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Chatsworth Man Dies; 2 Escape Crash

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

A World War II German Army captain who emigrated to America after the war and found success as a businessman became a victim early Sunday of the recent series of powerful storms that slammed the Southland. Frank Retz, 84, was killed when the car he was in fell to the bottom of a 60-foot ravine near his secluded home.

Authorities were still investigating Sunday night whether rain waters washed away an earthen bridge that led to Retz’s home off Santa Susana Pass Road, or if the weight of the car in which he and his friends were riding caused the bridge to collapse.

The car, which belonged to Andy and Helen Gattuso, plunged to the bottom of the ravine about 1:30 a.m., authorities said. The Gattusos, both in their 60s, managed to crawl out of the overturned vehicle and climb up the edge of the embankment.

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But when the couple reached Retz’s home, the power was out and the telephone was dead, said Capt. Michael McMaster of the Los Angeles Fire Department.

Authorities were called six hours later when someone on their way to Sunday morning services at the nearby Church at Rocky Peak saw the couple waving their arms for help.

“I looked over and saw them standing there, and they definitely looked like they needed help,” said Dan Oran, an usher at the church, who arrived minutes after the parishioner who called 911.

The Gattusos were taken to Granada Hills Community Hospital, where they were treated for minor injuries and released. They were recovering Sunday afternoon in their Northridge home and did not wish to speak with reporters.

Coroner’s investigator Erik D. Arbuthnot said it was not immediately clear what caused Retz’s death. Despite the fall, there was little obvious trauma to his body, he said.

“He might even have drowned. He might have had a heart attack. We don’t know.”

McMaster said there was a 3-foot-wide culvert that channeled water from a stream underneath the earthen bridge that led to Retz’s home.

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Tina Thompson, a neighbor, said the bridge had been “red tagged” as unsafe by city building inspectors because Retz installed the drain himself, then covered it with fill without the proper permits.

“He used to tell me he wasn’t going to let the city bureaucracy tell him what he was going to do on his property,” she said.

Thompson’s account could not be confirmed Sunday.

Retz was remembered as a colorful character by his neighbors, who said he boasted of being the stuntman atop the horse in the TV series, “Zorro,” and of once physically assaulting Charles Manson, whom he caught trespassing on his property.

By others, he was recalled alternatively as an affable partyer and an ill-tempered recluse. Retz apparently spent his last night alive just as he would have liked, said his attorney, John J. Altenburg.

The Gattusos had taken Retz to a dance at the Bavarian Haus club in North Hollywood, Altenburg said, where he often enjoyed spending time with fellow German expatriates.

“He was an 84-year-old man full of vim and vigor,” Altenburg said. “He loved to dance and sing. He would sing, totally offbeat, but at the top of his lungs.”

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Retz was decorated during the war by the German army, Altenburg said. After the war he came to the U.S., where he was in several businesses, including import-export, retail food and discount airline charters.

Retz also had a passion for soccer and horses, and made many friends in the movie business over the years, said Bill Murdock, who knew Retz for 20 years. Retz sometimes rented his ranch--a 64-acre spread in picturesque hills overlooking the San Fernando Valley--to filmmakers.

Nikki Wright, who grew up near Retz’s ranch and still lives nearby, said the man had charm.

“We care a lot about him,” she said, as she watched firefighters pull Retz’s body from the car.

Altenburg conceded that Retz was protective of his property, as indicated by several lawsuits stemming from dog bites, he said.

Thompson, who is Wright’s mother, said that Retz told her several times about his role in the “Zorro” series. “Whenever you see Zorro on a horse, it’s me,” Thompson quoted Retz as saying.

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He also told her of the time he attacked Charles Manson, ordering Manson and his followers to get off his land.

Retz’s son, Phil, an architect in the Seattle area, didn’t want to talk about his father’s colorful past.

“He was a good, decent man,” he said. “I don’t think there’s need to say much more.”

Staff writer Allison Cohen contributed to this report.

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