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'She's a great woman, she doesn't deserve to
be in jail': Husband DEFENDS wife 'who stabbed their three
daughters to death' and vows to keep marriage alive
Carol Coronado, 30, was arrested on suspicion
of murder May 20 at her home in Torrance, California
Her mother found the three girls dead in a
bed at the home with their naked mother beside them clutching a
knife
Husband Rudy Coronado said Thursday there had
been warning signs, but he did not know anything about
postpartum depression
Mr Coronado called his wife 'a great woman'
and said she did not deserve to be behind bars
Mrs Coronado allegedly tried to cut her own
wrists and was taken to hospital before being booked into jail
By Snejana Farberov - DailyMail.co.uk
July 4, 2014
The husband of a California mother accused of
stabbing to death her three young daughters has spoken out in her
defense, saying that his wife's undiagnosed postpartum depression
was to blame for the tragedy.
Carol Coronado, 30, has pleaded not guilty to
murder charges in the deaths of her children, Sophia, 3, Yazmine,
1, and two-month-old Xenia. The Torrance, California, woman, is
also accused of trying to kill her own mother after stabbing her
daughters May 20.
The mother of three was taken to a mental
hospital after she tried to take her own life by stabbing herself
in the chest, according to police.
Carol Coronado's defense team has retained the
services of a psychologist who will examine her for any signs of
postpartum depression.
'I'm not a doctor but I know for a fact that
was that disease, and it wasn't my wife,' Rudy Coronado told NBC
Los Angeles Thursday.
The grieving father revealed that there had
been many warning signs before the murders, but he did not know
how to read them.
‘That's the reason why we need to bring
awareness to [postpartum depression] because I was never educated
on nothing like this,’ Mr Coronado said. ‘I didn't have a clue.’
He added that if it were not for the psychosis,
his wife would not have hurt anyone 'in a million years.'
Rudy Coronado confided that he has been
struggling to come to terms with the loss of his girls over the
past month and a half.
‘It doesn't get easier by the day, it gets a
little more harder,’ he said.
But even as he continued mourning his
daughters, Coronado vehemently defended his wife, describing her
as a 'great woman.'
‘She doesn't deserve to be where she's at,’ he
said.
The 30-year-old mother of three has never been
diagnosed with, or treated for, postpartum depression.
However, the family have set up the Coronado
Angel Fund to raise awarenss of the mental health issue affecting
many new mothers.
According to a Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention survey, 8 to 19 per cent of women reported having
frequent postpartum depressive symptoms.
The devastated Rudy Coronado had previously
told MailOnline: 'I don’t know why the hell this happened, she
killed my babies man, she killed my babies,' as tears streamed
down his face.
'It was like a demon possessed,' he continued.
'She was a girl with a good career ahead of her, I just don’t know
why it happened. If I knew why it happened, it would answer all my
questions.’
The girls' godfather, John Carrion, told the
Daily Breeze in May: '[Rudy] loved her. He is concerned for her.
He understands what happened, but he is adamant whatever happened
wasn’t her. She needs help.'
Carol Coronado's mother Julie Piercey first
discovered the children's butchered bodies covered in blood lying
lifeless in the bed at around 5pm on May 20. The accused killer is
said by investigators to have then gone at the woman with a knife.
'Oh my God!' Piercey is said to have screamed
before wrestling the knife from the hands of her blood-spattered
daughter, sources told the Daily Breeze. Husband Rudy was outside
working on his car when the killings occurred.
Police said Mrs Coronado was found naked and
holding a knife after reportedly trying to cut her own wrists and
stabbing herself in the chest. Several knives were recovered at a
grisly scene.
'The babies were on the bed,' Los Angeles
County Sheriff's Lt. Dave Coleman said.'And not in a haphazard
fashion, they were placed on the bed, so how and where they were
killed, we're going to have to figure that out.'
Sheriff's deputies took the mother, who was
naked except for a blanket, to a patrol car and she was then
placed in an ambulance, Madrid said.
Mrs Coronado joined the U.S. Army after high
school but only spent a few months in the service before being
released due to an injury, Coleman said.
Woman accused of killing 3 daughters could face death penalty
By Kate Mather, Richard Winton - Latimes.com
May 23, 2014
Murder charges filed against a West Carson
mother accused of killing her three young daughters carries a
special allegation that could bring the death penalty, prosecutors
said.
But the Los Angeles County district attorney's
office said Friday it would decide later whether to seek the death
penalty against Carol Coronado, 30.
Prosecutors charged Coronado on Friday with
three counts of murder in the deaths of her daughters, identified
by relatives as Sophia, 2 1/2; Yazmine, 16 months; and Xenia, 2
months. Coronado also faces special allegations that multiple
murders were committed and that she used a deadly and dangerous
weapon--a knife.
Coronado also was charged with one count of
attempted murder for allegedly trying to kill her mother,
according to the felony complaint filed in the case. Investigators
said it was Coronado's mother who found her daughter naked and
"covered with blood" on a bed next to the bodies of her own girls.
It was unclear when Coronado would be arraigned
as she remained hospitalized Friday for self-inflicted wounds.
Sheriff's officials said she would be transferred to the jail ward
at the Los Angeles County-USC Medical Center and booked there on
the charges.
Los Angeles County sheriff's detectives were
still trying to determine what prompted the slayings Tuesday
evening at Coronado's home in the 1000 block of West 223rd Street.
Investigators were looking into Coronado's
medical history and mental health, sheriff's Lt. Dave Coleman
said, including whether she might have suffered postpartum
depression after the birth of her youngest daughter.
Detectives removed several knives from the
home, Coleman said. There was evidence the girls had been stabbed,
he added, but it was unclear what other injuries they may have
sustained.
Those who know the family said there was no
indication anything was wrong. One relative said Coronado's
husband--who was working on a pickup across the street when his
daughters were killed--was "dazed and confused."
"Right now, he's giving her the benefit of the
doubt," relative John Carrion said. "He just said he didn't
believe he saw Carol — he saw a demon inside her. He said he
doesn't blame Carol. He blames the … demon."
Carrion declined to speak further about the
children's mother, saying only that he had never seen her angry.
"I don't know how I feel about the woman right
now," he said. "I don't understand what was going on in that
woman's head."
Outpouring of anguish at vigil; three children dead, mother in
custody
By Megan Nicolai, Jenna Chandler -
LosAngelesRegister.com
May 22, 2014
TORRANCE – More than 80 family members, friends
and neighbors prayed and sang at a vigil Wednesday night to honor
the three girls killed Tuesday in their Torrance-area home.
Rudy Coronado collapsed in front of a memorial
set up for his daughters on a wood pallet in his driveway. He wept
and rocked throughout the 30-minute vigil, and kissed a photo of
his daughters as flowers, stuffed animals, balloons and candles
were placed in front of the memorial.
Attendees of the vigil gathered to remember
three girls, 21/2-year-old Sophia, 16-month-old Yazmine and
2-month-old Xenia, found dead in their home by their grandmother
the night before.
Their small, blood-covered bodies were neatly
arranged on a bed. Their mother was lying next to them, and later
arrested as their suspected killer.
Carol Coronado, 30, remained in custody and
hospitalized Wednesday with multiple self-inflicted stab and slice
wounds. She was expected to be booked into the Carson sheriff’s
station jail on suspicion of three counts of murder.
“They were the most beautiful babies in the
world,” John Carrion, the girls’ godfather, said. “Words can’t
describe what’s happened.”
Those who live in the 1000 block of West 223rd
Street, heard a father’s distraught screams ring through the
neighborhood.
Ashley Madrid said she saw her neighbor, Rudy
Coronado, in his front yard wailing: “‘She killed my daughters.’”
His screams brought another neighbor, Veronica
Ruiz, running from her kitchen. She said she heard Coronado
continue: “‘She’s crazy,’ he said, and ‘She killed the babies.’
... He showed me the knife with blood,” Ruiz said.
Neighbors and authorities said a grandmother
made the grisly discovery, the girls’ small, blood-covered bodies
neatly arranged on a bed. Their mother lay next to them.
As the grandmother ran outside, she threw a
bloody knife to the ground and told the girls’ father, who was
working on a car, what she’d seen.
She called 911. Los Angeles County sheriff’s
deputies arrived at the home about 5:20 p.m. Tuesday.
Deputies escorted Carol Coronado, handcuffed
and cloaked in a blanket, out of the house. Underneath the
blanket, Coronado’s arms, legs and face were smeared with blood,
Madrid said.
Investigators were reviewing Coronado’s medical
records and her service in the military. She joined the Army after
high school but spent only a few months in the service before
being released due to an injury, Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Lt.
Dave Coleman said.
Multiple knives were taken from the scene,
including the one the grandmother tossed to the ground, believed
to be the one used to stab the girls to death.
Authorities said the grandmother, whose name
was not released, had come to the home near Torrance after
receiving a call from her daughter. Coleman said detectives
believe the stabbings likely occurred just before the grandmother
arrived.
“The babies were on the bed,” Coleman said.
“And not in a haphazard fashion. They were placed on the bed, so
how and where they were killed, we’re going to have to figure that
out.”
Carrion said the family was “doing horrible,
just horrible.”
“They’re just dazed and confused,” he said.
His eyes moist and puffy, Rudy Coronado emerged
from the light green home about 9 a.m. Wednesday. He quickly
covered his face with a hand towel to shield himself from news
reporters and was driven away.
Eddie Larsen, who lives nearby, attended the
vigil. He said he hoped to support the family any way he could.
“I just can’t believe this kind of evil
exists,” Larsen said. “I feel terrible for what happened to the
children, and equally as bad for the woman.”
Officials focus on mother's mental health in deaths of 3 girls
By Ruben Vives, Richard Winton, Kate Mather -
Latimes.com
May 21, 2014
It was a quiet evening in the working-class
West Carson neighborhood — until residents heard the screams.
A woman ran out of a small, white house, a
bloody knife in her hand. She screamed at her son-in-law and
frantically began dialing her cellphone.
"She killed the babies," she said.
Inside the house in the 1000 block of West
223rd Street, authorities said, the woman had found her
30-year-old daughter, naked and "covered with blood" on a bed next
to the neatly arranged bodies of her own three girls.
Investigators say that Carol Coronado killed her daughters —
identified by relatives as Sophia, 21/2 ; Yazmine, 16 months; and
Xenia, 2 months — before stabbing and slicing herself with a
kitchen knife.
The girls' father was working on a pickup
parked across the street, neighbors said. He screamed when he saw
the bloody scene inside his home.
"He kept saying, 'Oh my God, Oh my god,' "
neighbor Veronica Ruiz said.
Los Angeles County sheriff's detectives
Wednesday were still trying to determine what prompted the
slayings the day before. Coronado and her children had never been
reported to the Department of Children and Family Services' child
abuse hotline, according to sources who have reviewed the case.
Sheriff's Lt. Dave Coleman said investigators there were not aware
of any previous incidents involving the stay-at-home mother.
Investigators were looking into Coronado's
mental health, Coleman said, including whether she might have
suffered postpartum depression after the birth of her youngest
daughter.
"We still haven't determined a reason," Coleman
said. "Obviously, we're going to have to delve into her mental
state."
Those who know the family said there was no
indication that anything was wrong. Coronado often took the girls
on walks up and down the street, a neighbor said. Her Facebook
page featured several photos of the girls, including an ultrasound
photo.
In a brief interview with The Times, Coronado's
father-in-law said she was "trying to go to school and take care
of the kids."
"It's real bad," Rudy Coronado, 67, said.
Another relative, John Carrion, said Coronado's
husband — who is also named Rudy — was "dazed and confused."
"Right now, he's giving her the benefit of
doubt," Carrion said. "He just said he didn't believe he saw Carol
— he saw a demon inside her. He said he doesn't blame Carol. He
blames the … demon."
Carrion declined to speak further about the
children's' mother, saying only that he had never seen her angry.
"I don't know how I feel about the woman right
now," he said. "I don't understand what was going on in that
woman's head."
Authorities responded to the Coronado home
about 5:20 p.m. Tuesday. Neighbors watched as deputies escorted
her from the house, handcuffed and wrapped in a blanket.
"She had a zoned-out look and was just looking
down," Ashley Madrid, 27, said. "She had dry blood smeared on her
face and legs."
Coronado was taken to a hospital for the
self-inflicted wounds, which Coleman said included a puncture
wound to her chest. She was listed in stable condition Wednesday,
and was expected to be booked on suspicion of murder when she was
released.
Detectives removed several knives from the
home, Coleman said. There was evidence that the girls had been
stabbed, he added, but it was unclear what other injuries they may
have sustained. Autopsies were scheduled to be conducted Thursday.
"We still haven't established how they died,"
Coleman said. "But there were stab wounds."
Coleman said the girls' bodies were carefully
lined up across the bed. Coronado, he said, was lying
perpendicular to them.
Investigators also planned to examine
Coronado's medical history. Coleman said she briefly served in the
Army more than a decade ago before she left for medical reasons.
Outside the home, relatives assembled a small
memorial of flowers, candles and teddy bears. On Wednesday
evening, several dozen people attended a vigil for the slain
girls, including their father. Surrounded by relatives and
friends, he cried and rubbed the photos of his three daughters.
Amid prayers and chants, the younger Rudy
Coronado dropped his head to the ground and wept louder. Relatives
stroked his back and head.
The girls, Carrion said, were energetic and
loved the Disney movie "Frozen." There were plans for a baptism
this fall.
"They were the most beautiful babies you had
ever seen," he said. "They loved their daddy and he loved them.
Pray for my babies, please, pray for my babies. Pray for Rudy. And
even pray for that woman."
Witness recalls chaotic scene: 'She killed the babies'
By Ruben Vives, Richard Winton, Kate Mather -
Latimes.com
May 21, 2014
Veronica Ruiz was cooking dinner when her
daughter rushed into the kitchen, saying their neighbor's mother
was in the front yard with a bloody knife.
Ruiz went outside and saw the woman screaming
at her son-in-law, who was working on a truck across the street.
They ran inside. Seconds later, Ruiz said, she heard more screams.
The man ran back outside, Ruiz said,
frantically trying to dial his cellphone.
"Oh my God," he said. "Oh my God."
Ruiz went to his mother-in-law, who was on the
phone with police.
"She killed the babies," the woman said.
Residents of an unincorporated neighborhood
near Torrance described the chaotic scene Tuesday night, when a
30-year-old stay-at-home mother was arrested on suspicion of
killing her three daughters.
Law enforcement officials identified the girls
as 2 1/2-year-old Sophia, 16-month-old Yazmine and Zenia, who was
2 months old.
Investigators said Carol Coronado, 30, was
"covered with blood" when her mother found her lying on a bed next
to the girls' bodies. Coronado, who was half-clothed, also had
self-inflicted stab wounds, said sheriff's Lt. Dave Coleman.
There was evidence to suggest Coronado used a
knife in the attack, Coleman said, but it was unclear what other
injuries the children might have suffered.
"There was evidence of stab wounds," Coleman
told The Times on Wednesday. "We still haven't established how
they died exactly yet. But there were stab wounds."
Coroner's officials said autopsies were
scheduled to be performed Thursday.
When police led Coronado out of the house in
the 1000 block of West 223rd Street, she was handcuffed and
covered in a blanket, said neighbor Ashley Madrid.
"She had a zoned-out look and was just looking
down," Madrid said. "She had dry blood smeared on her face and
legs."
Coronado's husband, Madrid said, collapsed in
the street as sheriff's deputies escorted him to a patrol car.
"It was very horrible to see," she said. "Very
heartbreaking."
Investigators are still trying to determine
what happened, Coleman said. He said detectives were not aware of
any prior incidents involving Coronado, but would examine whether
she suffered any postpartum depression after her youngest daughter
was born.
"We still haven't determined a reason," Coleman
said, later adding, "Obviously we're going to have to delve into
her mental state."
Coronado served in the military as a young
woman, Coleman said, but left after a short stint because of
medical reasons.
In a brief interview with The Times, Coronado's
father-in-law said there were no obvious red flags before the
killings. Rudy Coronado, 67, said his daughter-in-law was "trying
to go to school and take care of the kids."
Rudy Coronado said his son called him with the
news Tuesday night. He was so quiet, he said, "he couldn't say
anything."