Missing Pieces
Irene Garza was a young, intelligent, and ambitious woman born on November 15, 1934, in McAllen, Texas. She was highly active in her community, winning the title of Miss South Texas in 1958, and working as a teacher dedicated to helping children from impoverished families. She often spent her own salary on books and clothing for her students. Faith played a central role in her life; she was a member of the Legion of Mary and frequently visited her church to find peace.On the evening of April 16, 1960, which was Holy Saturday, 25-year-old Irene drove her parents' car to the Sacred Heart Church in McAllen for confession. She told her parents she would return afterward, but she never came home. Her parents reported her missing the next morning, and her car was soon discovered parked near the church. On April 19, her purse, a left high-heeled shoe, and a lace garter were found near an irrigation canal. On April 21, Irene's body was recovered from the canal. An autopsy revealed she had been sexually assaulted and died from asphyxiation. A nearly new film projector was also found in the water near her body, which investigators believed was tied to her by the perpetrator to keep her from floating to the surface.The investigation quickly focused on John Feit, a 27-year-old priest at the church where Irene was last seen. Witnesses confirmed seeing Irene walking toward the rectory with Feit, and other clergy members noticed scratches on his hands and his unexplained absences that day. Furthermore, police received an anonymous note linking the discovered film projector directly to Feit. Suspicion deepened because, just three days before Irene's disappearance, a 20-year-old woman named Maria Guerra had been attacked in another local church by a man wearing a cassock. Guerra later identified Feit in a police lineup as her attacker. Feit failed polygraph tests regarding both incidents, yet he was not immediately charged for Irene's murder due to a lack of physical DNA evidence, as well as the immense political and social influence the church held at the time. Instead of facing justice, Feit was transferred to a monastery in Missouri as part of an alleged institutional cover-up. Feit eventually left the priesthood in 1972, moved to Phoenix, married, and started a family.The case remained cold until 2002 when a monk named Dale Tacheny came forward. Tacheny revealed that while counseling Feit at the Missouri monastery in 1963, Feit had confessed to Irene's murder. Feit admitted to taking Irene to the rectory for confession, attacking her, and suffocating her, further boasting that his superiors helped cover up the crime. Despite this damning testimony, a grand jury initially declined to indict Feit due to the lack of contemporary witnesses.The turning point came in 2014 when a newly elected District Attorney reopened the investigation. John Feit was finally arrested in February 2016 at over 80 years old. In December 2017, he was found guilty of Irene Garza's murder and sentenced to life in prison. Feit never publicly admitted to the crime and died in prison in February 2020. Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/missing-pieces--6886558/support [https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/missing-pieces--6886558/support?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=rss].
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