Socorro Caro Murders Her 3 Children

Socorro Caro is a woman from California who was sentenced to death for the murders of her three children

Socorro Caro was not happy with her husband who decided to leave her and decided the best way to make him suffer was to kill their three children.

Socorro Caro would fatally shoot her three children before attempting to take her own life by shooting herself in the head. Caro would survive obviously

Socorro Caro would be arrested and later convicted of three counts of murder and sentenced to death

Socorro Caro Photos

Socorro Caro

Socorro Caro FAQ

Where Is Socorro Caro Now

Socorro Caro is currently incarcerated a the Central California Women’s Facility

Socorro Caro Death Sentence Upheld

The California Supreme Court decided unanimously Thursday to uphold the death sentence of a chronically depressed mother who killed three of her children before shooting herself in the head.

In a decision written by Justice Mariano-Florentino Cuellar, the state high court affirmed the death sentence of Socorro Caro for shooting to death Joey, 11, Michael, 8, and Christopher Caro, 5 at her Camarillo home. Her fourth child, who was 1, was unharmed.

At the time of the 1999 killings, Socorro Caro, known as Cora to her friends, was having marital difficulties with her husband, Dr. Xavier Caro, a specialist in rheumatology. He had visited a divorce lawyer.

The couple shared margaritas and dinner on the night of the killings and then argued about disciplining one of their children. Socorro accused her husband of not loving or respecting her. Xavier told her he was leaving and went to his medical office.

Socorro was convicted of shooting the three boys a few hours later in their bedrooms before turning the gun on herself. She later underwent two brain surgeries.

Reports showed she had Prozac, an anti-depressant prescribed by her husband, and Xanax, a medication for anxiety, in her system. Socorro Caro blood alcohol level was 0.138, an amount a defense expert said would have caused her to stagger.

A clinical neurologist testified at her trial that Caro suffered from chronic depression, delusions of personal inadequacy, alcohol dependence and a dependent personality.

Socorro challenged her death sentence on a variety of grounds, including the admission of statements she made before being given a Miranda warning while in intensive care after brain surgery.

The court concluded that those statements to a detective were largely innocuous and “did not have high value in the overall evidentiary calculus.”

“Had these statements been omitted, moreover, it would have been unlikely to affect consideration of the case’s compelling forensic evidence,” Cuellar wrote. “Expert testimony about the bloody clothes Socorro was found wearing provided a wealth of incriminating information.”

https://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-death-sentence-mom-killed-kids-20190613-story.html

FacebookTwitterEmailPinterestRedditTumblrShare

Rosie Alfaro Murders 9 Year Old Girl

Rosie Alfaro is a woman from California who was sentenced to death for the murder of a nine year old girl

Rosia Alfaro was planning to rob a home of a friend however when she arrived at the residence she would discover that the woman’s nine year old daughter was home. Instead of leaving and trying the robbery on another day Rosie Alfaro would repeatedly stab the nine year old girl killing her

Rosia Alfaro would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

Rosie Alfaro Photos

Rosie Alfaro

Rosie Alfaro FAQ

Where is Rosie Alfaro now

Rosie Alfaro is currently incarcerated at the Central California Women’s Facility

Rosie Alfaro Sentenced To Death

Linda Wallace was sitting in the cavernous courtroom of the California Supreme Court recently when she started to cry.

“You would think after all this time, you would get over it, but you don’t,” said the Lake Havasu City, Ariz., woman.

It’s been 17 years since her little girl was killed; 15 years since the killer was sentenced to death.

Still, she cries. The tears come at her at odd hours in the day and the night.

“The hurt is still there,” she said. “It’s always there, no matter how much time passes by.”

Wallace has attended every minute of every court proceeding in the case since June 15, 1990, when 9-year-old Autumn Wallace was stabbed to death in her own home.

She has endured one trial, two penalty hearings, and more than 15 years awaiting an appellate review. The testimony, she said, has frequently been gruesome and hard to take, but Wallace persevered because “I was doing it for Autumn.”



Wallace will continue to travel from her home in Arizona, accompanied by her two surviving daughters when possible, no matter when and no matter how far, to represent Autumn.

“It’s the only thing I can do for her,” the mom said, “I need to be there to represent her, because she can’t do it. I go to be with my daughter.

“The hardest thing for me is to see people now who are Autumn’s age,” she said. “Not being able to see her grow up, that’s what bothers me the most. She would be 26 years old now. She could be married. She could have kids. That’s what I think about.”

• • •

Maria del Rosio “Rosie” Alfaro, grew up in the Anaheim barrio near Disneyland. She became a drug addict at 13, a prostitute at 14 and a single mom at 15. Eventually, she became a murderer at 18 and the first woman in Orange County to get the death penalty at 20.

On June 15, 1990, Alfaro was high on cocaine and heroin, and she desperately need money for another fix.

An easy target for stuff to steal, Rosie Alfaro thought, would be the Wallace residence in Anaheim Hills, a warm and comforting home she had visited many times before as a sometimes friend of one of Autumn’s older sisters.

Autumn, a pixie with blond hair and brown eyes, was home alone cutting out paper dolls when she heard the knock on the door. The teenager on the front porch was not a stranger to Autumn. It was Rosie Alfaro, her sister’s friend.

The killer was inside now, and Autumn was a perfect victim: She was a child. She was trusting. She was vulnerable.

She was also a witness. Years later, in a jailhouse interview, Rosie Alfaro said she had to kill Autumn because the little girl knew who she was. She remembered how Autumn looked up at her with a trusting smile, a smile that turned to fear when the stabbing began.

Linda Wallace found the body of her cherubic little girl hours later, in a pool of blood in the bathroom. She had been stabbed 57 times.

The Wallace home had been ransacked, and property was missing – including a portable television, a VCR, a typewriter, a telephone and a Nintendo set. Rosie Alfaro later sold all of it for $300.

Rosie Alfaro confessed to the slaying, but later changed her story and claimed that an unidentified male accomplice forced her to start stabbing the girl, and then he finished the slaying. Rosie Alfaro has adamantly refused to identify the mystery man, and continues to do so. The police say he never existed.

Jurors did not buy her version of the facts.

Rosie Alfaro was convicted of first-degree murder, plus special circumstances. The same jury deadlocked at 10-2 for death penalty, and a mistrial was declared. A second jury voted unanimously that Rosie Alfaro should die for taking Autumn’s life. Linda Wallace sat through both.

Superior Court Judge Theodore Millard, in confirming the death recommendation, said the slaying was “senseless, brutal, vicious and callous.”

That was 15 years ago this month. Wallace and her two surviving daughters are still waiting for Millard’s sentence to be meted out.

• • •

Linda Wallace knew from the beginning that it would take a long time for her courtroom treks to be over.

Chuck Middleton, the deputy district attorney assigned to her case, warned her before the first trial that it can take as long as 20 years for a death penalty case to wind its way to a conclusion – sometimes longer.

Wallace says that while she waits for justice, she does not spend her time or energy fretting about Rosie Alfaro.

“I know she is in a bad place,” Wallace says. “I know she will never see the light of day. I am fine with it.”

Rosie Alfaro, Wallace added, hasn’t had much of a life since she was arrested in 1990.

“She just exists,” the mother said. “It wouldn’t be any life I would want.”

Amber Wallace Zabo, who is one of Autumn’s older sisters, traveled with her mother to San Francisco last month when attorneys argued whether Rosie Alfaro’s death sentence had been fair. Zabo’s sister April made the trip to San Francisco for the arguments, but she couldn’t get to the courthouse in time.

They have waited nearly two decades for the case to come to a conclusion. They will have to wait awhile longer. The California Supreme Court has until the end of summer to issue a ruling.

And if justices affirm Rosie Alfaro’s sentence, it’s on to the federal court system for another round of appeals.

Linda Wallace says she is ready for that too.

Zabo gets mad every time she thinks about the woman who killed her younger sister.

For her, Rosie Alfaro gets one advantage after another: court-appointed lawyers, two penalty hearings, numerous appeals.

“We get nothing,” Zabo said. “And she gets all of these things. It makes me mad. … I just want to see her be put to death, and I want to see it faster than it is taking.”

Would she travel to San Quentin Prison to watch Rosie Alfaro be executed?

“Oh yes, I would go to watch her die, without a doubt,” Zabo said. “I would do it myself, if they’d let me.”

But what about Linda Wallace, now 58, a woman who lost her husband to cancer in 1987 and her youngest daughter to a murderer’s knife in 1990, a woman who has attended every single hearing in the case for 17 years.

Would she go to an execution?

“I am not that much for that,” she said. “If she is put to death, then another mother loses her child. I know what it feels like to lose a child.”

FacebookTwitterEmailPinterestRedditTumblrShare

Shawna Forde Murders Father And Daughter

Shawna Forde is a woman from Arizona who was sentenced to death for the murder of a father and his young daughter during a robbery.

Shawna Forde was part of a group that patrolled the Mexico border looking for people attempting to cross illegally.

On the night of the murder Shawna Forde and Jason Bush would force their way into a home and would murder a man and his daughter while attempting to kill the mother. Police would determine that Shawna Forde and Jason Bush were looking for drugs and not illegal aliens

Shawna Forde and Jason Bush would be arrested and charged with two counts of murder. The pair would both be convicted and sentenced to death.

Shawna Forde Photos

Shawna Forde 1

Shawna Forde FAQ

Where Is Shawna Forde Now

Shawna Forde is currently incarcerated at the ASPC Perryville, Lumley Unit the home of Arizona Death Row for Women

Shawna Forde Sentenced To Death

Shawna Forde, a border vigilante, was sentenced to death today for the murders of a 9-year-old Arivaca, Ariz., girl and her father in a home invasion she orchestrated to rob the family.

The jury deliberated only a few hours before coming to the decision, but the one juror who spoke to reporters said the deliberations were difficult.

“We chose death because that’s what seems fair,” juror Angela Thomas told ABC affiliate KGUN-TV in Tucson.

“While Shawna Forde gets to delight in the picture of her brand new grandson, there’s another person in this equation who never will. There’s another person in this equation who’ll never get to wear her first pair of high heels or have her first kiss or go to prom or graduation,” Thomas said. “There’s a little girl in this equation who’s father won’t be able to walk her down the aisle.”

She said the trial, which included graphic, detailed testimony about how Raul “Junior” Flores, 29, and his young daughter were gunned down in their own home while Flores’ wife, pretending to be dead, watched, was extremely painful.



“Hideous, the apropos word is hideous. Every second of every day. Every time I close my eyes I see this picture. It’s a picture of a love seen innocent enough. And little hands with red fingernails and a white tank top and turquoise colored pajama shorts,” Thomas said. “I’ve seen it a thousand times in my house. I have daughters. The difference in this picture I see is that this little girl’s face, half of her face is missing.”

Shawna Forde, 43, founder of Minutemen American Defense, showed no emotion when the verdict was read, but her attorney, Eric Larsen, said he did not expect the jury to come back with a death sentence.

“No I did not,” Larsen told KGUN-TV. “I fully expected that this community valued human life greater then this jury did.”

Shawna Forde was convicted Feb. 14 of two counts of murder for orchestrating the home invasion. Prosecutors said she planned to rob Flores, who she thought was a drug dealer, to fund her border watch group.

There were rumors that Flores had a stash of $4,000 in cash in the house.

Flores and his daughter Bresenia were both killed in the May 2009 attack at their Arivaca home. His wife, Gina Gonzalez, was shot three times, but survived by playing dead.

In addition to the first-degree murder charges, Shawna Forde was found guilty of one count of attempted first-degree murder; one count of burglary in the first-degree; one count of aggravated assault, serious physical injury; one count of aggravated assault, deadly weapon/dangerous instrument; one count of armed robbery; and one count of aggravated armed robbery.

The Pima County Superior Court jury came back with a verdict after it deliberated for seven hours over two days.

Shawna Forde’s lawyer had argued that the woman was not in the house when Flores and his daughter were murdered, so she should not be found guilty.

But prosecutors said Shawna Forde was with the two men who broke into the Flores home, and Gonzalez testified that she was there.

“She didn’t put a gun to Brisenia’s head … but she was the one in charge,” Pima County Deputy County Attorney Rick Unklesbay said in closing arguments. “Because of that you must hold her accountable.”

Gonzalez, who played dead in the kitchen after being shot three times in the leg, identified one of the three suspects as Shawna Forde.

“She’s walking in and she’s got a smile on her face. She looks up … and walks back out,” Gonzalez told the jury.

The woman testified in chilling detail about seeing her husband and daughter killed.

“He’s all out of bullets by then because he used them on me and Junior,” she said of one of the alleged gunmen who had shot and killed Flores before turning the barrel on their crying daughter, Brisenia. “He stands here and he loads the gun right in front of her.”

“And is this something you can see happening?” Pima County Deputy Attorney Kellie Johnson asked.

“I just hear her telling him, ‘Please don’t shoot me, please don’t shoot me,’” Gonzalez said.

Then, Brisenia was shot in the head.

Two other suspects — Jason Bush, a known white-supremacist, and Albert Gaxiola, a convicted drug dealer — are in custody awaiting trials later this spring. Like Forde, both men have pleaded not guilty.

In a 911 call recording played in court, Gonzalez could be heard using her husband’s handgun to fire back at the men after they had left and returned, continuing to ransack the house.

“They’re coming back in, they’re coming back in,” she told dispatcher Tanya Remsburg. Several rounds of gunshots can be heard on the recording. “Get the f*** out of here, get the f*** out of here.”

Gonzalez said that the family had been roused from their sleep by a trio dressed in camouflage, claiming to be law enforcement officers looking for fugitives.

“They told us that somebody had escaped jail or something, they wanted to come in and look at my house,” she said on the call. “And they just shot my husband and they shot my daughter and they shot me. Oh, my God, ma’am, I can’t believe this is happening. … I can’t believe they killed my family.”

Lying in the kitchen, bleeding from gunshot wounds to her leg, she described the suspects as a white male whose face was painted black, a six-foot-tall Mexican man and a “shorter fat woman.”

In the courtroom Jan. 26, Gonzalez pointed to Shawna Forde and said she looked like the female suspect. Previously, however, she had failed to pick Forde out of a police lineup.

But prosecutors said there was evidence beyond that from Gonzalez and other witnesses that linked her to the crime.

They presented text messages sent through Forde’s phone and recorded conversations between Shawna Forde and other suspects. He said Shawna Forde had planned the crime for months with her fellow suspects, in meetings out-of-state.

“Even if she didn’t pull the trigger … make no mistake about it. She’s the one who planned the events. She’s the one who recruited people to do this,” Unklesbay said.

Prosecutors also said police recovered from Shawna Forde several items of Gonzalez’s personal jewelry, including her wedding ring, during a search after her arrest. Shawna Forde remains on Death Row

Shawna Forde Now

shawna forde now

ASPC-PV SM RECEPTION
SHAWNA FORDE 260830
PO Box 3300
Goodyear, AZ 85338
United States

FacebookTwitterEmailPinterestRedditTumblrShare

Wendi Andriano Murders Husband

Wendi Andriano is a woman from Arizona who was sentenced to death for the murder of her husband.

Wendi Andriano was not happy that her husband was chronically ill and unable to work so she began a plan to murder him. Andriano would begin by taking out a number of life insurance policies on her husband then began to slowly over medicate him

On the day of the murder Wendi Andriano would call 911 and say that her husband was having a heart attack however when the ambulance arrived she would turn them away. Wendi Andriano would then fatally beat her husband and stabbed him multiple times in the neck

Wendi Andriano would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

Wendi Andriano Photos

Wendi Andriano

Wendi Andriano FAQ

Where is Wendi Andriano now

Wendi Andriano is currently incarcerated at the ASPC Perryville, Lumley Unit the home of Arizona Death Row for Women

Wendi Andriano Convicted Of Murder

A 34-year-old Ahwatukee Foothills woman was convicted Thursday of poisoning, beating and stabbing her terminally ill husband to death in October 2000 and now faces the possibility of the death penalty.

If sentenced to death, Wendi Andriano would become the second woman on Arizona’s death row. Jurors, who took 2 1 /2 hours to return their verdict, will begin hearing evidence in the penalty phase Monday in Maricopa County Superior Court.

After the guilty verdict was announced, Andriano glanced sharply at defense attorney David DeLozier. Her husband’s parents and two sisters, one of whom is raising the couple’s two small children, cried quietly and exchanged hugs.

“This is a relief for us because now we can get on with our life, and the children can get on with their life and have the normal family life they deserve,” said Jeanea Lambeth, one of the sisters.

Jurors were told Andriano grew tired of the time it was taking Joseph Andriano, 33, to die and devised a plan to poison him with the pesticide sodium azide. Prosecutor Juan Martinez said Wendi Andriano believed she could receive as much as $20 million if her husband died before their medical malpractice suit went to trial.

Not only did Wendi Andriano have two affairs in the weeks before her husband’s death, but she called multiple insurance companies in an attempt to get policies on her husband, Martinez said. She also asked two men to impersonate Joseph Andriano during the required physical exams — offering one of them $10,000 to do so, the prosecutor said.

Wendi Andriano’s attorneys, DeLozier and Dan Patterson, painted her as a meek and battered wife desperate for affection.

Andriano testified that her husband was the one who devised a plan that would end his life on his terms and provide life insurance for their two children, Nicholas, then 3, and Ashley, then 2. It was at his insistence, she claimed, that she purchased the insecticide under a false name and tried to purchase extra life insurance.

Wendi Andriano said that on the day of her husband’s death he voluntarily took the poison in pill form and stabbed himself in the neck after learning she had a one-night stand. She said she beat her enraged husband repeatedly with a bar stool in self-defense.

According to court testimony, Joseph Andriano was struck in the head 23 times and the pesticide was found in a pot of soup and two bowls.

Wendi Andriano faces either life in prison with the possibility of parole after 25 years, life without parole, or the death penalty. She could receive the death penalty if the jury finds the slaying was especially cruel, heinous and depraved and because the motivating factor was money.

If given the death penalty, Andriano will join Debra Milke on death row. Milke was convicted of hiring two friends to shoot her 4-year-old son to death in December 1989 because she didn’t want him to grow up to be like his father. The boy went with the men believing he was going to visit Santa Claus

https://www.eastvalleytribune.com/news/woman-convicted-of-slaying-husband/article_6df08377-6efc-5445-986f-be87c73c6303.html

Wendi Andriano Now

wendi Andriano now

ASPC-PV SM RECEPTION
WENDI E. ANDRIANO 191593
PO Box 3300
Goodyear, AZ 85338
United States

FacebookTwitterEmailPinterestRedditTumblrShare

Sammantha Allen Murders 10 YR Old Girl

Sammantha Allen is a woman from Arizona who along with her husband John Allen would murder a ten year old girl

Sammantha Allen and John Allen were suppose to be taking care of ten year old Ame Deal however the little girl would be tortured before she finally died. According to reports Ame Deal was forced to exercise for long hours for minor offenses and locked in a 31 inch foot locker overnight where the child would die

Sammantha Allen and John Allen were both arrested, convicted and sentenced to death for the murder of Ame Deal

Sammantha Allen reverted back to her maiden name Sammantha Uriarte

Sammantha Allen Photos

sammantha allen

Sammantha Allen FAQ

Where Is Sammantha Allen Now

Sammantha Allen is currently incarcerated at the ASPC Perryville, Lumley Unit the home of Arizona Death Row for Women

Death Sentence Upheld For Sammantha Allen

Sammantha Allen still faces the death penalty for the murder of her 10-year-old cousin, Ame Deal, after the Arizona Supreme Court sustained her most severe sentence Tuesday. Allen had appealed her sentence, raising 22 issues.

Out of the 22 issues she raised in her appeal, only her allegation that the state illegally placed an aggravated sentence of two years for negligent child abuse was sent back to the lower courts for resentencing.

The courts’ opinion on the appeal explained the state needs to provide two aggravating factors when it comes to aggravated sentencing. In this case, the state only provided one for the negligent child abuse conviction: the offense involved an accomplice.

In the summer of 2011, Allen and her husband forced Ame Deal to get into a small footlocker in their garage that was not air conditioned during a sweltering July night. Deal was found dead the next morning.

Allen was found guilty in 2017 on five counts: felony murder, conspiracy to commit child abuse, negligent child abuse, and two counts of intentional child abuse.

She received the death sentence for the felony murder conviction and a total of 76 years of prison time for the others.

In another issue, Allen claimed the state didn’t meet the Enmund/Tison requirement, a standard Arizona uses to impose the death penalty when there is more than one person involved in a killing.

In the Enmund requirement, “the state has to prove that the defendant killed, at- tempted to kill or intended a killing to take place.” In Tison, the state has to prove that “the defendant was a major participant in the underlying felony and acted with reckless indifference to human life.”

Allen claimed it was her husband who killed Deal since he had been the one who physically put her in the box and locked it. She also claimed her “passive conduct” in watching her husband do this did not mean she was a “major participant.”

In the ruling, the court pointed out Allen admitted to blocking Deal from leaving the room while her husband got the box. This was enough for a jury to reasonably conclude that Allen had killed Deal and played a major part in the killing.

“Sammantha actively participated in [Deal’s] punishment and her failure to release [Deal] from the box before she suffocated was what killed her,” the justices wrote.

The justices also set a precedent that a jury doesn’t have to unanimously agree on which of the two requirements fits the crime.

According to the court records, Allen and other relatives had repeatedly abused Ame Deal, forcing dog feces on her, beating her with a paddle and dunking her in cold water, among other forms of violence. Placing her in the foot-locker box, 21 inches smaller than she was, became a standard form of punishment.

A jury found Sammantha Allen guilty in the summer of 2017. Her husband, John Allen, was later found guilty and sentenced to death.

Both Allen and her husband originally claimed that Deal’s death was an accident caused by a game of hide and seek.

Her story changed, and she later claimed that she knew her husband put Deal in the box but told him to let Deal out before going to bed. Eventually, she admitted that she and her husband made Deal do backbends and that she let him put Deal in the locker because they thought Deal had stolen a popsicle.

After a week of deliberating the jury sentenced Sammantha Allen to death after weighing the cruelty of the case against her age, her clear criminal record and her toxic upbringing. Her mother, Cynthia, Stoltzmann, and grandmother, Judith Deal, were also convicted of child abuse and are currently serving 24-year and 10-year prison sentences, respectively.

https://www.azcentral.com/story/news/local/phoenix/2022/07/28/death-sentence-upheld-sammantha-allen-murder-ame-deal/10178505002/

Sammantha Allen Now

sammantha allen sammantha uriarte

ASPC-PV SM RECEPTION
SAMMANTHA E. URIARTE 320757
PO Box 3300
Goodyear, AZ 85338
United States

FacebookTwitterEmailPinterestRedditTumblrShare
Exit mobile version