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Thursday, November 12, 2009 - 4:46 AM
Howard and Smith
state that despite her condition, Beverly Washington managed to provide
the officers with several significant characteristics about the man who
had attacked her. Fletcher provides more detail. The driver had been
a slender white man who looked to be around 25, wearing a flannel shirt
and square-toed boots. He had greasy brown hair and a mustache. Washington
said he had offered more money than she'd asked for and had seemed
unaccountably nervous. When he asked her to get into the back of the
van with him, he had a gun. He ordered her to remove her clothes and
she quickly obeyed. Then he placed handcuffs on her, forced her to
perform oral sex, and threatened her with violence if she did not
swallow the handful of pills he held out to her. As she passed out,
she saw him holding a cord over her, and she feared that she was going
to die. The man dumped her into the trash, one breast severed and
the other nearly so, but someone discovered her and called the police.
Rushed to the hospital, she was saved. Police officers who questioned
her asked her about the van he was driving, and she said that it had
been red with tinted windows and a wooden divider inside. She also
told them that there were feathers and a roach clip hanging from the
rearview mirror.  Edward Spreitzer, arrest photo Those
details proved to be helpful in making an arrest. Within three weeks,
on October 20, 1982 (according to Howard and Smith, while Kelly says
November 7 and Fletcher says October 5), the police pulled over a red
van and questioned the driver. He had red hair and did not resemble
the victim's description, but the van fit it perfectly. The driver
told them his name was Eddie Spreitzer, and that the van belonged to
his boss, Robin Gecht. The officers directed Spreitzer to Gecht's
house and had him beckon Gecht outside. They hoped that he would be
their guy, and when he came out, he did indeed fit the description,
down to his shirt and boots. Yet he acted as if he had no worries at
all and was quite willing to help. Either he was innocent of these
crimes or utterly arrogant, confident that he was untouchable. Robin Gecht, arrest photo Later,
the victim picked Gecht out of a set of photos as the man who had
assaulted her, but when detectives went back to see him, Gecht had a
lawyer. It was clear that he was going to be quite careful in his
dealings with the police, and in fact they found him difficult to shake
up. Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire According to some sources, he had an interesting association with
a notorious criminal from the area, arrested three years earlier in
1979. Chicago, it seemed, had attracted its share of unusual
offenders.
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