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EDITORIAL: The Murder of Glenn Reitz and the Biases that Killed Him

EDITORIAL - In the rural Central California city of Madera, Thomas Jefferson Junior High principal Benny Barsotti was concerned that one of his teachers did not show up for school or call in for a substitute. This was highly unusual for this teacher, who chaired the school's English department and was hired thirteen years earlier from the Stanford University Graduate Program. The teacher lived alone, just three houses south of the school, so Barsotti walked over to see if everything was all right. First, he knocked on the front door, but there was no answer. Then, he noticed the teacher's car was not in the driveway. For some reason, Barsotti walked around the house to the backyard and looked through two French doors that looked into the living room. He then got on his school radio and told the school secretary to call the police immediately.[1]

When Officer Sam Anderson arrived at the house three minutes later, he was directed to the backyard, where he attempted to gain entry. Once inside, he found what appeared to be a body covered by a large bath towel, leaning on the front door in a seated position on the floor, where a large pool of blood had formed. The officer noticed the wall and door behind the body were covered in blood splatter, with bloody handprints down the hallway to the back of the house and a trail of blood to the home's only bathroom. When the officer removed the towel, he found the bludgeoned nude body of Glenn Reitz, the 35-year-old missing teacher. Anderson placed the towel back on top of Reitz’s head and body as he found it, then backed out of the house while calling for a supervisor and two of the department's detectives.[2] Once detectives arrived and the crime tape went up, the rumors began, and this teacher, who always placed the needs of his students first, went from a position of respect to becoming that gay teacher who was killed in Madera.


The Glenn Reitz Murder: An Introduction

AN UNSOLVED MURDER IN MADERA: Part 1

MADERA - In 1977, I entered junior high school in the small Central California town of Madera. While I thought I knew everything and had experienced things that other twelve-year-old boys had not, it would be many years before my eyes would be opened to the big picture and the truth about people: We should all be treated equally no matter what the differences.

I was an only child of conservative Republican parents with country club memberships. Dad was an accountant and a member of the Elk's and Masonic Lodges. Mom was also involved in community service clubs. Being an only child, I had my parents' full attention most times. I sometimes forgot that I was only a lad and my mouth occasionally landed me in some real trouble.

The Glenn Reitz Murder: Crime Scene

AN UNSOLVED MURDER IN MADERA: Part 2

MADERA - On Tuesday, March 19, 1985, Thomas Jefferson Junior High English teacher Glenn Reitz failed to show up for school. This was something school Principal Ben Barsotti thought was very unusual for the teacher he had hired thirteen years earlier.

Phone calls were made to Reitz's home, but there was no answer. Being that Reitz only lived half a block from the Sunset Avenue school on Rotan Street, Barsotti decided to walk over to the teacher's home. He found something no one had expected to see in the little town of Madera.

The Glenn Reitz Murder: Time Line

AN UNSOLVED MURDER IN MADERA: Part 3

MADERA - In 1985, Glenn Reitz was living a full life. At the time of his death, he was helping form a drum and bugle corps for the Boy Scouts of America. He was in great physical shape from working out six days a week. He was water skiing one day and snow skiing the next. He had friends who cared for him. He had students who remember fondly how he would offer his help in and out of the classroom. And he had his secret life.

Once the Madera Police got this case, Detectives Dale Padgett and David Foster did a great job piecing together the last 48 hours of the Thomas Jefferson teacher's life. Through phone records, interviews, and good police work, almost every hour of Reitz's last 48 hours was accounted for in the police reports. Of course, we do not know for sure who was in the house with Reitz when he was killed, but we do know who he came in contact with shortly before.

The Glenn Reitz Murder: Missing Car & Police Sketch

AN UNSOLVED MURDER IN MADERA: Part 4

MADERA - As the local leads were drying up on the March 19, 1985, murder of Thomas Jefferson Junior High teacher Glenn Reitz, the Madera Police got a big break in the case. A partial license plate belonging to Reitz was found near a burned-out car in a gravel pit in Louisiana.

On April 7, 1985, Barry Culpepper, owner of a gravel pit near Arcadia, Louisiana, reported to the Bienville Parish Sheriff's Department that he had found a burned car on his property approximately 150 yards west of the intersections of Parish Roads 402 & 446.


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