murder/636828

Susan Schwarz may have been the queen of her father's heart, but it was her place as the queen of hearts in a deck of playing cards that may have led to finding her murderer 32 years after her death.

Kirkland resident Henry Schwarz, 82, has had to forget Oct. 22, 1979 to continue living. But now he knows the man who is the alleged killer that took his daughter, a Bothell High graduate.

"Truly, it was the only way I could deal with it," said Schwarz, about trying to forget. "I had to play like it never happened. I buried it so deep now it is just words."

The 57-year-old suspect was arrested on April 22 at his Seattle home in connection with the murder.

"His bail was originally set at $1 million, but they have increased it," said Schwarz. The man's bail was set for $5 million during a hearing on Monday, according to Snohomish County Sheriff Det. Jim Scharf. Charges will be filed by 5 p.m. Tuesday, he said.

The break in the case came via a deck of playing cards put together by the Snohomish County Sheriff's Office cold-case team. A prison inmate gave investigators a tip after seeing Susan's playing card. The cards are produced with the victim's face on the front and a description of the incident on the back.
[...]
"They made my daughter the queen of hearts," said Schwarz. "They told me there was a chance that someone in prison might know about it."

The tip led investigators to a former girlfriend of the suspect's, who told investigators that she was there on the night of the murder and witnessed the suspect kill Susan Schwarz. The girlfriend also gave investigators independent details of the crime scene and residence that matched the case.

Susan, 24, was found dead with her hands tied behind her back and a gun-shot wound to the back of her head at her Lynnwood home on Oct. 22, 1979. Items were also missing from the home, pointing toward a burglary.

From the outset, the suspect's name was connected to the murder, but police did not have enough evidence to make an arrest. The suspect was the estranged husband of Susan's best friend, who had moved to Minnesota in 1978 with the couple's 2-year-old son, according to Snohomish County Sherrif Office documents.

Approximately two weeks prior, Susan's best friend had returned to Washington and had spent a lot of time with Susan and deciding whether to get back together with the suspect. Upon contact, the friend told investigators that Susan had urged her to leave the suspect because she did not like him. She also told police that she left the suspect because he was violent, had been involved in an armed robbery and had a girlfriend, according to police documents.

When contacted, the suspect told investigators that he was fishing in Everett on the day Susan was killed, but his statement could not be fully confirmed. In 1986, detectives went to talk with the suspect in prison where he was serving time for armed robbery. His brother was also serving time for a murder that was similar to Susan's death. The Seattle man told investigators during an interview that he dropped off his brother and two other unidentified people for a burglary and that his brother later admitted to killing Susan.

The suspect has an extensive criminal history, including multiple robbery and drug convictions, according to police records.

For Henry Schwarz, the news of the arrest came via an Associated Press reporter last week.

"I was shocked to get that call from someone I didn't know," said Schwarz, "And then I got all these other calls from the TV stations."

The media attention and Susan's murder has been the toughest on Susan's brother, Gary, who also graduated from Bothell High.

"My closure took place 25 years ago," said Susan's father. "They were the best of friends and I hope this will give him some closure."

Schwarz said he does not plan to follow the court proceedings, but he will just stay in contact with his son.
http://www.pnwlocalnews.com/north_king/bkn/news/120667359.html
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This cold-case playing card led to an arrest in the 32-year-old murder investigation of Bothell High graduate Susan Schawrz​
 
Her name was written in the thick murder book.

Three decades later Snohomish County sheriff's detectives came knocking on her door. She knew why the two men were there. The moment finally had come to share the secret she'd been lugging around since she was 18 years old.

She could tell them who killed Susan Schwarz.

The words eventually tumbled out. She had been in the small Lynnwood-area home in 1979 when Gregory Johnson grabbed a pretty, young woman out of her shower, tied her up and put a bullet in her head.

Johnson, then 26, looked up to find his teenage girlfriend in the room. He shot the victim again.


"It's that easy. This is what happens to people who (expletive) with my life," the woman recalled Johnson saying, the gun still gripped in his hand.

The teen had already felt the rage of his fists. The threats he made against her family pounded any courage out of her. She would be to blame if they got hurt, he said. Fear bought her silence.

Then last year, two dogged detectives asked her to tell the truth and give a grieving family answers.

"I had this immense sense of relief," the woman told The Herald last week.

The Herald is not naming the woman, now 50. She is considered a witness to a violent crime and prosecutors refer to her only by her initials in court papers.

A Snohomish County judge on Friday sentenced Johnson to a minimum of 24 years in prison for the death of Susan Schwarz. The Seattle ex-con, 58, pleaded guilty in January to second-degree murder, finally admitting that he was responsible for the slaying.

Because the murder happened two years before the state Sentencing Reform Act, Johnson's fate ultimately lies with the state's Indeterminate Sentencing Review Board. They will decide if he ever walks out of prison again.

Prosecutors believe that Johnson killed Schwarz out of revenge. He blamed her for meddling in his marriage.

Schwarz, 24, was a high school friend of Johnson's estranged wife. The woman had confided in Schwarz that her husband beat her. Schwarz helped her friend move into a shelter until the woman could leave the state with the couple's young son. The woman later returned to Washington and spent time with Schwarz in the weeks before the murder.

Back then detectives listed Johnson as a suspect. They took down the names of people in his circle, including his then-girlfriend.
[...]

They began to take a hard look at Johnson and how his life intersected with the slain woman's. Inside the case file, they found the name of Johnson's then-girlfriend.

The detectives didn't know that she would provide critical evidence to put the killer away -- the first conviction in the cases featured in the cold case cards.

The woman met Johnson when she was just 17. Her father had died about nine months earlier and her family was reeling from his death. With Johnson's encouragement, she became alienated from her mom. She moved in with the older man and the relationship quickly became violent, the woman said. He threatened to hurt her if she left. He allowed his friends to abuse her.

The day of the murder, he told the woman they were going to see his friend who owed him some money and drugs.

The woman didn't know the victim's name or even the address where the homicide happened.

She believed Johnson when he told her the cops would see her as a suspect. She wasn't sure what legal responsibility she'd bear, but she was certain that if the detectives came for her, she'd answer their questions. She also was convinced that Johnson would go after her family if she told the truth.

"I can't say I did it right, but I did the best I could," the woman said. "I was sorry Sue was dead. I'd have done anything in my power possible at the time to stop it if I could have. She wasn't coming back though. I knew my mother would be a victim. I had to protect my mom."

The woman split up with Johnson. She tried to put the past behind her, breaking off ties with high school friends. She stopped going by her childhood nickname. She became a nurse and a mom. She never stopped looking over her shoulder.

Even as time went on, her fear didn't go away.

Johnson called her mother's house after he got out of prison for robbery. The woman was visiting her mom and spoke with him. He reminded her that he was still around and knew how to reach her family.

"It drags on you," she said.

She thought of the slain woman and her family.

"She didn't deserve that. She was only standing up against abuse," the woman said. "Her family deserved to have answers long ago."

Gary Schwarz had learned to live without knowing who took his big sister's life. He had no choice. He carried some small hope that the killer would be caught. He worried that the person would hurt others.
[...]

Gary Schwarz asked the judge to protect the woman who helped the detectives and Snohomish County deputy prosecutor Lisa Paul put Johnson behind bars. He said he feared for the woman's safety if the convicted killer was released any time soon.

Gary Schwarz met the woman in January after the defendant pleaded guilty. The woman felt she owed the family an explanation and an apology.

"I feel like I didn't do enough" she said.
http://www.komonews.com/news/local/...d-to-24-years-for-1979-murder--144100016.html
 
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