Angelina Rodriguez
Angelina Rodriguez | |
---|---|
Born | |
Nationality | United States |
Occupation | Laborer |
Criminal status | In prison |
Spouses |
|
Children |
|
Motive | Financial gain |
Criminal charge |
|
Penalty |
|
Comments | Accused of killing her infant daughter, Alicia, in 1993 by suffocation |
Details | |
Victims | Jose Francisco "Frank" Rodriguez |
Date | September 9, 2000 3:19 am |
Country | United States |
State(s) | California |
Weapons | Ethylene glycol poisoning |
Date apprehended | February 7, 2001 |
Imprisoned at | Central California Women's Facility, Chowchilla, California |
Notes | |
On death row awaiting execution |
Angelina Rodriguez (born May 31, 1968) is an American woman from Montebello, California who was sentenced to death for the September 2000 murder of Jose Francisco "Frank" Rodriguez, her fourth husband. She also was accused of killing her infant daughter in 1993 by suffocating her with a pacifier. Angelina is incarcerated at the Central California Women's Facility in Chowchilla, California, where she is on death row awaiting execution.[1]
Background
Angelina Rodriguez met her husband Frank, a special education teacher, while they were employed at a camp in San Luis Obispo, California. The couple married in April 2000.[2] It was Angelina's fourth marriage.[1] Prosecutors argue that within months of the marriage, Angelina took out a $250,000 (2018 value of $366,000) life insurance policy on Frank and began plotting to kill him. She was suspected of poisoning Frank's tea with oleander leaves, loosening the gas cap on their clothes dryer, and finally adding antifreeze to her husband's Gatorade. Frank Rodriguez died on September 9, 2000. His death initially was ruled undetermined, but the lack of a cause of death meant that Angelina could not get a death certificate or Frank's life insurance. She pushed for more testing, and these results showed that he intentionally had been poisoned. Angelina was arrested for murder in Paso Robles, California in February 2001.[3]
Trial
Three years after Frank's death, Angelina's murder trial began in the fall of 2003. During the years since her arrest, prosecutors discovered that her 13-month-old daughter Alicia died suspiciously in 1993. Angelina claimed that her daughter choked on a pacifier that became dislodged, but investigators believe that Angelina removed the pacifier's nipple and used it to suffocate Alicia. Angelina then sued the pacifier manufacturer and was awarded a settlement of $700,000. She also received a $50,000 life insurance policy after Alicia's death was ruled accidental. Although she never was charged in her daughter's death, this evidence was presented at her trial to show that Angelina's motive for murder was financial.[4]
In October 2003, Angelina Rodriguez was convicted of first-degree murder with the special circumstances, murder for financial gain, and attempt to dissuade a witness. She was not convicted of the charge of soliciting murder. The following month, the jury rendered a sentence of death.[2][5]
Angelina Rodriguez was sentenced to death by lethal injection on January 12, 2004. In her sentencing, Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge William R. Pounders stated that she killed her husband in an "exceptionally cruel and callous" way and that her guilt had been proved to "an absolute certainty...In the past 20 years, I have never seen a colder heart." Despite her conviction and death sentence, Angelina argued her innocence and maintained that her husband's death was a suicide by antifreeze poisoning.[4]
Aftermath
Angelina Rodriguez was awarded a new sentencing hearing in 2010, but was re-sentenced to death in November 2010. Her most recent appeal was denied by the Supreme Court of California in February 2014.[6][7] Angelina remains on death row at the Central California Women's Facility in Chowchilla, California. However, she is planning to appeal her case to the United States Supreme Court.[8]
Media
The murder of Frank Rodriguez has been profiled on several television shows, including North Mission Road on truTV, Deadly Women[9] and Happily Never After on Investigation Discovery, Snapped[10] on the Oxygen Network, and It Takes a Killer[11] on Escape TV. The crime was featured on an episode of NBC's Dateline, titled "The Devil in Disguise".[12]
Published in February 2016, the book A Taste for Murder, written by Burl Barer and Frank C. Girardot, covers the details of the crimes committed by Rodriguez.[13]
See also
The articles listed are based on women who committed murders for financial gain, the noted years are the span of the killing(s).
- Black Widow Murders, 1999-2005
- Teresa Lewis, 2002
- Celeste Beard, 1999
- Frances Elaine Newton, 1987
- Stella Maudine Nickell, 1986
- Judy Buenoano, 1971-1983
- Janie Lou Gibbs, 1966–1967
- Ruth Snyder, 1927
- Belle Gunness, 1900-1908
- Black Widows of Liverpool, 1880–1883
References
- ^ a b Gina Piccalo (2005-03-09). "Fatal Lies". Los Angeles Times.
- ^ a b Anna Gorman (2003-11-13). "Jury Calls for Poisoner's Death". Los Angeles Times.
- ^ Frank C. Girardot (2015-01-23). "How greed kept one woman from getting away with her husband's murder". Pasadena Star-News.
- ^ a b Anna Gorman (2004-01-13). "Wife Gets Death for Killing Husband". Los Angeles Times.
- ^ "People v. Rodriguez - S122123 - Thu, 02/20/2014 | California Supreme Court Resources". scocal.stanford.edu. 20 February 2014. Retrieved 16 July 2017.
- ^ Maura Dolan (2014-02-20). "Death sentence upheld for Montebello woman who murdered her husband". Los Angeles Times.
- ^ From staff and wire reports (20 February 2014). "She killed 4th husband with 'oleander tea,' antifreeze-laced Gatorade, and she's still sentenced to death". The San Gabriel Valley Tribune. Retrieved 4 August 2017.
- ^ Sami K. Martin (2014-02-21). "Angelina Rodriguez Death Sentence Upheld by State of California, Lawyer Appeals to US Supreme Court". Christian Post.
- ^ "Deadly Women: Self-Made Widows". TVGuide.com. 29 August 2014. Retrieved 11 July 2017.
- ^ "Snapped: Angelina Rodriguez". Oxygen Official Site. Oxygen Media LLC. 9 July 2015. Retrieved 11 July 2017.
- ^ "It Takes a Killer: A Preference for Poison". Escape Media LLC. Retrieved 11 July 2017.
- ^ "Full Episode: The Devil in Disguise". NBC News: DATELINE. June 2015. Retrieved 4 August 2017.
- ^ Barer, Burl; Jr, Frank C. Girardot (2016). A Taste For Murder. WildBlue Press. ISBN 9781942266358.
External links
- Supreme Court of California case and opinions hosted at FindLaw, February 20, 2014
- Los Angeles County District Attorney's Office Press Release, Jury Recommends Death Sentence for Woman Convicted of Poisoning Her Husband, November 12, 2003
- 1968 births
- 2000 murders in the United States
- American female murderers
- American murderers
- American female criminals
- American people convicted of murder
- American prisoners sentenced to death
- Prisoners sentenced to death by California
- Living people
- People convicted of murder by California
- People from Montebello, California
- Mariticides
- 20th-century American criminals
- Women sentenced to death