San Diego – A suspicious woman fatally stabbed her wife of the firepiece at her home in southern California has been captured in Mexico after more than a month in the race, Mexican authorities said on Saturday.
Yolanda Marodi was arrested after being found in a hotel at approximately 2.3 miles south of the American border in the city of Mexicali, said the Ministry of Citizen Security of California de Low (SSCBC) in a statement.
The SSCBC said that Marodi was transferred to the border with the help of the National Migration Institute of Mexico. He was delivered to the US Sheriffs’ service after being returned to the United States in an entrance port in the United States, said San Diego County Sheriff in a statement on his capture.
The US authorities were looking for her in the murder of February 17 by Rebecca “Becky” Marodi, 49, a respected Firefighters of California, in the couple’s house in San Diego County.
The Secretariat said that cooperation and an exchange of information with US authorities helped lead to arrest.
A affidavit in support of an arrest warrant for Yolanda Maradi cites a home security video that represents a horrible scene outside the couple’s house in Ramona while facing a bloody Marshare Rebecca with a knife with a knife on February 17.
When the couple found a patio that night, Rebecca Maradi was heard in the recording saying: “Yolanda! Please …! I don’t want to die,” according to the statement.
At one point, Yolanda Marodi replied: “You should have thought about that before,” according to the affidavit.
Rebecca’s mother, who lived with the couple, called the authorities to say that her daughter had been stabbed, according to the document.
Shortly after, the house security chamber captured Yolanda Maradi, with different clothes, placing belongings, luggage and pets in its silver equinox SUVs and moving away, according to the document.
The same night, the SUV crossed Mexico, about 45 miles south of Ramona, declared the Affidavit, citing the records of the Department of National Security.
Yolanda Marodi was accused of murder on February 21.
The search for her included the department of the San Diego County Sheriff and the San Diego Fugitive Work Service of the United States Mariscal Service, authorities said. Carlos Zúñiga, spokesman for the State Security Agency of Baja California, said the authorities had been looking for her in coordination with American counterparts, NBC San Diego reported last month.
In 2003, Yolanda Marodi declared himself guilty of voluntary homicide for the stabbing death of the husband Jim Olejniczak in 2000, the station reported. She was released from custody a decade later.
The affidavit establishes that an unidentified witness received a text message from Yolanda Marodi one day after the murder of Rebecca Maradi, stating that Rebecca Marodi had told Yolanda Marodi “who met someone else” and was leaving her.
“Becky came home and told me that he left, met someone else, all the messages were lies. We had a great fight and hurt her … I’m sorry,” said the text, according to the affidavit.
The first to respond in the house reported that Rebecca Marodi had multiple white weapon wounds, including lacerations in the neck, chest and abdomen, according to the document. It was declared dead on the scene.
According to a joint statement from the Department of Forestation and Fire Protection of California, known as Cal Fire, and the Riverside County Fire Department, Rebecca Marodi worked in shootings for more than 30 years, starting as a volunteer in Moreno Valley, a city about 85 miles north of Ramona, in Riverside County.
She was a seasonal bomb, then a full -time one, before moving to engineering in 2007 and captain in 2022, working mainly on the counties of Riverside and San Bernardino, according to the statement.
Rebecca Marodi devoted much of his career to peer support, “always prioritizing the well -being of his colleagues,” according to the statement.
An Instagram post of the Cal Fire Battalion in Temecula, California, a community north of the Riverside County border with San Diego County, showed Rebecca Marodi on the first line of the Fire Eaton in Altadena, the deadliest of the state’s wind storm blazes in January.
A benevolent fund of Cal Fire San Diego online to raise money For Rebecca Maradi’s family, he described her as a woman who “dedicated more than three decades to serve and protect our communities with unwavering leadership, leadership and commitment.”