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Dancer’s dream lost in lurid headlines
Thursday, December 01, 2005
MIKE HARDEN
On the day after Catherine Woods was killed, the New York Post described her as "an aspiring Broadway dancer" in a story headlined "Dancing Beauty Murdered on Upper E. Side."
Within what seemed a New York minute, however, the 21-year-old was dismissively demoted in a WABC-TV Web site headline: "Still No Arrest In Topless Dancer Murder."
The New York Daily News teased readers with the headline "Dancer Led a Double Life: Parents of Slain Ohio Woman Didn’t Know She Was on B-way at Strip Club."
Based on the Big Apple news media coverage of the slaying, it seems that Woods’ first sin was failing to fit the template of their stereotype. Could it be that New York journalists wanted her to be an apple-cheeked Midwestern milkmaid who paid the rent on her Broadway dreams by scrubbing toilets?
New Yorkers know nothing of Columbus and its people. To them, we are just a bunch of yahoos hoeing the pole beans in one of those states with too many vowels, cows and all-you-can-eat buffets.
At last glance, the New York media were speculating on a love triangle that pitted Woods’ boyfriend, who followed her from Ohio, and a Manhattan fitness instructor against each other for Catherine’s affection. How long before we will see a New York headline featuring alliteration woven from topless, two-timing and triangle?
The view from Catherine Woods’ hometown is a little different.
Here, she was a beloved daughter and sister, a young woman whose incandescent dream of being a dancer had been with her since she was 3 years old.
She liked sketching, calligraphy and creative writing, and she was fond of animals — horses and dogs in particular.
None of that makes tantalizing grist for subway reading.
She left behind friends who will probably break down if they are invited, at the memorial service on Friday, to share a special memory of her.
In Columbus, the story of Catherine Woods is about a heartbreaking homecoming for a local girl.
But that doesn’t sell tabloids.
I doubt that New Yorkers — or anyone, for that matter — would find this story half as sensational were it about the slaying of an aspiring male dancer who earned rent money performing with the Chippendales.
New York will have its day with Catherine Woods.
Her death has provided CNN’s crime banshee, Nancy Grace, with enough fodder for a week of shows.
While I was wrestling with what might be said about the life and death of Catherine Woods, coincidence brought me an e-mail from a dear friend that included a few lines by poet T.S. Eliot:
Words strain,
Crack and sometimes break,
Under the burden, Under the tension, Slip, slide, perish, Decay with imprecision, Will not stay in place, Will not stay still. Words fail, fall short, get wrapped around sordid scenario and speculation. New York City would have us believe that there was something obscene about the life of Catherine Woods. Here, in her hometown, we know that the only obscenity is her death. Mike Harden is a Dispatch Metro columnist. He can be reached at 614-461-5215 or by e-mail.
[FONT=Arial,Helvetica,Verdana]Woods' Ex Arrested In Separate Case[/FONT]
<script language="JavaScript">var wn_last_ed_date = getLEDate("Dec20,2005,10:49 PM EST"); document.write(wn_last_ed_date);</script>Dec 20, 2005, 10:49 PM
There has been a big development in the investigation into the murder of Catherine Woods.
The daughter of OSU band director Jon Woods was found stabbed to death in her New York City apartment in November. Now, police have arrested Woods' ex-boyfriend for an unrelated sex crime.
The arrest of Paul Cortez provided police with something they didn't have before, his fingerprints.
10TV knows that investigators found a bloody fingerprint inside Woods' apartment. Now, they have something to compare it to.
The New York Post quotes police sources saying they've matched that bloody fingerprint to Cortez.
Police arrested the aspiring singer Monday and charged him with sexual assault. Police sources tell the Post the victim in the case only recently learned of Woods' murder, and came forward to tell police that Cortez assaulted her last New Year's Eve.
On November 27th, Woods' roommate, David Haughn, left their apartment for about 20-minutes to move his car. He came home to find Woods lying in a pool of blood and her throat slashed.
Police questioned Haughn for more than 24-hours before investigators focused their attention on Cortez.
He worked as a yoga instructor at Woods' gym. The two shared an on again, off again relationship, but had recently broke up.
10TV knows that Cortez made seven calls in a row to Woods' cell phone just before she was murdered.
A surveillance camera from a nearby bank may have caught Cortez standing outside Woods' apartment even though he told police he made those calls from his apartment more than 20-blocks away.
Police have not charged Cortez with the murder of Catherine Woods, and the case could rest on a single fingerprint.
Producers at 48 Hours say the district attorney says if they had been able to get a grand jury together, they would have tried to seek a murder charge against Cortez on Tuesday.
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thats horrible.
im sorry but no area of nyc is "safe" with regards to areas we have here in columbus.
Ex-Boyfriend Charged In Dancer's Slaying
Cortez Pleads Not Guilty
POSTED: 2:40 pm EST December 23, 2005
UPDATED: 5:46 pm EST December 23, 2005
<!--startindex-->NEW YORK -- The ex-boyfriend of slain dancer Catherine Woods was officially charged with murder Friday, NBC 4's Mike Bowersock reported.Paul Cortez was arrested Tuesday in an unrelated case, which allowed police to obtain a fingerprint to compare with those found in Woods' apartment. He was charged Friday with second-degree murder in connection with Woods' slaying, New York television station WNBC reported.<table class="clkImgTbl" align="right" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="240"><tbody><tr><td valign="top"><table border="0" cellpadding="8" cellspacing="0" width="100%"><tbody><tr><td valign="top"></td></tr></tbody></table></td></tr></tbody></table>
A second-degree murder charge means the crime was a purposeful killing, and not an accident, punishable by 25 years to life in prison. There is no death penalty in the state of New York, NBC 4's Nancy Burton reported.Cortez appeared in court Friday morning, where he pleaded not guilty. During the brief arraignment, the prosecutor said that Cortez made statements, and there are witnesses that tie him to the slaying, NBC 4 reported. A district attorney also said "there's a bloody fingerprint found at the scene which has been matched to this defendant."<center> RAW VIDEO: Cortez Enters Court
SLIDESHOWS: Paul Cortez | Catherine Woods | Crime Scene </center>Woods, the daughter of The Ohio State University Marching Band director Dr. Jon Woods, was found stabbed to death in her apartment."I want to say we are very thankful and appreciative of the hard work of the New York Police Department to apprehend this person, to get him off the streets. They have been very good communicating with us almost daily on their progress, which is very important to us," Jon Woods said.<table class="clkImgTbl" align="left" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="240"><tbody><tr><td valign="top"><table border="0" cellpadding="8" cellspacing="0" width="100%"><tbody><tr><td valign="top"></td></tr></tbody></table></td></tr></tbody></table>
Investigators said Cortez, 25, made as many as seven phone calls to Catherine Woods, 21, in a short time before she was killed, but none after the killing.Police said, after he first cooperated, they wanted to ask Cortez new questions about a number of things, including his phone records, but were told that Cortez had retained a lawyer.Cortez is a personal trainer who works at the upscale Equinox Fitness Club on the Upper East Side. Investigators said Woods had recently broken up with Cortez. The two had been close and worked out together at an East 85th Street club.Woods, an aspiring dancer from Worthington, who apparently paid her bills working as a exotic dancer at New York clubs, was living with another ex-boyfriend, David Haughn. It was Haughn, an Independence High School graduate, who first discovered her body after leaving their apartment for about 20 minutes to pick up his car.Police said Haughn was questioned and continues to cooperate in the investigation. One investigator said Haughn insisted he loved her and hoped to get back together with her after her breakup with Cortez.Watch NBC 4 and refresh nbc4i.com for continuing coverage. Previous Stories:
- December 20, 2005: Prosecutor: Bloody Fingerprint Linked To Woods' Ex-Boyfriend
- December 2, 2005: Police: Video Shows Person Near Scene Of Killing
- December 1, 2005: Police Focus On Phone Calls To Murdered Dancer
- November 30, 2005: 2 Ex-Boyfriends Questioned In Woman's Death
- November 29, 2005: Family Stunned By Daughter's Slaying In New York
- November 28, 2005: Daughter Of OSU Marching Band Director Killed