Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Yiya Murano

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Number of Victims
  
3

Children
  
Martin Murano

Country
  
Yiya Murano Escrito con Sangre El Website de los Asesinos Yiya Murano La

Known As:
  
The Poisoner of Monserrat

Born
  
20 May 1930 (age 86) in Corrientes, Argentina (
1930-05-20
)

Similar
  
Osvaldo Bazán, Tomás Fonzi, Robledo Puch, Cayetano Santos Godino, Nacha Guevara

María de las Mercedes Bernardina Bolla Aponte de Murano (born 20 May 1930), better known as Yiya Murano, is an Argentinian killer and swindler. Convicted of three murders, she was imprisoned for 16 years.

Contents

Yiya Murano Escrito con Sangre El Website de los Asesinos Yiya Murano La

Murders

Nilda Gamba, a neighbor of Murano's died on 10 February 1979. On 19 February, Murano's friend, Leila Chicha Formisano de Ayala, died. Murano owed money to both women, and both bodies showed signs of cyanide poisoning.

Yiya Murano httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons22

On 24 March 1979, Murano's cousin, Carmen Zulema del Giorgio de Venturini, fell and died on the stairs of a building on Hipólito Yrigoyen Street, where she lived. Zulema's death was initially attributed to cardiac arrest. Zulema’s daughter found that a promissory note worth 20 million Argentine peso ley was missing from her mother’s belongings. The building’s doorman said that Murano arrived for a visit carrying a mysterious package (which was later discovered to contain masas finas), and had casually asked for a copy of the keys to Zulema's apartment keys, saying, “I need her notebook to warn her relatives”. Murano entered her cousin’s apartment and left quickly, carrying papers and a jar. She complained loudly: “My God, it’s my third friend to die in a short time!” During the autopsy, examiners discovered cyanide in Zulema's body. Investigators discovered the poison in the jar mentioned by the doorman, and in the masas finas.

Arrest

Yiya Murano Mentes Macabras Yiya Murano La Envenenadora de Monserrat YouTube

On 27 April 1979, the police arrested Murano at her home on Mexico Street. In 1980, she was found unconscious in the prison where she was being held; later, they removed one if Murano's lungs.

Murano was convicted in 1985, during the Trial of the Juntas. She insisted upon her innocence, saying: "I never invited anyone to eat."

Yiya Murano DiFilm Lia Salgado con Yiya Murano 1994 YouTube

Murano was released from prison after 16 years. It was learned that she sent the judges who released her a box of chocolates as a token of her appreciation.

Murano lives in a geriatric residence in La Boca. She occasionally gives interviews.

Media

Argentinian writer Marisa Grinstein included Murano in her book Mujeres Asesinas (Killer Women). In 2006, an episode of the Canal 13 television series of the same name featured a recreation of Murano's crimes. At the end of the episode, the real Yiya Murano appeared and proclaimed her innocence, citing evidence.

The second season of Mujeres Asesinas, the Mexican adaptation of the series, featured an episode based on Murano entitled “Tita Garza, Swindler,” starring Patricia Reyes Spindola.

References

Yiya Murano Wikipedia