In 2017, Monica Sementilli was living an enviable life — a sumptuous space with a pool and a Porsche at the end of the driveway — in an exclusive Los Angeles community.
But after spending nearly seven years waiting in bars due to legal delays and COVID, she is expected to stand trial for the murder of her husband, famed stylist and beauty director Fabio Sementilli.
As “48 Hours” contributor Michelle Miller reports, it’s a confusing story. Her defenders claim that Monica Sementilli is an innocent victim. But if the prosecutors are to be believed, she’s a criminal. Authorities describe a case of lust, greed and murder. In any case, the drama extended on January 23, 2017.
Elyse Bleuel: There were fire trucks in front of your house. . . And I like it, oh my God. . . There are no police yet. Only the first responders.
Elyse Bleuel, a friend of Monica Simental, spoke to him in 2018. He says Monica texted him to come the night Fabio killed.
Elyse Bleuel: She and her daughters. . . She kept saying that “he’s gone, I’m not a woman anymore”. . . I just had her in my arms. I just held it.
Elyse Bleuel: It’s so painful, just the tears. . . not being able to breathe. . . She’s beyond devastated. . . beyond devastated.
Monica’s husband, Fabio, collapsed in his chair by the pool.
Michelle Miller: Have you noticed the body? Have you seen?
Elyse Bleuel: No. . .
Elyse Bleuel: I just wanted to be as comfortable as possible. . . I didn’t know how to do it. . . He was not able to utter complete sentences until the fourth day.
Detectives soon learned that the victim, Fabio Sementilli, was a superstar in the good-looks industry.
“48 Horas” spoke with those who knew him in 2017. La Fabio’s sister, Mirella Rota
Mirella Rota: He’s a satisfied man. And he wanted everyone around him to be satisfied.
Luigi Sementilli: The way to describe my father, actually, is like a cup of coffee in the morning.
Luigi Sementilli is the son of Fabio’s marriage.
Luigi Sementilli: He helps you keep going. . . it cheers you up. . . He determines you to attack the mountain of life.
Michelle Miller: Have your friends said to you, “Hi Luigi, is that your dad?
Luigi Sementilli: Absolutely. It’s fun, you know. . . It’s hard to avoid it when you type Sementilli into Google, it’s very difficult. . . in fact, when you type in my name, Luigi Sementilli, the first thing that pops up is His profile!(laughs)
Fabio and his sister Mirella getting a haircut in Toronto, Canada.
There Fabio met Monica, a consumer and makeup artist whom he married in 1997.
Joe Mercurio: The Amazing Wedding.
Restaurateur Joe Mercurio grew up with Fabio. The most productive guy at Fabio’s wedding to Monica.
Joe Mercurio: We danced to the end.
Mirella Rota: We saw their courtship as a love story.
Fabio is also in love with his career: he and his sister Mirella became famous.
In 2008, Fabio rose to a management position at the giant Wella and moved his family to Los Angeles. Pete Castellano, Fabio’s colleague.
Pete Castellano: What happened was the opportunity. . . to allow the things he sought for his family to come to life by taking on a bigger role.
He and Monica have adapted to a life that most of us can dream of.
Michelle Miller: Drive a Porsche.
Mirella Rota: Yes.
Michelle Miller: What guy doesn’t need a Porsche in Los Angeles?
Mirella Rota: You’re right.
They lived in and raised their two teenage daughters, Gessica and Isabella.
FABIO SEMENTILLI (video): My own family unit is the most expensive for me.
Then I got here that day in January. It’s already been the afternoon while I was sitting by the pool. Fabio was stabbed to death. His 16-year-old daughter Isabella found his body.
To investigators, the Sementilli case was first and foremost a mystery. But from the beginning they had at least one intriguing clue.
From a neighbor’s security camera, they may see two hooded figures running near the Sementilli home at the time of the murder. Soon after, Fabio’s Porsche drove away. At the time, investigators didn’t suspect that Monica had anything to do with Fabio’s death. She wasn’t even home when he killed. Instead, they looked at the two hooded figures.
At the time of Fabio’s murder in 2017, Los Angeles was plagued by raids by infamous criminal groups.
Michelle Miller (watching a video of a burglary): What do you call those guys?
Det. William Dunn: Well, us thieves.
Michelle Miller: So those are photographs from the Los Angeles Police Department?
Det. William Dunn: yes, they know what they’re doing and they know what they want.
Michelle Miller: I mean, they go crazy!
They were reaching out to celebrities all over Los Angeles.
That in 2017, and for years, celebrity homes in Los Angeles have been attacked.
LOCAL NEWS REPORT: At least seven celebrities have had thousands of dollars worth of jewelry stolen.
LOCAL NEWS REPORT: Most high-profile victims come with $300,000 for former Lakers star Derek Fisher, $175,000 for Nikki Minaj. . . and $2 million from Alanis Morrissette’s Brentwood home.
Detective William Dunn | LAPD (watching surveillance video of a heist robbery): They’re moving as fast as they can.
Det. William Dunn: They’re in and out in about 3 minutes. . . They ransack a room, some jewelry, and leave.
William Dunn, an LAPD detective at the time, had hours of video of burglars in action in each and every affluent Los Angeles community, adding one in a space a few miles from Fabio’s home, months after his murder.
Michelle Miller (watching surveillance video of a robbery): They need to know what to look for.
Det. William Dunn: That’s right, they’re looking for jewelry. They’re looking for money.
Michelle Miller: Look at it!
Det. William Dunn: Yes, he checks the clothes, feels them to see if he has put jewelry or cash in any pockets.
Det. William Dunn: See? Now you see this for sure.
Michelle Miller: Oh!
Det. William Dunn: Look, and now you understand,” he says to his friend. Hey, look what we found. Now look at how many seconds, and that’s a really heavy safe. . . . But they are very determined. . . They’ve put in a lot of effort and it’s so heavy that they can’t – they can’t lift the thing. But look at how this thing is going to slide.
Michelle Miller: So they got the vault, they get paid, and we’re leaving.
Det. William Dunn: They’re gone. Yes! See? They left.
To detectives, those two hooded figures recorded by a neighbor’s surveillance camera near Fabio’s space at the time of his murder looked a lot like robbers.
And the Sementilli space had its own cameras. Detectives hoped to find even more videos of those hooded characters on those tapes.
There were four hereras outside Sementilli’s house, but when police arrived looking for the video, it disappeared!A DVR in the garage kept all the surveillance. Whoever broke in had to take him away.
Interestingly, Fabio’s Porsche, this black box, was still one of the only pieces stolen from space, according to investigators. Monica told them they might be missing some reasonable jewelry and $11,000 in cash, but she wasn’t sure. Detectives say security in the area was not reached.
Luigi Sementilli: The only thing that caught my attention was, why didn’t they take more from it?Why didn’t they take away his watch?
The alleged thieves left an $8,000 Rolex on Fabio’s wrist.
But after a few months, thieves began to disappear among police suspects, as police clung to a big secret. No one, the investigators, knew at the time, yet they discovered blood at the crime scene that did not belong to Fabio Sementilli. This meant that detectives had DNA to work with. The DNA that eventually led to a suspect.
Captain William Hayes | LAPD: We were going to expand forensic testing. . . some of them were DNA, which helped identify Robert Baker.
Robert Baker had been the director of a racquetball league in a Los Angeles gymnasium, not Fabio’s home. And Monica’s friend, Elyse Bleuel, knew him. “48 Hours” had told him about himself in 2018.
Michelle Miller: How would you describe Rob Baker?
Elyse Bleuel: It was great. We all enjoyed it.
Elyse Bleuel: He’s one of those gym guys, you know, grrr!
Bleuel in his league.
Elyse Bleuel: He’s very alpha. He is a very alpha male. There’s also some kind of something sexual about it.
Michelle Miller: There’s something sexual about him. What do you mean?
Elyse Bleuel: You know, some guys just have that kind of sex, I don’t know, he’s very manly. . . He’s in smart shape, and he, you know, takes care of everything, he’s in charge.
She also worked in the porn industry, even doing theater.
Bleuel didn’t know much about Baker’s background, but he learned about his film career through a friend who had seen him in an adult film.
Elyse Bleuel: It’s the kind of gossip that. . . You just have to communicate it.
Michelle Miller: Who did that?
Elyse Bleuel: I’m Monica.
Monica is also a member of Robert Baker’s racquetball league.
Michelle Miller: What was your reaction?
Elyse Bleuel: Well, it was disappointing, I assure you.
Michelle Miller: Really?
Élyse Bleuel: yes, often, when we talked to the girls, she would get a little prudish. Like a bit of a prude.
What Bleuel didn’t know is that Baker is also a registered sex offender.
Captain William Hayes: Robert Baker convicted in 1993 in a Long Beach case. It is for lewd and lascivious acts with a minor.
Police say Baker served time for the crime of being a teenager.
For months, police surveilled Baker and discovered two things. Firstly, he wasn’t one of the thieves, and secondly, he made thousands of calls and texts to Monica Sementilli, among all the people.
In fact, a few days after Fabio’s death, Monica held a vigil in his garden and Baker showed up.
Michelle Miller: Do you know him?
Mirella Rota: I did.
Rota says Monica fainted with Baker.
Mirella Rota: I saw her again. . . outside, having a drink, smoking and talking to this guy. . . . I found out his name was Rob, and he brought it to me.
Luigi saw it too.
Luigi Sementilli: Robert and Monica were in a corner talking to each other, a bit away from the party.
And there’s something else Luigi saw about Baker.
Luigi Sementilli: He had bandages on his hands.
One guest even took pictures of Monica and Robert Baker together. If you look closely, you can make out a bandage on Baker’s finger. Police would later conclude that Baker cut his finger when he killed Fabio. And that’s how his blood is supplied at the scene.
The detectives visited Monica at her home and called it a “ruse”: telling her that they were investigating thieves, when in fact they were investigating her and secretly tracking down Monica and Baker. And according to authorities, it paid off. They say they uncovered evidence that Monica and Baker were having an affair and plotting to kill Fabio.
JUSTIN EISENBERG | LAPD Chief Detective [to reporters in June 2017]: Over the past few months, investigators have developed data and identified Robert Baker, 55, of Canoga Park, and Monica Sementilli, 45, of Woodland Hills, who is the wife of our murder victim. , as to his murder.
Mirella Rota: He said, “We arrested Monica for the murder of your brother and Robert Baker for the murder of your brother. “And I was in shock. I say, “They’re. . . Are you sure?”You know? Me in shock.
Mary Fulginiti: According to the prosecution. . . those two were plotting and making plans to kill Fabio so they could live their lives together.
Mary Fulginiti is a former federal prosecutor and consultant for “48 Horas. “
Mary Fulginiti: It’s a very confusing piece of research.
When the government took Robert Baker and Monica Sementilli to court, they pleaded “not guilty. “But nearly six years later, Baker replaced everything.
Mary Fulginiti: When he arrived at the courthouse that day, people were stunned.
Monica Sementilli accused of cheating on Fabio with racquetball coach Robert Baker and then, with Baker, of plotting Fabio’s murder.
Elyse Bleuel: My instantaneous, complete, complete reaction that there is no way. . . Me there. It has been decimated.
After months of crying and mourning with Monica, Fabio’s relatives couldn’t either.
Mirella Rota: For twenty years of my life, she was like a sister. She was a great-aunt to my children. . . She’s lovely. . . My whole family circle felt the same way about her (crying).
Then, in 2023, Baker ignored the lawsuit and did not file a challenge.
Mary Fulginiti: Robert Baker does not advocate a challenge. And that necessarily comes down to accepting duty for the murder. He was eventually sentenced to life in prison without the option of parole.
JUDGE RONALD COEN (in court): The maximum sentence in this case is criminal life in prison with the option of parole plus one year. . . Do you perceive it?
ROBERT BAKER: Yes, sir.
But while Baker accepted responsibility for Fabio’s death, Monica did not.
MIRELLA ROTA: What he and Monica did to my brother Fabio is unforgivable.
But Monica’s daughters, Isabella and Gessica, supported their mother.
GESSICA SEMENTILLI (in court): We will continue with our mother as we have done for more than six years and we will fight for her innocence.
As Monica prepared to go to trial, her defense attorney, Leonard Levine, made a statement.
LEONARD LEVINE: We are sure that Robert Baker’s guilty pleas and truthful testimony will, in spite of everything, make it possible to identify once and for all that Monica Sementilli had nothing to do with the plans or the murder of Fabio Sementilli, her husband.
Monica’s defense team was not responding to pretrial questions, so “48 Hours” asked New York-based defense attorney Julie Rendelman about the pretrial motions from Monica’s defense team.
Julie Rendelman: As far as we know, no witnesses will come forward and testify that she planned this murder.
She says Monica’s relationship with Baker proves nothing.
Michelle Miller: Based on the prosecutor’s argument, it turns out that not only was he having an affair, but the user he was having an affair with is the killer.
Julie Rendelman: I hear you, but the challenge is that, just because an individual is having an affair, you can’t take the step to make an individual responsible, uh, for the death of the person they love, no more than a moderate. doubt.
But prosecutors say the case is key to a conspiracy between Monica and Robert Baker, a conspiracy detectives have spent months tracking.
Michelle Miller: How did this research come about?
Maria Fulginiti: Five months. Five to six months.
While the prosecutor declined a pretrial interview, former prosecutor Mary Fulginiti reviewed the case in opposition to Monica.
Michelle Miller (at the Sementilli House): So this is the crime scene?
Mary Fulginiti: yes. . . You know, that’s where the two runners arrived, you know, from a neighbor’s video, uh, running into the house.
Prosecutors say the first hooded figure, dressed in a green sweatshirt, is Robert Baker.
Michelle Miller: And what about this accomplice?
Mary Fulginiti: We don’t know who that user is. . . It’s a mystery.
Michelle Miller: What does this indictment say about Monica Sementilli?
Mary Fulginiti: This indictment is a very detailed review and chronology of the plot to kill Fabio Sementilli.
Mary Fulginiti: The reason is simple. I mean, it’s love and money. It’s one of the oldest crimes in the ebook where, you know, two lovers desperately need to be in combination, and they’re looking to get rid of one of the spouses so they can be in combination. For what? For a monetary benefit. . . And that would mean three-quarters of a million life, home, 401k insurance policy.
Police said they plan to level the scene to look like the thieves’ paintings and distract police from their track. And they believe Monica is deeply involved.
Mary Fulginiti: They believe. . . she was the one who coordinated everything, the one who showed him, you know, where the spacearray was, where the DVRArray was, so he knew where to go to rip it out of the walls. How to enter the space.
And that’s not all. The prosecutor claims that six months before the murder, Monica sent an email sharing the main points of her home security formula with Baker.
Mary Fulginiti: He gave the password, username, login credentials, and user manual to Robert Baker the same day he won them over to the surveillance company.
And then the day of the murder. Prosecutors say Monica’s habit that day is a key component of her role in the plot to kill Fabio. According to prosecutors, surveillance video shows Monica leaving her home at 3:26 p. m. behind the wheel of the family’s black Ford F-150 pickup truck.
Michelle Miller (standing in a Target parking lot): Is this where you came, according to prosecutors, to identify your alibi?
Mary Fulginiti: There’s a lot going on in this parking lot. . . she pulls up here in her Ford-150 truck right in front of this store. . . It stops only for a few minutes.
Prosecutors say they have a video of him getting into Monica’s truck. This user is said to be Robert Baker. Then, Monica goes alone to the Target store and starts shopping. But when she leaves, prosecutors say this surveillance photo shows her obsessed with her phone.
They would tell the grand jury that it looks like she streams video from her home, for the most part.
So what was Monica Sementilli watching on her phone that afternoon, around the time her husband was murdered?
Phone logs and data show that you connect to a unique IP address. . . . Turns out it’s the IP address of the house. And a lot of data is consumed. And this large amount of data is consistent with streaming video, i. e. video surveillance of the home.
Video surveillance? According to the prosecutor, it may simply be a video from his home’s security cameras.
But could it be that Monica was a witness to the real murder?
Mary Fulginiti: No. . . The surveillance has here the cameras in the space are. . . they are looking outward, but they are not looking towards the pool, where Fabio was at that moment. So they did not capture the murder, however, they flagrantly captured those who came and left.
It’s possible that Monica simply looked at everything else, prosecutors say.
Mary Fulginiti (with Miller in the Target parking lot): They go on to discuss. . . she looks at the scene, the crime scene to see the comings and goings of the moment Baker and the partner enter the space, when did they do it?Leave the space for him to know when he can get out of here and go home.
Prosecutors say that while she was watching the broadcast, Baker and his partner were in Sementilli’s assets tracking Fabio.
Mary Fulginiti: According to the prosecution, “this is a very targeted attack with intent to kill. “They also add that “he stabbed him in the neck, which severed his jugular vein and carotid artery. “
And there is additional evidence of the plot to kill Fabio. Prosecutors say Baker makes long-term plans with Monica.
Mary Fulginiti: The prosecutor says that about two months before the murder, Baker told a friend that he had been dating this woman for about a year and that he had sent him a picture of this woman and that woman, Monica.
Mary Fulginiti: And two months later, Fabio killed.
Authorities are also suspects of Monica’s habit after the homicide: she didn’t get her teenage daughters out of space and didn’t repair her safety formula.
Mary Fulginiti: And prosecutors argued that the explanation for why she wasn’t worried was because she knew who the killer was and she knew with him.
Mary Fulginiti: She’s one who pretends to be a grieving widow and posts all those messages on social media.
Mary Fulginiti: At the same time, she has a torrid love affair with the guy who killed her husband.
Prosecutors have made certain images public in court records. We can’t show you some of them. This is said to be evidence that the secret affair continued after Fabio’s death.
Mary Fulginiti: I mean, it’s a double life. . . The prosecutor presented a photograph of Monica and. . . and Baker to the grand jury. And it’s an image of Monica clutching her crotch. . . And this is a photo, uh, taken in Las Vegas.
Michelle Miller: There’s also this: this image of a mirror.
Mary Fulginiti: That’s right. . . it’s a back photo of Monica. . . with Mrs. Baker, uh, lipstick written on the mirror.
Michelle Miller: The. . . Lipstick and the mirror – what do they mean?
Mary Fulginiti: Again, it’s all a matter of motives. I mean, Mrs. Baker. . . she wanted to be Mrs. Baker.
But when detectives questioned Monica about Robert Baker, prosecutors said she told them she wasn’t even sure of his last name. They say he also told them he didn’t know how to operate the home’s security cameras.
Mary Fulginiti: To quote the prosecution here, they say, “She’s a liar, she’s a manipulator, she’s a cheat. And anything that comes out of his mouth should be taken with a big grain of salt big enough that you can drown. “”.
Mary Fulginiti: If they can find out that Monica lied about her lifestyle, about her affair, about many other things, they will convince the jury that she is also lying about her involvement in this plot to kill Fabio.
And they say that when he later asked why Baker’s blood was discovered in his home, he kept lying.
Mary Fulginiti: She makes up a crazy story about, you know, playing racquetball with Baker and hitting him on the finger and him bleeding and there a bloody towel and she had to take it home and. . . And that’s why your blood at home.
But Fulginiti says one of the most important pieces of evidence against Monica is what happened when police hatched a plan to secretly record the couple, when they pulled them over while they were driving.
Mary Fulginiti: It’s a police trick. . . They say they believe the car they’re in was stolen and they wanted, you know, to check it out and you know, it’s probably not and they were handcuffed as per protocol. , puts them in the police vehicle. But what they don’t know is that that vehicle is plugged in and there’s a van on the street with cops on board listening to their every word. And that’s when Monica says, and I’m going to quote here, “Somebody must have been talking. Someone is doing this to us. ” And then he said, “It has been given to you to have something. They’re going to have to have something. “
Mary Fulginiti: It’s irrefutable proof. . . As a former prosecutor, he is on the verge of admitting his involvement in this plot.
According to detectives, Monica also recorded telling her cellmate, “He’s not just my lover. . . He’s my confidant. . . It’s everything to me. “
Detectives also intercepted letters Monica wrote to Baker behind bars saying, “I’m amazed at how much we know what everyone thinks. DESTINED!” And “I miss you so much my love!”
Mary Fulginiti: When you look at those pieces as a whole, you get the best puzzle. And the puzzle will represent the symbol that Monica conspired with Baker, that he didn’t do it alone, that they did it together.
But Monica’s defenders say the case against her is fragile and that Baker made it herself.
Julie Rendelman: Robert Baker would have possibly killed him because he was looking for him to get out of the way. Maybe he did it because he hoped that by killing him, he would get Monica back. . . This in itself means nothing. We did not identify Monica involved in the murder.
Monica Sementilli’s defense categorically states that she had nothing to do with Fabio’s murder.
Julie Rendelman: The defense’s position is that there is no falsified evidence; in fact, there is no evidence that Monica Sementilli is involved in the conspiracy.
And if you can’t uncover a conspiracy, you can’t uncover Monica’s guilt, Rendelman says.
Michelle Miller: The sheer number of cases that seem to intertwine: the assembly in the parking lot. . . Walking into the store and watching a video streamed live from home. . . The password given to the killer. . . All those things, the sum between them, wouldn’t a jury think that’s too much of a coincidence?
Julie Rendelman: Obviously, I can’t vouch for what the jury is going to say. Uh, the defense, I can promise you, is going to look for holes in each and every piece of evidence that you just talked about. .
Michelle Miller: So, let’s take it step by step. . . Share this password for surveillance video.
Julie Rendelman: So there’s no question that she shared the password.
But Rendelman says there’s no connection between sharing that password and a killer plot.
Julie Rendelman: Surely there’s no evidence between the six months that she shared it and the day he killed, that there’s any plan between them to kill her husband, not a text message, not an email, not a conversation. She has ended their relationship.
Julie Rendelman: The timing is that there’s surely no evidence that Robert Baker downloaded the app or even used it.
Michelle Miller: Let’s talk about the movements in the parking lot on the day of the murder. . . It looks like someone is getting in the car.
Julie Rendelman: Keep a few things in mind. The first is from a defense point of view. . . the video is so grainy that you can’t tell who, if anything, is getting into Monica Sementilli’s car.
And what about the accusation that he was watching a video of the murder scene?
Michelle Miller: Once she was handed over to the lens, there was a moment when she seemed fascinated, obsessed with her phone.
Julie Rendelman: Well, I’ll tell you what. The prosecution doesn’t know what he’s seeing on his phone. They can’t and never will be able to explicitly explain what’s going on on that phone.
Michelle Miller: But it was broadcast from home.
Julie Rendelman: You might just look at an exhibit, just like any of us looked at your exhibit as we walked.
Michelle Miller: The prosecution is interested in Monica’s character, in the fact that she’s having an affair.
Julie Rendelman: Well, let me quote what the defense says about that. ” The prosecutor’s testimony about Ms. Sementilli’s case and, in particular, the sexist and sinister way in which he presented it. . . irrelevant, out of place and unfairly prejudicial to Ms. . Sementilli. “
Julie Rendelman: They go on to say that “the sexual and romantic highlights of their affair were simply due to the question of whether they had conspired to assassinate Fabio Sementilli. “
But then, why lie to investigators, supposedly saying it wasn’t Robert Baker’s last name?
Julie Rendelman: The question is, why are you lying? Are you lying because you’ve committed murder or are you lying because you’ve been on a date with someone for some time and you don’t want the world to know, especially law enforcement?
Prosecutors found it suspicious that on the night of Fabio’s death, Monica had already inquired about his life insurance. But Rendelman says it’s not strange.
Julie Rendelman: I understand how insensitive it can seem to start asking questions about a life insurance policy so soon after. But if you’re not in good monetary health, you have two daughters at home, you potentially have a loan to pay off. If you have expenses to pay, you’re going to worry about your family’s monetary security.
And at trial, Rendelguy says, what might help Monica is that they won’t try it on Baker. The jury may not see the guy who committed the real murder at the defense table next to Monica. The case is more complicated for prosecutors, Fulginti said.
Mary Fulginiti: The fact that he’s her lover and the killer, the one whose DNA is in the house, I mean, there’s a domino effect. And all of that, you know, would have potentially impacted, I think, the jury in this case. And it’s gone.
Michelle Miller: Would you say it was your last gift to Monica?
Mary Fulginiti: Yes, I would, because surely there’s no other explanation for him pleading directly, without any genuine price reduction here, to life in prison without the option of parole, except, I suppose, his last chivalrous and murderous act.
But it seems that Baker could have an even greater effect on Monica’s case. “48 Horas” went to see him in prison and told us that Monica had nothing to do with Fabio’s murder and that she never knew that he was Fabio’s murderer. Baker also told us that he was no longer in contact with Monica and had not made a decision on whether he would testify.
Another thing that could help Monica, Rendelman says, is that the daughters Monica shared with Fabio are her mother.
Julie Rendelman: So, you can argue that the jury is going after the woman and thinking, “If they find her after all this, right?
As for Monica herself, she has never spoken publicly, in a tribute to her late husband.
MONICA SEMENTILLI (Video in memory of Fabio): How lucky I am to have lived the greatest love story of all time. A story that other people only read. It’s a story that movies are made of. Thanks a lot.
Monica Sementilli’s trial is scheduled to begin in April.
Produced through Chuck Stevenson. Greg Fisher is the producer of progression. Gabriella Demirdjian and Hannah Vair are the producers of the box. Michael Baluzy, Grayce Arlotta-Berner, Wini Dini and Chris Crater are the editors. Patti Aronofsky is the lead producer. Nancy Kramer is the story’s editor. Judy Tygard is the producer.