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Suspects in the case included Isabella's father, Alexandre
Nardoni, and her stepmother, Anna Carolina Jatobá. It is alleged
that Jatobá strangled Isabella and Nardoni threw her out of the
window of their apartment located on the sixth floor of the
Edifício London (London Building) in the Tucuruvi district of São
Paulo, Brazil.
Brazilian media has closely followed the case, offering
continuous updates. More than 98% of Brazilians are aware of her
death—the highest percentage in the history of Brazilian media
coverage research.
Isabella de Oliveira Nardoni (April 18, 2002 - March 29, 2008)
was born on April 18, 2002, in São Paulo, Brazil, a to Alexandre
Alves Nardoni and Ana Carolina Cunha de Oliveira. Alexandre had
met Ana Carolina when they were in school, and they dated for
three years. Oliveira became unexpectedly pregnant with Isabella
when she was 17 and, by that time, Nardoni was about to begin his
law classes at college. While she was pregnant, they considered
moving in together, but the relationship was already
deteriorating; so, Oliveira chose to live with her daughter in her
parents' house.
Eleven months after Isabella's birth, Ana Carolina left
Alexandre when she was very sure and convinced that he was
cheating on her. At first, since she was too young, Isabella was
constantly with her mother, but as the child grew they established
a routine: Nardoni would have Isabella over from Friday to Sunday
night twice in a month. By then, Nardoni was already married to
Anna Carolina Jatobá; they have two sons together, Pietro and Cauã.
Nardoni began seeing Jatobá, who was his colleague at Law
school, behind Oliveira's back, while she was still pregnant with
Isabella. He carried on with both relationships for a year, until
Oliveira dumped him after she was convinced he was cheating on
her.
After Isabella's murder, Oliveira claimed that Jatobá was very
jealous of her past with Nardoni. After some time, Jatobá took
over talking with Oliveira about Isabella, instead of Nardoni.
Oliveira also said that Nardoni's family avoided to leave Isabella
with her stepmother and that when Nardoni wasn't around, his
sister would sleep with the family. A neighbor also told police
Isabella's paternal grandmother told her that Jatobá was crazy and
was capable of someday dropping the girl from the apartment. A
friend of Oliveira that chose to remain anonymous told press that
Isabella sometimes came back from Nardoni's house crying, and that
she often wanted to go back to her mother earlier than expected.
The murder
At 22:30 of March 29, 2008, Isabella Oliveira Nardoni fell from
the sixth floor of Edifício London, where her father Alexandre
Nardoni lived with Isabella's stepmother Anna Carolina Jatobá and
their two sons. She was found suffering from cardiac arrest in the
front garden of Edifício London. Rescue personnel tried to
resuscitate her for 34 minutes, but were unsuccessful.
She died on the way to the hospital. Nardoni and Jatobá were
taken to a local police station. Nardoni told police officers that
when he arrived with the family at the building, Isabella was
already sleeping, so he went up with her first. He left Jatobá
with their sons in the car, placed Isabella in the guest room,
turned on the bedside lamp and a lamp in the boys' room, locked
the door and went down back.
According to Nardoni, he and Jatobá took Pietro and Cauã to the
apartment and when they arrived there, he noticed that Isabella's
room's light was on. Nardoni said he didn't find Isabella in her
bed when he returned to the apartment, and that she stayed from
five to ten minutes on her own; he noticed the hole in the
window's safety net, looked out and down and saw Isabella's body
on the front yard. He yelled at Jatobá to call his father, which
she did, and then she called her own father. Isabella's mother
would later say in an interview that Jatobá was hysterical when
they spoke on the phone, screaming that Isabella had fallen.
According to Oliveira, Jatobá was screaming so much that she had
believed Isabella had accidentally fallen into the building's pool
and told her to perform CPR on the child.
Once Ana Carolina arrived at the site and realized how badly
injured her daughter was, she refrained from touching Isabella,
out of fear of worsening her condition. She however often kissed
her daughter, and told her to be calm and that everything was
going to be all right, and that she loved her. Isabella was taken
to a hospital, but she died as a result of her injuries.
Burial
Isabella was buried in the “Parque dos Pinheiros” Cemetery, in
the São Paulo district of Jaçanã. The service was attended by 200
people.
Investigation
Investigators found Isabella's blood in Nardoni's car and in
his apartment, on a towel and a diaper, her vomit on his T-shirt,
footprints of her flip-flops on a bed next to the window through
which she was thrown, and traces of nylon from the wire safety
screen on his T-shirt. The police also found fragments of the
safety screen on a pair of scissors inside the apartment.
Although there was circumstantial evidence to suggest that
Isabella was thrown to her death from a bedroom window, her
injuries were not consistent with a falling death. Only her wrists
were broken, in addition to the fact that she was still alive,
albeit barely, when she was discovered. The IML (Instituto
Médico Legal, or Legal Medical Institute) personnel announced that
they found injuries unrelated to the fall on Isabella's body. The
injuries suggested that she had been punched and asphyxiated
before being thrown out of the window.
Nardoni's and Jatobá's indictment
On April 18, 2008, both Nardoni and Jatobá were indicted by the
São Paulo Civil Police, still insisting they were not involved in
her death.
Trial
Alexandre Nardoni and Anna Carolina Jatobá's trial began on
March 22, 2010, almost two years (to the day) after Isabella's
death. On the first day of trial, Ana Carolina Oliveira
testified.[15] She said Jatobá was extremely jealous of her, and
that Alexandre had once threatened to kill her and her mother and
then vanish with Isabella when Ana Carolina confronted him over
late alimony payments. She also said Anna Jatobá was the one to
call her on the night of Isabella's death, and screamed to her
that it was all her daughter's fault.
Ana Carolina was later requested by the defense attorney to
remain in the court house so she could go under an acareation with
Nardoni and Jatobá. She remained in a tiny bedroom at the court
house for three more days—until a psychiatrist said she was under
extreme stress and she was released.
On March 25, 2010, Alexandre and Anna Carolina testified in
front of the jury. Both denied having murdered Isabella. Anna
cried during her testimony. Alexandre took the stand at 10:45 a.m,
and was dismissed at 16:25. Alexandre told the jury that the cops
responsible for dealing with Isabella's case proposed that he
admit he had killed the child, saying he could rule the case as an
accidental homicide with no intent to kill.
Alexandre also claimed he felt humiliated by this and that the
police weren't actually interested in figuring out what had
happened in the building the day Isabella died. Nardoni cried
three times during his testimony and said that the day Isabella
died was the worst of his life, that he had lost the most precious
thing in his life and that he was unaware of what was going on. He
also accused Ana Carolina's mother of not wanting her to have the
child.
He also said he didn't remember having mentioned in his
testimony to the cops that there was a third person in his
apartment the day Isabella was murdered. The defense attorney had
mentioned that someone else had broken into the apartment and
thrown the girl out of the window, but Nardoni denied that he had
seen someone with a gun, wearing black clothes, and that he had
locked Isabella in the apartment.
Nardoni shocked audience and jury when, after being questioned
by DA Francisco Cembranelli on why he didn't think of helping
Isabella, he first said that he was making sure she was alive.
Cembranelli said she was, and insisted; Nardoni then said he was
in shock. After Cembranelli asked for a third time why he didn't
think of trying to do anything to help the girl, Nardoni finally
answered that when he became aware of what was going on, a
neighbor ordered him not to touch Isabella.
Another shocking moment occurred when Cembranelli asked why
Nardoni hadn't spoken to Oliveira during Isabella's funeral and
wake. Nardoni simply answered it was an embarrassing situation.
After a lunch break, it was Jatobá's turn, and she spoke until
a quarter to nine p.m. During her testimony, Jatobá said that the
accusations against her and Nardoni were completely false. She
also gave more details about the family's relationship with
Isabella. She also said that the girl was very attached to her.
Jatobá also admitted that when she was being questioned by the
police, she had "embellished" and "made up" stories such as being
beat up by her father.
However, in their testimony, Jatobá and Nardoni constantly
contradicted each other. While Nardoni claimed they had normal
fights, she admitted they fought constantly and very nastily.
After a five-day-long trial, in the early hours of March, 27th,
2010, Alexandre Nardoni was sentenced to 31 years, 1 month and 10
days of imprisonment; Anna Carolina Jatobá, to 26 years and 8
months for Isabella's death. It counted against both the fact that
Isabella was less than 14 when she was murdered; against Nardoni
weighted the fact that he is Isabella's father. Nardoni and Jatobá
also were convicted of procedural fraud to 8 months of
imprisonment (for trying to clean up the crime scene). According
to the Brazilian law, both sentences are to be served
concurrently. During the sentence reading, Nardoni was
expressionless, while Jatobá cried. Outside the forum, people
celebrated their sentence with fireworks.
The couple's defense attorneys said they are going to appeal
against the decision, but, according to the Brazilian media, the
judge who sentenced the couple to prison is unlikely to allow any
such thing as parole. On March 30, 2010, the defense attorney
filed a petition for a new jury, since Brazilian law says that,
when the penalty is over 20 years, the convicted person is allowed
to go through a new jury.
BBC.co.uk
March 27, 2010
The father and stepmother of a five-year-old
girl have been found guilty by a Brazilian court of throwing her
to her death from a sixth-floor window.
The
death of Isabella Nardoni in 2008 shocked Brazil, and the case has
been the focus of intense media coverage.
Her
father, Alexandre Nardoni, was sentenced to 31 years in prison by
the Sao Paulo court. Her stepmother, Anna Carolina Jatoba, must
serve 26 years.
The couple, who had denied the
girl's murder, will appeal, their lawyers say.
Isabella was found in the communal garden below the apartment
where Nardoni, his second wife and their two children lived in
March 2008.
Nardoni, a lawyer, claimed that his
daughter had been killed by an intruder while he was helping his
wife bring the other children from their car, parked in a garage
in the building's basement.
But prosecutors
argued that his wife had attacked Isabella in the car and then
strangled her in the apartment.
They said
Nardoni, believing the child to be dead, had then thrown her out
of the window to make it appear a third person was responsible for
the attack. She died a few minutes after she was discovered on the
ground.
Investigators found traces of Isabella's
blood in the couple's car and in the apartment.
The pair will serve their sentences in separate prisons outside
Sao Paulo, where they have been held since their arrest in April
2008. They will then be eligible to complete a shorter term for
other offences in a semi-open prison.
BBC.co.uk
May 8, 2008
Brazilian police have arrested the
father and stepmother of a five-year-old girl thrown to her death
from a sixth-floor window.
A judge said there
was "material evidence" and "concrete indications" that the pair
were responsible for the death of Isabella Nardoni on 29 March.
He said Alexandre Nardoni and Anna Carolina Jatoba, who deny
murder, were arrested to "guarantee public order".
The case has shocked Brazil, and been the focus of intense media
coverage.
Leaked evidence
Officers lined the streets and a crowd of onlookers gathered in
front of the couple's apartment building as they were taken into
custody.
Prosecutors, who will begin questioning
the couple later this month, believe Ms Jatoba hit the girl on the
head with a blunt object and strangled her.
They
say Mr Nardoni then threw her out the window, and the girl died a
few minutes after being discovered on the ground.
Police evidence leaked to the press suggests that blood was found
in the apartment and there was a hole in the wire safety netting
that covered the window.
Mr Nardoni, 29, says he
believes that his daughter was killed by an intruder while he was
helping his wife bring their other children from their car in the
garage in the basement of the building.