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Margaret Rudin tried to dispose evidence, police say By Harriet Ryan The items investigators recovered
from the trash bin included notes about her husband's $11 million personal
fortune — her alleged motive for the crime — a newspaper article
about the remote area where his body was dumped and lamp oil the prosecution
claims she intended to use to set his corpse aflame. During that time, Margaret
Rudin became the homicide detective's chief suspect. Previous police witnesses
have testified she showed no interest in finding her husband and was unemotional
when told he had been murdered. He said he and other undercover officers tailed her to a parking lot where she placed calls on both her cellphone and a payphone before walking to the dumpster of a nearby butcher shop and placing something inside. Police crime scene analyst Daniel Ford said he was summoned by other officers to the dumpster after Rudin drove off and discovered two bottles of lamp oil and a gift box containing torn-up pieces of paper. Back at the crime lab, he said, he put them together with scotch tape "like a jigsaw puzzle." Some of the pieced-together scraps yielded several pages from a day planner for the prior week. Scrawled in list form were terms like "power of attorney" and "assets not to be put in trust." Other scraps were from an article in the travel section of the local paper about nature trips near Lake Mojave scheduled for that spring. The article, published after Rudin's body was dumped there, beckoned the public to guided hikes in "spots you may never have found on your own." Ford also showed the jury the lamp oil he recovered, prompting an objection from Michael Amador, Rudin's lawyer, who argued that the bottles were irrelevant since tests prove Ron Rudin's corpse was burned using gasoline. Prosecutor Christopher Owens jumped at the chance to give the jury a taste of the prosecution's closing argument. With the panel paying close attention, he told Judge Joseph Bonaventure that investigators contend Rudin gave her co-conspirators — previously identified as Sharon and Rudin's nephew Scott Stavro — the oil to torch the corpse, but they decided later to use gasoline. Rudin, he said, was still under the impression the lamp oil could be traced to the body when she dumped it.
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