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Such Good Boys: The True Story of a Mother, Two Sons and a Horrifying Murder

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by Dirmann, Tina




  Dear Reader:

  The book you are about to read is the latest bestseller from the St. Martin’s True Crime Library, the imprint The New York Times calls “the leader in true crime!” Each month, we offer you a fascinating account of the latest, most sensational crime that has captured the national attention. St. Martin’s is the publisher of bestselling true crime author and crime journalist Kieran Crowley, who explores the dark, deadly links between a prominent Manhattan surgeon and the disappearance of his wife fifteen years earlier in THE SURGEON’S WIFE. Suzy Spencer’s BREAKING POINT guides readers through the tortuous twists and turns in the case of Andrea Yates, the Houston mother who drowned her five young children in the family’s bathtub. In Edgar Award-nominated DARK DREAMS, legendary FBI profiler Roy Hazelwood and bestselling crime author Stephen G. Michaud shine light on the inner workings of America’s most violent and depraved murderers. In the book you now hold, SUCH GOOD BOYS, veteran reporter Tina Dirmann tells the shocking true story of two brothers accused of killing their mother.

  St. Martin’s True Crime Library gives you the stories behind the headlines. Our authors take you right to the scene of the crime and into the minds of the most notorious murderers to show you what really makes them tick. St. Martin’s True Crime Library paperbacks are better than the most terrifying thriller, because it’s all true! The next time you want a crackling good read, make sure it’s got the St. Martin’s True Crime Library logo on the spine—you’ll be up all night!

  Charles E. Spicer, Jr.

  Executive Editor, St. Martin’s True Crime Library

  Titles by Tina Dirmann

  Vanished at Sea

  Such Good Boys

  FROM THE TRUE CRIME LIBRARY OF ST MARTIN’S PAPERBACKS

  SUCH GOOD BOYS

  The True Story of a Mother, Two Sons, and a Horrifying Murder

  Tina Dirmann

  St. Martin’s Paperbacks

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  I could have never told this story if it weren’t for the support and patience of so many people.

  To Michael Murray, Andre Spencer, and Craig Johnson—thanks for listening to my never-ending questions, and answering every one.

  To Eliza Gano—thanks for all of your research help, and for never saying no.

  To The Press-Enterprise newspaper and reporter Lisa O’Neill Hill—thanks for the clips and court notes.

  And to Sherry Parmet, Daryl Kelley, Kay Salliant, and Ray Locker—thanks for the outlines, for listening to me read (and re-read) endless paragraphs, and for generally listening as I complained out loud.

  Finally, to my agent, Jane Dystel, and my editors, Charlie Spicer and Michael Homler—thanks for the opportunity.

  “In our society any man who does not weep at his mother’s funeral runs the risk of being sentenced to death.”

  —The Stranger by Albert Camus

  SUCH GOOD BOYS

  Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  1

  Peter Martinez was bored, as usual. But after serving twenty-five years in the Marine Corps, including two tours of duty in Vietnam, the retired sergeant major enjoyed the quiet he found as a security guard charged with keeping an eye on the eighty or so multimillion-dollar homes that lined the sandy shore in the private community of Saint Malo Beach in Oceanside, California. He particularly enjoyed working the uneventful graveyard post and had grown accustomed to the simple sounds of the ocean as it roared in the not-too-far distance from his guard shack.

  Despite its beauty, Oceanside was a place most visitors zooming down the 5 Freeway simply passed on their way to the more popular destination point of San Diego, just twenty minutes away and home not only to beaches, but to the very popular SeaWorld tourist attraction. In fact, the Oceanside beaches weren’t even visible from the freeway, so tourists, and the troublemaking their revelry can sometimes bring, were scant.

  Martinez was armed. As a career military man, he’d had a pistol strapped to his side since he was 18 years old. But in the eight years he’d worked as a Saint Malo Beach security guard, he’d never pulled that firearm from his hip.

  Still, he stiffened when he saw car headlights break the black night sky just before 2 a.m. on January 14, 2003.

  The 2000 Oldsmobile Intrigue stopped several houses away from his shack, but he could still make out two figures as they lifted a bag out of their trunk. He watched as the pair struggled to heave their heavy load over their heads and into the roughly seven-foot-tall Dumpster in front of the neatly kept white two-story home at 2041 South Pacific Street. “Someone’s trying to dump a load of garbage,” Martinez thought. But this was private property, so he walked toward the car to give them a friendly but stern reminder.

  On approach, Martinez saw a tall man, easily over 6 feet, and a smaller man, maybe even a teenager, still gripping their oversized parcel.

  “What do you have there?” Martinez asked.

  Who knows why Jason Bautista froze in that moment? Maybe it was because he was only 20 years old and still used to listening to adults. Maybe because he was scared out of his mind and wasn’t sure what to do.

  But he dropped the bag onto the ground and froze. Matthew Montejo, his 15-year-old half-brother, mimicked his every move. Both men looked up at Martinez, who saw what looked like fear on the face of the smaller guy, the one he considered the sidekick.

  “We’re just dumping some trash,” Jason said.

  “Well, you can’t dump trash here,” Martinez said. “You have to pick it back up and leave.”

  “Sorry,” Jason said, before turning to Matthew. “Pick it up, let’s get it back in the car.”

  As he spoke, the old security guard looked down at the bag. He would later tell investigators it looked like a body bag, the kind he’d seen too many times during his years of service in the Marines. In actuality, it was a dark brown sleeping bag and he couldn’t see what was inside. But there was something in there. The bag drooped in the middle as the boys heaved on the ends.

  Matthew obeyed his older brother’s instructions, lifting the bag again. Martinez watched as the folds of the sleeping bag shifted, pulling back just far enough to reveal a human foot.

  Martinez felt shock rip through him. His mind reeled as he stared at the dangling foot. He hoped for a moment that he was looking at a doll or part of a mannequin. But the tightness in his gut told him otherwise.

  “Hey!” he called out. “Stop! Put the bag down! I want to see what’s in there.”

  Jason didn’t listen.

  “No,” he told the old man as he stuffed the bag back in the trunk and slammed it shut, “I’m not going to let you.”

  On instinct, Martinez reached for the .357 pistol at his side and pointed it at the men. “I said freeze!” Martinez repeated.

  “Fuck you!” Jason spat bac
k. “You’re just a security guard! You can’t do anything.” He slammed the trunk shut before climbing back into the driver’s seat.

  Martinez stood still, his grip on the gun. But he never fired. There had already been enough violence this night. Instead, as the car sped away, he took note of the license plate number. Returning to his guard shack, Martinez, shaken by what he’d just seen, called the Oceanside Police Department. And suddenly, the calming sounds of the ocean were drowned out by a police dispatcher’s voice.

  It was about 8:30 a.m. on the morning of January 14 when Orange County Sheriff’s Homicide Investigator Andre Spencer peered down the steep ravine off the Ortega Highway. Earlier that morning, a passenger in a car driving east on the 5 Freeway had spotted what looked like human remains lying in the fields near Mile Marker 79. Spencer was the next one up for an assignment, so it had fallen to him to lead the investigation. After thirteen years as a sworn officer, he was used to dealing with death. But as his eyes strained through a pair of binoculars, scanning the extreme hilly fields down the freeway, he was still startled at the sight, some 170 feet below him, of the headless, handless torso of a white female, clad only in her panties. The remains were ghostly pale because someone had taken the trouble to drain the corpse of most of its blood.

  Spencer knew how tough this one would be. “If she had a head or hands,” he thought, “we’d run fingerprints, dental records.” They’d have to swab the body instead and hope for a DNA match. His mind churned for ideas, determined to find out who this woman was and how she’d met such a gruesome end.

  It would be seven days before that license plate number scribbled down by security guard Peter Martinez would hit Spencer’s desk—the tip leading investigators to discover that the torso at the bottom of the ravine was 41-year-old Jane Bautista. Bautista, through the course of her life, had become obsessed by the idea that nameless, faceless strangers were out to kill her, but, in the end, her killers would be the only people she ever allowed to be close to her—her sons Jason and Matthew.

  2

  When she was a young woman, people described Jane as “striking.” Her pale skin covered a thin, 5‘7” frame and was set off by long, wavy brilliant red hair. Her soft blue eyes could pierce any man’s heart. One neighbor described her as “not flashy, not the kind who wore a lot of make-up or anything. She was plain, but pretty.” She probably could have had her choice of men to date, but she fell in love with a simple handyman from Belize. Armando Bautista met Jane while she was a student at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, where she was taking classes in hopes of someday becoming a teacher. Jane was 19 years old in 1981, the year she returned to Bautista’s home in Corozal Town, a lobster-exporting community on the northern coast of Belize, and agreed to marry him. Standing in the pink prom dress she’d borrowed from Armando’s sister, she promised to love, honor, and cherish her groom forever.

  Armando’s family, however, took an immediate dislike to Jane. They thought she was uppity because she insisted Armando rent a hotel room, rejecting his close-knit family’s offer to stay with them. Elida Centeno, Armando’s mother, was particularly hurt, then enraged, after her son and his wife refused to stay with the family during their visit. But Armando was so eager to please his new bride, he borrowed money from his mom to cover the hotel tab and meals at local restaurants.

  By any respect, the marriage was an odd, if not controversial, partnering. Jane came from a very upscale, white, devoutly Christian family. She looked odd next to her poor, immigrant groom. But Jane was always the rebel, neighbors recalled. Her older sister was the quiet one, never causing her parents any trouble. Jane was the one who sparkled, but she had a stubborn streak that kept her at odds with her family, especially her mother, Nellie Osborne.

  Jane Marie Osborne had come into the world on December 18, 1961, in a small suburban hospital in Waukegan, Illinois. She was the granddaughter of Benjamin Cloyce Funderburk, founder of Funderburk Builders, a flourishing construction company. It’s a company so well respected that local Realtors can expect to fetch a higher price for a home or building if they can advertise it as “Funderburk built.” Thanks to her family’s wealth, Jane and big sister Deborah, six years her senior, wanted for nothing as they grew up in the security of small-town living. Nellie and Don Osborne dressed their daughters well, sent them to pricey private schools, and treated the family to frequent Mexico vacations when the bitter Illinois winters took their toll. Acapulco was a family favorite.

  When Jane was in grade school, her parents moved from their middle-class home in small-town Zion to the even smaller town of Winthrop Harbor, Illinois, where even today the population maxes out at 6,700. Despite her family’s wealth and connections in construction, they moved into a simple, single-story brick home with a double-car garage and a sprawling front yard on a halfacre of land. The back yard wasn’t enormous, but was certainly big enough to accommodate the family picnic table and a large barbecue. For most of her life, Jane’s grandparents would occupy a small house on the neighboring half-acre of land along Russell Avenue.

  The town is a fiercely Southern Baptist community where churches outnumber retail stores. Accordingly, it’s also a steadfastly conservative and patriotic town. The American flag waves prominently from the front porches of most homes. Even today, the biggest businesses along Sheridan Road, the main stretch in and out of town, is a Veterans of Foreign Wars office and an Outdoorsman shop selling rifles and fishing equipment. A few mom-and-pop restaurants also dot the road, including Gyros-N-Heros, where a Confederate flag hangs over the front stoop and a giant sign reads “Heros Welcome!” Nearby is the competing Stone Creek Grill—owned by the Funderburk clan. The steak and fish restaurant is so well known it draws people from Wisconsin, though that’s not a particularly hard feat, since Winthrop Harbor sits against the Wisconsin border. A freshwater marina just outside the restaurant helps bring Wisconsin residents, who crowd the water with boats and yachts in summer months.

  “This place ain’t nothing but a little jerk town, always has been,” says one long-time Winthrop Harbor resident. “We’re so small, why, we’ve tried to get a Target or a Wal-Mart out here for years, but so far, they aren’t coming. We aren’t worth the effort, I guess.”

  Jane’s father, Don Osborne, chose not to work for the family business, instead making his own living as a dye caster for a local boating company. Finances allowed Nellie the luxury of being a stay-at-home mom. But neighbors said Nellie ran her home more tightly than any office. She was an organized, disciplined woman. “Nellie is very outspoken and always wants to be the boss,” a long-time neighbor and friend of the family said. “I would consider her a good mother, but she was pushy sometimes.”

  She often ran up against her equally strong-willed daughter, Jane. Frequent fights broke out between mom and daughter, but neighbors and childhood friends recall it was typical teenage stuff—curfew, boys, chores. If it was anything more, locals say, it’s unlikely folks would know about it. “Jane’s mother cares a great deal about what other people think of her and her family. She isn’t one to air her dirty laundry.”

  As a child, Jane was considered a nice little girl with no problems making friends at school. She was bright, outgoing, and the ringleader in playtime activities. She even joined the Girl Scouts, and neighbors still remember what a striking vision she was in the little green uniform that set off her long red mane. But she also evinced a mean stubborn streak, flanked with a quick temper, childhood friends recall. “Once she got mad at you, that was kind of it,” a former friend remembers. “She could pull away from you real quick.”

  She temporarily attended Zion-Benton High School. But when a rash of schoolyard fights broke out, Nellie decided to send her daughter off to a private, nondenominational Christian school in Grayslake, Illinois, about a thirty-minute drive from her home. Westlake Christian Academy required two entrance exams to get in—one academic, the other a series of questions about her faith to ensure that she was a devout Christian.
She passed both effortlessly. In fact, for a brief time, Jane was so infatuated by religious teachings, she thought a life devoted to God could be her calling, as her father, Don Osborne, recalled in a rare newspaper interview after his daughter’s death. That faith, however, evaporated by the time she entered college. By the time she was in her twenties, she would promise never to own a Bible again.

  Her family tried to support her early beliefs and gladly paid out the nearly $1,000 in annual tuition and enrolled her in classes, including theology. She was always an exceptionally bright student, and that didn’t change when she took on the rigorous classes and daily chapel attendance offered at the private school.

  Neighbor Joyce Yonke met Jane in the tenth grade. The girls took turns spending nights at each other’s houses. “Sometimes Jane could be hard to figure out,” Joyce remembered. “But there were several of us who hung out together, and Jane was usually just a lot of fun to be with.”

  At that time in her life, Jane was outgoing and social. She loved going to school basketball games or driving around with friends at night, listening to music. As a teenager in a small town, there wasn’t much to do. But the girls made the most of it. Jane seemed happy.

  Even among friends, she stood out for her academic performance. “She was a very smart student, and I was sort of average, so we didn’t have a lot of classes together,” Joyce said. “We had gym and chapel. And we lunched together. But as far as math and science classes, we didn’t, because we weren’t at the same level. Jane was always in the honors classes, accelerated stuff. But it was a very small school, so you just got to know everybody anyway.”

 

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