Down the Basement Stairs
Dennis Murphy and Josh Mankiewicz go behind the scenes of the making of this episode in ‘Talking Dateline’:
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Transcript
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Speaker 4 Ann's dad called me and told me Ann was dead.
Speaker 5 I looked down the basement, could clearly see somebody's legs.
Speaker 6 Kara says, I don't know, maybe she fell down the stairs.
Speaker 7 I had nightmares for months.
Speaker 8 There was paint all over the place. One of the most odd scenarios I could have ever dreamed of.
Speaker 3 What do you make of the paint to cover up?
Speaker 8 As simple as that.
Speaker 5 Things were moved before we got here.
Speaker 7 This isn't what it's made out to be.
Speaker 9 I know they had their problems.
Speaker 10 I think every relationship struggles.
Speaker 5 Anna Marie was a big spender. She owed other people money.
Speaker 6 It was a relationship of extremes: hot, cold, wild, calm.
Speaker 3 There's a guy named Mark.
Speaker 7 He was a married man. Clearly, there was an emotional affair between Mark and Anne at a minimum.
Speaker 12 When buttons are pushed, people get angry, people get upset.
Speaker 3 A history-making case, and after four trials, a surprising verdict.
Speaker 13 Ladies and gentlemen, this whole investigation started with a lie.
Speaker 6 It was a blow. It was a real gut punch.
Speaker 5 You know, love is crazy.
Speaker 3 I'm Lester Holt, and this is Dadeline.
Speaker 3 Here's Dennis Murphy with Down the Basement Stairs.
Speaker 3
March 29th, 2010. A dank, rainy day in Granby, Massachusetts.
Kara Rentala, a 30-something mom, was out running errands with her two-year-old daughter.
Speaker 3 When they got home around 7 p.m., they found something truly shocking. Kara's wife lying at the bottom of the basement stairs.
Speaker 3 Kara grabbed their daughter and raced to her neighbors, then home again, this time alone.
Speaker 17 My neighbor just came over and she told me to call 911.
Speaker 19 She was pretty distraught.
Speaker 3 She was. When Sergeant Gary Poehler of the Granby Police Department arrived at the Rentala house about 7:20, he heard Kara before he saw her.
Speaker 8 It was, she's dead, I can't believe she's dead.
Speaker 4 Crying.
Speaker 8 Lots of crying.
Speaker 3 Nothing prepared Sergeant Poehler for what he saw when he went down those basement stairs.
Speaker 8
There was Kara Rentala sitting on the floor with a female, looked like a female party across her lap. Later found out it was Anne-Marie.
She had her eyes open. Her arms were out
Speaker 8 extended like this.
Speaker 3 There was blood smeared and streaked and something truly weird.
Speaker 8 Paint all over the place, all over this female that she had across her lap.
Speaker 3 Within minutes, more first responders arrived.
Speaker 3 A surreal scene because both Kara and her wife were paramedics, had worked with some of these same responders, now helping an hysterical Kara out from beneath her wife's body.
Speaker 21 I said, oh my God, you know, you've got to be kidding me.
Speaker 3
The phone calls to family and friends started later that night. A shattered Cara on the line.
The news heartbreaking, incomprehensible.
Speaker 11 It was devastating.
Speaker 3 37-year-old Anna Marie Cochrane Rintala was dead.
Speaker 4
I couldn't be. It couldn't be true.
It's just wrong.
Speaker 3
As police videoed the basement, Massachusetts state trooper Jamie McGarion, the lead investigator, arrived at the scene, studied it. let it talk to him.
Any obvious injuries to the victim here?
Speaker 3 Are we talking about stab wounds, bullet hole, lacerations, abrasions?
Speaker 5 I mean, things that strike me, you know, there's a large amount of blood, and there's several lacerations to the head.
Speaker 3 It seemed as though the body had been there for a while.
Speaker 5 When I touched the deceased for the first time, with the rigor mortise setting in, I thought, how long that body had been on that floor?
Speaker 3 There was an open paint bucket at the scene, and paint, light-colored paint, everywhere.
Speaker 5 The paint to me is fresh paint. It's wet.
Speaker 5 There was a thin layer of paint on the deceased that appeared to be dry in some spots, but then there was other paint on the deceased that was still wet and a large amount of paint on the floor that was wet.
Speaker 3 Did this look like the case of somebody who had taken a bad fall and somehow ends up knocking into the paint can and causing the paint to spill over them?
Speaker 5 No, because in the configuration of where the deceased was in relation to the stairs and where the paint bucket was, you couldn't fall directly down those stairs and tip that paint over.
Speaker 3 Other things spoke to the trooper. Items on the basement floor with blood under them, like a laundry basket.
Speaker 5 What'd that tell you? That tells me that, you know, things in this crime scene were moved before we got here.
Speaker 3 Late that night, Carol went to the Granby Police Department for an interview.
Speaker 3 It was almost midnight when Detective Lieutenant Robin Whitney hit record, turning the clock back to 8.30 that same morning when Anne got home from her overnight shift.
Speaker 17 We were talking.
Speaker 15 She made me coffee.
Speaker 3 Playtime with the couple's daughter Brianna followed. There was lunch and then a request from Anne, who was trying to nap before another overnight shift.
Speaker 17 She's like, can you just go to the mall or whatever?
Speaker 3
And that's why Kara said she and Brianna ended up on that afternoon of errands. They left the house about 3 p.m., she told Detective Lieutenant Whitney.
The goodbye to Anne, just matter of fact.
Speaker 3 That's all I can think of, you know? It's a little goodbye greeting.
Speaker 15 See you later. You know.
Speaker 15 And here we are.
Speaker 3 Mother and daughter shopped at the mall, going to McDonald's to grab food, and then, change of heart, going to a Burger King instead for mac and cheese.
Speaker 15 And Kaven's been able to get a hold of Anne.
Speaker 8 We've been texting, like, calling.
Speaker 3 Then home. Brianna spotted Ann's body first.
Speaker 15
And Brie's like, Mama down there? And I didn't know what to do. I just wanted to scream.
I wanted to run down there. But I didn't want to freak Brianna out.
I didn't know.
Speaker 15 So I just ran out of the house.
Speaker 3 After she left Brianna at the neighbors, Kara went downstairs to Anne.
Speaker 3 I wanted to turn her over. You know, like, you know,
Speaker 3 it's cold.
Speaker 3 And then she said she sat with her arms around her wife's body.
Speaker 15 This is nothing like I've ever been trained for.
Speaker 17 I've never experienced anything like this.
Speaker 15 Honestly, training, I know now I couldn't work on a loved one.
Speaker 3
It was a poignant picture, to be sure. A dead wife, a devastated spouse, a little girl who'd lost a mother.
But what had really happened at the bottom of those stairs?
Speaker 3 The news of Anne Cochrane Rintala's death reverberated among her friends and family for days. A young mother, her daughter still a toddler, was dead on the basement floor.
Speaker 3 How did you find out something awful had happened?
Speaker 11 I was at my desk at work and my wife at the time called me and said, sit down.
Speaker 10 I heard there was an accident.
Speaker 3
That's what I heard. A huge loss because if ever there was a woman who took life in big gulps, it was Anne.
She loved laughing, singing, and parades on the 4th of July.
Speaker 22
The parade and and the music and the fireworks and it was just like a huge celebration. Like that was Anne.
Like if she could have celebrated every day, she would celebrate every day.
Speaker 3 Jen Cochran, Ann's former sister-in-law.
Speaker 22
I remember my 30th birthday party. She was there and she would be the MC and that was her.
I can't even explain what she would do and you would laugh to the point where your stomach would hurt.
Speaker 22 But that was her.
Speaker 3 Even as a little girl growing up in a big big Irish-Italian family in Springfield, Mass, Anne loved the limelight. Her uncle passed Squally Martin.
Speaker 4 The first time I had seen her take the stage and sing Mambo Italiano, it just knocked me out. Not afraid of the spotlight, huh? No, she loved it.
Speaker 3 She could belt it out to the raptors, but was she any good? Her friends TJ Donahue and Mary Patrone are diplomatic.
Speaker 10 She thought so.
Speaker 3 She was brave. Oh, no,
Speaker 10 she could carry a tune, but she thought she was much better than she actually was.
Speaker 11 It didn't really matter because she had the charisma to kind of pull off anything.
Speaker 3
When she settled into a career, the bright lights she went for were a top and ambulance. That's how she came to be a paramedic.
That was another thing about Anne.
Speaker 3 She wasn't all look at me in the spotlight. She wanted to serve, too.
Speaker 10 She liked helping people, so I'm not surprised that she ended up working with people.
Speaker 3 Did she like the adrenaline of it? Running hot with the blue lights going.
Speaker 10 I would say yes. I would say yes, 100%.
Speaker 3 You can see that in her character?
Speaker 10 Yeah, Yeah, that's who she was.
Speaker 3 It was under those flashing lights back in 2002 that Anne met another paramedic named Cara Rentala and fell for her. Like Anne, Cara was compassionate, but in other ways, she was Anne's opposite.
Speaker 3 If everything about Anne was larger than life, everything about Kara was contained, even cautious. Sandy Montana is Kara's mom, Carl Montana, her stepdad.
Speaker 8 She had a plan, always had a plan, was very conscious of
Speaker 8 where she was headed in life.
Speaker 3
After a couple of years together, Anne moved into Kara's house in the western mass town of Granby, and they decided to adopt. This is a real step, San.
I mean, this is a commitment.
Speaker 23 And so I don't think it was looked upon lightly. I remember that Kira wanted a two or three-year-old boy, and they ended up with a six-day
Speaker 17 girl.
Speaker 3 Weeks after Brianna came into their lives, Anne and Kara quietly went to the courthouse and got hitched.
Speaker 3 She and Anne are defining their relationship at a very prominent time in American sexual politics, and especially in the state of Massachusetts, with just taking the lead on same-sex relationships and courts, and all of a sudden, couples are getting married in the courthouse.
Speaker 23 Well,
Speaker 23 I don't think that Kara would have gotten married, but Anne really wanted to have the same last name. as Brianna.
Speaker 3 In the years that followed, there were happy times with Brianna, the little girl who meant the world to them.
Speaker 3 A day before Anne died, they attended service at the Reverend Laurie Sauter's Serene Church, and everyone seemed so contented, fresh from a vacation.
Speaker 18 When I stand at the pulpit, I look around, and it's like they're here.
Speaker 12 They've returned.
Speaker 18 I knew they were away in Florida.
Speaker 3 And they were full of light. When Suzanne Cordas, a friend from church, saw them after the service, they struck her as a couple who had it all together.
Speaker 21 They were showing me pictures of a trip they had gone on, and they seemed like perfectly happy.
Speaker 3 So how to explain that horror at the bottom of the stairs? The investigators focused on that paint all over the place, on the body and beside it.
Speaker 3 They asked Kara to explain.
Speaker 24 Where did the paint come from? I don't know.
Speaker 15 Paint's been down there for months.
Speaker 3 It looked as though Anne fell down those stairs. But was it really an accident? Or something more sinister?
Speaker 20 I seriously...
Speaker 3 You couldn't rule that out at that time.
Speaker 5 You can't rule anything out.
Speaker 3 Trooper McGuiren was determined to find out. Little did he know how long it would take.
Speaker 11 Some stories never make national headlines, but stories from small towns and coastal communities deserve recognition too.
Speaker 11 I'm Kylie Lowe, host of Dark Down East, a true crime podcast that gives voice to victims through investigative journalism and powerful storytelling.
Speaker 11 Set in my home state of Maine and the greater New England area, it's my goal to dig through the archives to bring the stories of the people at the heart of these cases to light.
Speaker 11 Listen to Dark Down East, wherever you get your podcasts.
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Speaker 3 Over time, investigators became convinced that something sinister had happened in the Rentala basement. Lead investigator Jamie McGarion.
Speaker 5
We have wet paint. We know items are moved in the basement.
Those are all flags that come up.
Speaker 3
The medical examiner confirmed those suspicions. Cause of death, strangulation.
Anne was a homicide victim. Her uncle, Pesqually Martin.
Speaker 4 That was tough.
Speaker 3 An accidental death would have been easier, wouldn't it?
Speaker 4 Of course it would. But to have somebody rob somebody from you, steal, take, murder, just rip them from the world,
Speaker 4
you know, hard to fathom, hard to swallow. An accidental death, no one likes it, but we're human.
We deal with these things. But this was far and beyond.
Very hard to, it's still hard to accept.
Speaker 3
Now investigators were looking into a murder. They began a deep dive into Ann's life.
Prosecutors Steve Gagne and Jen Sewell of the district attorney's office joined the team.
Speaker 3 They learned that while Kara and Ann both had male friends, Anne's relationships could be complicated. Take the thing she had going with a fellow paramedic named Mark Oleksak.
Speaker 7 Mark Oleksak was a very close friend of Anna Marie. They started as co-workers, then became very, very close friends.
Speaker 3
The two were on intimate texting terms. That last morning, Anne texted Mark asking him to go to Best Buy for her.
Can you please go sat at 6A for me?
Speaker 3 I will get there about 8.25A with a coffee and a big kiss. Mark at the time was a married man.
Speaker 7 He He was a married man, two children. I think very clearly there was an emotional affair at a minimum that happened between Mark and Anne.
Speaker 3 Investigators didn't think the two had a sexual relationship, but it was clear they had a financial thing going. Mark opened his line of credit to Anne.
Speaker 3 No small thing where Anne was concerned, because her big passion was shopping. Ann's friends, TJ Donahue and Mary Petrollen.
Speaker 10
I do know that Anne loves jewelry. She loves nice things.
They said she's she's yes, gadgets, cameras. I mean, she loved to spend money.
Speaker 3 And sometimes the spending got ahead of her. Mark learned that.
Speaker 7 He co-signed, I think it was three total credit cards with her, one of which had racked up about a $7,000 balance at one point.
Speaker 3 Another thing, when investigators asked Mark what he was doing the day of the murder, he wasn't straight with the facts. He told them he was at home.
Speaker 3 Then he said he'd actually gone shopping and dined out. That must make your nose twitch when a guy doesn't give you the straight out story.
Speaker 5 I agree. It's going to raise the suspicions a little bit.
Speaker 3 But Mark had receipts for his purchases that day, and his final texts with Anne were affectionate.
Speaker 7 Even the morning of the murder, they were very lovely-dovey on text messages that particular morning.
Speaker 3 And you don't think the financial, the outstanding debt gets you there?
Speaker 7 No, there was nothing to suggest that Mark was upset about that outstanding debt. She was paying him back for that debt.
Speaker 3 He seemed to be in the clear. Investigators, meanwhile, were looking at another possible, a police officer named Carla Danielli.
Speaker 3 Ann dated her before she met Cara, and perhaps more importantly, they had another fling the year before Anne's death when she and Kara briefly separated.
Speaker 6 And from Carla's perspective, perhaps the love of her life was coming back to her.
Speaker 3 And some more credit cards and more spending here, huh?
Speaker 6 Yes, and as with Ann's friend Mark, Ann started to rack up a little bit of debt on Carla's behalf.
Speaker 3 Racked up about $10,000 on Carla's card. But then in late 2009, Anne returned to her wife, left Carla.
Speaker 6
She was dumped, huh? She was blindsided. Carla said she was devastated.
She took it very hard.
Speaker 3 So was Carla in the basement that March day? Here's a person who is romantically involved, emotionally tied to her, is dumped. And there are money issues between them.
Speaker 6 She was on the short list of persons of interest or suspects.
Speaker 3 Call them what you will.
Speaker 3
But Carla told investigators she was at her gym, a half-hour drive from from the Rentala house the afternoon of the murder. She said she went out for a long run.
Security images supported her account.
Speaker 3 Is Carla's alibi rock-solid or does it have a window for foul play?
Speaker 6 I would say it's pretty rock-solid unless she had access to a helicopter.
Speaker 3
So while Carla might hypothetically fit into a motive for this crime, the facts of it dismiss her. Absolutely.
She's not there.
Speaker 6 Most importantly, too, she, much like Mark, would have no idea, no way of knowing that Ann would be home alone at that time.
Speaker 3 That left investigators with a suspect who'd topped their list since the murder. The person who knew Anne best, who loved her, and who could get into it with her behind closed doors.
Speaker 3 As Kara admitted in her police interview.
Speaker 15
We'd argue and it would get physical, absolutely. And I'm no angel, but I can honestly say it was definitely back and forth.
You know what I mean?
Speaker 3
Investigators learned their troubles were well documented. In 2008, Ann had Kara arrested for assault.
She dropped the charges.
Speaker 3 A year later, the couple not only separated, each woman filed for divorce, with Anne asking for sole custody of Brianna. Each woman also applied for a restraining order against the other.
Speaker 3 Brianna caught in the middle.
Speaker 7 When the other would try to pull Brianna away, that was problematic.
Speaker 3 So the child was the glue that held them together, but it was also the source of a lot of this friction, huh? Correct. Money was an issue too, as it so often was with Anne.
Speaker 7 Their finances were now starting to become commingled, and Anne's debt and ann spending problems were part starting to become a problem for care too.
Speaker 3 But in early 2010, they appeared to be working on their marriage. In February, they went on that trip.
Speaker 3 Then came March 29th, the bottom of the stairs. And only one person, investigators believed, had the opportunity and motive to kill that day.
Speaker 5 All the evidence kept leading us us right back to Barton Street where that homicide occurred. A stiff body in wet paint and Kara's not working that day.
Speaker 5 Whoever's in that house disturbing that scene, creating that break-in, is very comfortable that nobody else is coming home.
Speaker 3 No one else has that comfort. But they knew they had a circumstantial case.
Speaker 6 If there was a weak spot, it was that there was no single piece of evidence which conclusively said Kara Ventala killed her wife.
Speaker 6
There were a lot of dots, a lot of puzzle pieces that needed to be connected here. For a crime like murder, jurors nowadays more than ever want something concrete.
They want forensic evidence.
Speaker 6 They want
Speaker 6 DNA.
Speaker 3 Science.
Speaker 6
Fingerprint exactly. Didn't have it here.
Didn't have it in this case.
Speaker 3 Even so, 18 months after Anne's death, in October 2011, Kara Rentala was arrested and charged with murder. Kara's mom got a call to pick up Brianna.
Speaker 23 And Brianna, when I got there, she said, why was mommy crying? I had to think fast.
Speaker 23 I said, Because she's a great paramedic and they needed her for an important job, and so they took her, and that's why she's crying because she's not going to get to see you right away.
Speaker 3 Kara Rentala became the first woman in Massachusetts history to be charged with the murder of her lawfully wedded wife. An extraordinary journey through the criminal justice system was just beginning.
Speaker 3 Prosecutors knew when Kara Rantala was arrested in late 2011 for murder, they had a mighty challenge on their hands. And so it proved.
Speaker 3 The trial opened in early 2013, and it ended three weeks later with a hung jury.
Speaker 12 Breaking news: a Northampton jury has failed to come to a unanimous verdict.
Speaker 3 A year later, in 2014, trial number two,
Speaker 3
same thing happened. Incredible as it seems, another hung jury.
Anne's family, convinced that Cara was the killer, was frustrated, wondering why a jury couldn't get there.
Speaker 4 I trusted her with my niece's life, and she took it.
Speaker 3
Soon after, Cara was bonded out of jail, free to spend precious time with Brianna. Meantime, prosecutors wrestled with the facts.
They had a circumstantial case. No smoking gun, no eyewitnesses.
Speaker 3 Would they go again? You really do have to step back and say, are we going to do this a third time?
Speaker 6
We did. The first thing we did was we consulted with Ann's family.
They were on board, and that I think gave us the strength and the courage to step up again.
Speaker 3 So it was set. Kara Rantalo would be tried a third time for the murder of her wife Ann.
Speaker 3 But first, Kara had a heart-to-heart talk with Brianna, now nine years old.
Speaker 8 She says, some people think I did something bad, something terrible, but I just want you to know that it's not true.
Speaker 3 In September 2016, trial number three opened here at Hampshire Superior Court in Northampton, Mass. Prosecutors Steve Gagne and Jen Sewell returned with a streamlined argument.
Speaker 7 We were caught sort of in this trap of being responsive to the defense, and we decided, let's play offense.
Speaker 3
In trial number two, they'd put the possibles on the stand, only to knock them down as viable suspects. And that might have been confusing.
So this time, they were gone.
Speaker 3 Now they focused on Kara and the helpless victim at the bottom of the basement stairs. The wife who was strangled, they said, for as long as four minutes until she died.
Speaker 7 Her last precious breaths that she took on this earth were taken with the defendants' hands around her neck. Squeezing, squeezing, squeezing and squeezing more until every last breath of her was gone.
Speaker 3 Prosecutors laid out a timeline for murder that began with a nasty fight by text the night before. And working the overnight, angry when she learned Kara had a male friend over to the house.
Speaker 3
I hate the relationship we have. No one does that.
No respect. Kara's response, okay, you being over the top and crazy.
Speaker 7 It really is, in our mind, a fuse being lit, something that continues to the next day.
Speaker 3 The next morning, the last of her life, Anne, a phonaholic, called or texted friends and family members 58 times.
Speaker 13 I want to show you just one final entry here.
Speaker 3 The final call to her beloved Aunt Nancy was placed at 1221. Then, uncharacteristically, Anne went silent.
Speaker 13 And to your memory, did she leave a voicemail on that occasion? No, mia. So you did not speak to Anna Murray that day at all.
Speaker 15 Is that correct?
Speaker 24 No, I didn't.
Speaker 3 The timing of that last call was important, prosecutors argued, because they theorized that Kara murdered her wife soon after. then spent hours cleaning and covering up.
Speaker 3 Remember that afternoon of errands? Prosecutors showed security video of Kara and Brianna shopping and argued it was part of the cover-up.
Speaker 7 She leaves the house around 3, according to her, but she doesn't pop up on surveillance video until 5 or so p.m. that evening at the Holyoke Mall.
Speaker 27 Suddenly starts using her debit card left and right to make minuscule little purchases.
Speaker 3 What was going on, do you think?
Speaker 6
She was trying to be seen. She was trying to be elsewhere.
In short, she was creating a digital alibi for herself.
Speaker 28 We are go down. Love you.
Speaker 3 An audio alibi, too. Prosecutors played voicemails, all play acting, they said.
Speaker 3 On our way murder came, call, please, please, please.
Speaker 6 The whole reason she's out is to try to let her get some sleep. That just didn't add up.
Speaker 3 And now, a pretty big deal, these cleaning rags.
Speaker 7 Can you just hold that up for the jury to see?
Speaker 3
Prosecutors said Kara used them to mop up. One contained a woman's DNA.
which the prosecution's experts said could have been Anne's.
Speaker 3 But it was what Kara did with the rags that prosecutors wanted to talk about. That's her vehicle on surveillance video leaving McDonald's.
Speaker 29 She decides to get out of her truck in a pouring rainstorm, walk over to the farthest, most trash receptacle in McDonald's, dispose of three cleaning rags, and drive away.
Speaker 3 Prosecutors also highlighted Kara's odd behavior after she saw Anne's feet at the bottom of the stairs. Kara's a paramedic.
Speaker 5 This is her wife.
Speaker 6 What does she do? Does she rush down there? Oh my God, Anne, are you okay?
Speaker 6 No.
Speaker 3 She raced to the neighbors, prosecutors told jurors, then ran back home with one more job to do.
Speaker 27
Before the paramedics and the police arrive, she makes one final desperate attempt at covering up. She picks up that container of paint.
She pours that paint.
Speaker 3 But instead of masking the evidence, the prosecutors said, that paint pointed to Kara's guilt.
Speaker 7 The stiff body was clearly not something that had just happened. The paint being on the floor was something that had just happened.
Speaker 3 And now prosecutors played their ace. They called a new witness to bolster their case, someone not heard from in previous trials.
Speaker 27 She saw me speak the evidence she said.
Speaker 3 Engineer David Julianell.
Speaker 3 He really did watch paint dry, conducting dozens of lab experiments.
Speaker 27 Were you able to form an opinion as to the time frame within which that paint was applying to the floor?
Speaker 1 Yes.
Speaker 27 And what is your opinion?
Speaker 8 Within approximately 30 minutes of the time the first responders arrived.
Speaker 3
That would be many hours after prosecutors said Anne died. The final coat of a slap dash cover-up.
But motivation.
Speaker 3 Why did the more sensible one of the two, by most accounts, turn on her fiery partner?
Speaker 3 Prosecutors said the seeds were planted some 10 months earlier, and they played an audio tape from a contentious court hearing to prove it.
Speaker 30 I'm not going to play games with this.
Speaker 3 It was May 2009. Anne and Kara had each filed those restraining orders against the other.
Speaker 3 A district court judge heard them sniping at each other and erupted, threatening to have DCF, the Department of Children and Families, take custody of Breanna.
Speaker 30 If I see that come into this court, I will be on the phone to DCF so fast they'll be here before you get out the door.
Speaker 3 It was a turning point. Because of the judge's warning, each woman now knew that one wrong move could cost them custody of the daughter they adored.
Speaker 3 So the prosecutor's theory of what happened on March 29.
Speaker 3
There was a violent fight and Ann went down those stairs. Whether she was pushed or not they couldn't say.
What mattered, they told jurors was what happened at the bottom of the stairs.
Speaker 27 The defendant had to make a choice.
Speaker 14 Call for help,
Speaker 27 likely face criminal charges,
Speaker 6 lose her home, lose her daughter,
Speaker 6 lose her livelihood, or, on the other hand,
Speaker 27 Ann go away
Speaker 3 and she made her choice now it was over to Kara's defense team they'd managed to avoid conviction twice could they do it a third time
Speaker 11 some stories never make national headlines but stories from small towns and coastal communities deserve recognition too I'm Kylie Lowe host of Dark Down East a true crime podcast that gives voice to victims through investigative journalism and powerful storytelling.
Speaker 11 Set in my home state of Maine and the greater New England area, it's my goal to dig through the archives to bring the stories of the people at the heart of these cases to light.
Speaker 11 Listen to Dark Down East, wherever you get your podcasts.
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Speaker 3 Kara Rentala's family and friends agree on a couple of things. First, that Kara is a great mom.
Speaker 3 And if she has to sing herself silly to entertain her daughter, well, she's in.
Speaker 3
The second thing friends say is this. Kara did not murder her wife, not in a million years.
Suzanne Cordes.
Speaker 21 Kara would never do that. The woman that I know, the devoted, faithful mother that I know, would never, ever do that to her wife.
Speaker 3 When the third trial commenced, friends and family sat behind Kara in court, practically willing a victory.
Speaker 3 Attorney David Hoos opened, as he had in trials one and two for the defense.
Speaker 20 This case, ladies and gentlemen, is about unconscious bias. A mindset that caused the investigators and the experts to focus on one theory, one person, and to ignore everything that didn't fit.
Speaker 3 That one theory was, of course, that Kara murdered her wife in the course of one final terrible fight.
Speaker 3 The mindset, Attorney Hoo said, was there from the very beginning in the neighbor's 911 call. Listen to the dispatcher's words.
Speaker 17 She said the other one was down in the basement, but she didn't say much before. Maybe a domestic.
Speaker 3 And Attorney Hoose said, remember this question from Detective Lieutenant Whitney, a scant seven minutes into the lengthy police interview on the night Ann died.
Speaker 13 All right, so let's back up a bit. You have a history of domestic violence, Louisiana, right?
Speaker 3 Even that powerful voice from court. If I see that come into this court, Kara's side insisted that noisy scolding from the judge was anything but the trigger for murder.
Speaker 10 Did that scare them?
Speaker 21 Absolutely. That was when they did a turnaround and they decided they had to, you know, screw it up for the daughter.
Speaker 7 Yeah, pretty much.
Speaker 3 And by March 2010, although prosecutors hadn't acknowledged it, the defense told jurors the couple had put their troubles behind them.
Speaker 20 They focus on a nine-month period, which was undeniably a rocky patch in this relationship. A nine-month period out of a nine-year relationship.
Speaker 3 But what about that angry volley of text messages the night before the murder? The fuss over Kara's male friend's visit. Attorney Hoose hit that hard.
Speaker 20 The Commonwealth wants you to believe that this was the battle of all battles and the fight that ended everything.
Speaker 3 Well,
Speaker 20 you know, you've got to have some proof of that.
Speaker 20 And they don't.
Speaker 23 And I'll tell you why.
Speaker 20
You can look at these texts. And once again, Cara is the calm one.
Anne is the one who goes from zero to 60 in about three seconds.
Speaker 3 And by the next morning, the defense attorney said, Ann was going her breezy way, promising her buddy Mark that big kiss in a text.
Speaker 21 Not a word about fighting with Kara.
Speaker 14 Not a word even like, gee, things aren't too good around here right now.
Speaker 9 Kara and I had a big fight.
Speaker 3 Nothing like that.
Speaker 3 Then to that afternoon of errands. And from Kara's side, an explanation for the trip to that trash can at McDonald's.
Speaker 23
Because that's what they did. They had to pay for their trash bags in Gramby.
So they were dumping their trash wherever and whenever they could.
Speaker 20 Very low levels.
Speaker 3 The defense brought in its own expert to knock down the prosecutor's argument that one of the rags contained Ann's DNA.
Speaker 20 I have no idea what the source of the DNA on that rag is.
Speaker 3
It's a solid paint. But perhaps the most damaging evidence against Kara was the paint.
Attorney Hoos went after the prosecution's paint guy on cross. His weapon of choice, sarcasm.
Speaker 19 You are the first guy, as far as you know, who's ever testified about reading wrinkles and cracks in paint.
Speaker 24 Is that correct?
Speaker 27 I'm aware of.
Speaker 20 Yeah.
Speaker 19 Congratulations.
Speaker 14 You're the first as far as we know.
Speaker 24 Can you please change the tone here?
Speaker 3 The defense attorney had to persuade jurors that Kara hadn't poured the paint. He accused the paint expert of buying into the first responder's observation that the paint was wet.
Speaker 19 And your first responder's responses are
Speaker 19 these are people you've never met, correct?
Speaker 24 Correct.
Speaker 19 You don't know how much training they have, if they've ever even seen a bucket of paint before, correct?
Speaker 27 Correct.
Speaker 19 Yet you're willing to credit their subjective impression that the paint was either wet or shiny, correct?
Speaker 20 Correct.
Speaker 3 Finally, the defense called of all people state trooper Jamie McGarion. In the first two trials, the lead investigator had been a heavyweight witness for the prosecution.
Speaker 3
Not this time. The trooper was vital to the defense theory of a Keystone cops investigation.
And the defense attorney had pressing questions for him.
Speaker 3 Is he going to say, investigator, you ran a shabby case here, you didn't secure the scene.
Speaker 3 Yes, there were tests you didn't run, there were things to be known, you're relying on this junk science of how paint dries.
Speaker 5 Yes, that's his job. He just needs one nugget of doubt.
Speaker 3
In pursuit of that nugget, the defense attorney grilled the investigator about the two people of interest. First, Mark Oliksak.
Remember, he changed his alibi.
Speaker 3 But what motive could he have for murder? Well, maybe this. Anne, the drama queen, had angered him when she left her wife for her old girlfriend.
Speaker 20 He described that he had a big fallout with Anne. Is that correct?
Speaker 20
Yes. And the fallout was when he became aware that Anne was seeing an old girlfriend, correct? Yes.
An old girlfriend named Carla Danielle, correct?
Speaker 3
Correct. A wisp of doubt, perhaps, dating back to Anne and Kara's separation.
And what about Carla? Remember, she said she'd been miles away at the gym and out running on the day of the murder.
Speaker 3 Security images seem to support that account. But the defense produced a bank record dated the day of Anne's death from an ATM closer to the crime scene than the gym.
Speaker 20 Did you ever ask her about how that could have happened if she was running in East Long Meadow?
Speaker 3 I don't know that
Speaker 5 I've never asked her that.
Speaker 3 The name of the game for criminal defense lawyers is creating reasonable doubt. Had Hoos managed to do that? We've got the answer next and more.
Speaker 3 We'll tell you why this case was still making headlines years later.
Speaker 6 This is the most unusual, procedurally unique case that I've worked on in my 20-some-odd years of being a prosecutor.
Speaker 3 The jury deliberated for one day, two days, three days. Would it be another hung jury?
Speaker 3 That was the question.
Speaker 27 The defendant would please rise.
Speaker 3 It would not.
Speaker 3 On day four, a verdict.
Speaker 8 She's guilty of murder in the first degree.
Speaker 3 Guilty of murder one.
Speaker 3 The most severe charge.
Speaker 3
After two hung juries, it was a stunner, all right. And the sentence was mandated.
My daughter. Life without parole.
Speaker 8
It's like you can't believe it. There's nothing, nothing to point to Kara.
How could this possibly be the worst possible outcome?
Speaker 3 How?
Speaker 3 Team Kara struggled to accept the verdict. In prison, Kara struggled too, figuring out how to be a long-distance mother to Brianna, who went to live with Carl and Sandy.
Speaker 3
Everybody holding on to hope for a successful appeal. That took years.
Attorney Chauncey Wood argued the case.
Speaker 29 The core of our argument was that the Commonwealth introduced an opinion from a fellow who claimed to be an expert on paint. And in fact, the opinion he delivered was not reliable.
Speaker 3 Five years after Kara was convicted, Wood's argument carried the day.
Speaker 33 The state's highest court has overturned the 2016 murder conviction against Kara Rentala.
Speaker 3 It was a blow.
Speaker 6 It was a real gut punch.
Speaker 3 Prosecutor Steve Gagne prepared to have yet another difficult talk with Ann's family.
Speaker 6 Ann's father, Bill, had passed by that point. Our concern was, can the family even get through another trial?
Speaker 6 But after some thought and after some deliberation, they said, we're willing if you're willing.
Speaker 6 And we decided to go again.
Speaker 13 Good morning. Now before the court is Hampshire County Indictment 11.
Speaker 3 It's rare that someone stands trial four times for murder.
Speaker 3 But that's what happened here.
Speaker 3
Kara Rantala's fourth trial opened in September 2023. The prosecution pared down its witness list again.
This time, there would be no paint expert.
Speaker 3 Instead, they stuck to what they thought was their strong suit.
Speaker 6 I would say the strongest part of our case, in my opinion, was the time of death.
Speaker 3 The prosecution called a former chief medical examiner to the stand.
Speaker 6 Did you, in fact, form an opinion as to Anna Marie Rentala's estimated time of death?
Speaker 3 My review of the evidence suggests that Anna Marie Rentala died in a window of time between mid to to late morning and early afternoon.
Speaker 3 I think the evidence does not support death having occurred any later than one o'clock or so.
Speaker 6 And Cara, by her own admission, was in the house until about 3 p.m.
Speaker 6 So that was, I think, our bedrock throughout this case.
Speaker 3 The prosecution had merely tweaked its case. But the defense.
Speaker 13 Ladies and gentlemen,
Speaker 13 this whole investigation started with a lie.
Speaker 3 There was a brand new team for trial four, led by a brash Boston attorney named Rosemary Scapicio.
Speaker 13 We put our heart and soul into her defense because we believe in her and we believe in her innocence.
Speaker 3 In this case, Scapiccio pounded home the message that the investigators wore blinders and never looked seriously at other suspects.
Speaker 13 They were only looking at Carr and Tubb, and they were working really hard. to make the pieces fit.
Speaker 13 And if you don't look anywhere else, if you keep those blinders on, then you don't have to do the rest of the investigation.
Speaker 3 Time of death was key to the defense case, too. Scapiccio went after the prosecution's argument that Anne died before Cara left the house at 3 p.m.
Speaker 3 She put her own medical expert on the stand to cast doubt on the prosecutor's timeline.
Speaker 13 Give an opinion as to whether or not you could rule out Anne-Marie Metal dying after 3 o'clock.
Speaker 11 I could not rule that out.
Speaker 13 Ladies and gentlemen, when you take the blinders off, when you look at the information regarding time of death, without blinders, you'll come to one conclusion.
Speaker 13 And that's that the Commonwealth has failed to prove their case beyond a reasonable doubt because Cara Rantala didn't kill her wife.
Speaker 3 With that, a fourth jury got the case.
Speaker 13 You know, you can't predict what a jury's doing. You always have hope that your client's going to walk out the door with you.
Speaker 14 What say you met a poor person?
Speaker 3 Not this time.
Speaker 13 We, the jury, unanimously find the defendant guilty of voluntary manslaughter.
Speaker 3 Not murder one, the verdict of her last trial, not even murder two.
Speaker 3 This time, the jury found Kara Rantella guilty of a lesser charge that carried a lesser sentence, but still a loss for the defense.
Speaker 13 Devastating. To have your client stand next to you and have a jury come back and
Speaker 13 say that she's guilty and understand then that she's probably going to go back to jail is just devastating.
Speaker 3 Two weeks after the trial ended, everyone was back in court for sentencing. Kara in handcuffs, her daughter Brianna, now 16, in tears as she appealed to the judge for her mom's release.
Speaker 3 I need my mom.
Speaker 16
This case started when I was very young. I do not remember my mother Ann at all.
The only mother I have ever remembered is Kara.
Speaker 22 There is not enough words in the dictionary for me to explain my hurt, my pain.
Speaker 32 I am asking you to release my mom right away and let us know.
Speaker 3 Anne's former sister-in-law, Jen Cochran, was in court for the sentencing. she found brianna's statement hard to sit through
Speaker 3 the fact that i was witness to brianna sitting in that courtroom and didn't even call her mom called her ann cochran she did not know who she was and there's one person to blame for that kara was sentenced to no less than 12 years and no more than 14 with credit for time served in 2025 she was paroled but kara's fight to clear her name continues another appeal is in the works.
Speaker 3 It had been more than a dozen years since Anne died.
Speaker 3 Jen, for her part, said she still missed that exuberant spirit.
Speaker 22 I don't want people to remember that she was lying on the basement floor covered in paint. I want them to remember her the way that I do, which is her infectious smile.
Speaker 22 And I want that memory. I don't want the bad memory.
Speaker 3 Anna Marie Cochrane Rintala, a woman who took life in big gulps, a joyous soul with a huge smile and a heart to match.
Speaker 3
That's all for now. I'm Lester Holt.
Thanks for joining us.
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