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Yudenia
RODRIGUEZ
Same day
By Brenda Medina - MiamiHerald.com
October 8, 2013
A woman charged with stabbing her
mother to death during a fight appeared in court on Monday, where
her odd behavior prompted a Miami-Dade judge to order a
psychological evaluation.
The family tragedy played out Sunday when Sonia
Santiesteban, 65, asked her 40-year-old daughter to leave her
South Miami-Dade home at 17360 SW 232nd St. Santiesteban lived in
a mobile-home park with three children she had adopted.
Angered, Yudenia Rodriguez pushed her mother,
who frequently used a wheelchair, to the ground and began hitting
her. Santiesteban’s 15-year-old granddaughter witnessed the attack
and tried to call 911, but police said Rodriguez took the phone
from the teen and slapped her several times to keep her from
calling for help.
Rodriguez then grabbed a kitchen knife and
began stabbing her mother, killing Santiesteban, Miami-Dade police
said.
Rodriguez was arrested and charged with
second-degree murder, child abuse and tampering with a witness.
On Monday, Rodriguez made a bizarre appearance
at bond court, asking a judge to remove her handcuffs, correcting
the judge and saying her mother “did not die” and falling asleep
in mid-hearing. Rodriguez remains in Miami-Dade County jail
without bond.
Now, Santiestaban’s three grandchildren are
with relatives until a hearing is held to determine who will now
care for them. Santiesteban told el Nuevo Herald last year, when
she was featured in the newspaper’s holiday-giving Wish Book
series, that she had adopted the children eight years ago to
prevent them from being separated and sent into the foster-care
system. The two youngest were half-siblings to the teenage
granddaughter who witnessed the murder.
Santiesteban’s oldest son had lost custody of
all the children after he landed in prison on drug-related
charges. The children’s mother also lost custody, leaving
Santiesteban the closest adult who could take them in.
In her interview in December for the charity
program, Santiesteban said the children had changed her life.
For Christmas, the family wanted the community
to help them repair the mobile home they lived in, where the floor
and walls were slowly falling apart. Santiesteban had bought the
trailer for $16,000 several years ago.
Family history
Yudenia Rodriguez was not living with the
family at the time, but Santiesteban indicated that she suffered
from mental and emotional problems. It’s unclear why she moved in
with her mother.
The Cuban-born grandmother had spent decades
cleaning houses and hotels until she suffered a fall on the job in
2011 and broke her hip. Since then, Santiesteban could not get
around without a wheelchair.
Santiesteban and her family lived in Boston for
years until she decided to leave her abusive husband and head for
Miami, she told the newspaper. The family had arrived from Cuba in
1980 during the Mariel boatlift. She made the trip with her
ex-husband, her son and the daughter now accused in her murder.
Yudenia Rodriguez stabbed her mother after a
verbal dispute, police said
By Edward B. Colby
Tuesday, Oct 8, 2013
A 40-year-old woman was being held in jail
without bond on Monday after she fatally stabbed her mother in
front of her teenage niece in southwest Miami-Dade, authorities
said.
Yudenia Rodriguez faces charges of
second-degree murder, child abuse with no great bodily harm and
tampering with a witness, according to online Miami-Dade
Corrections records.
On Monday, Judge Ellen Sue Venzer ordered
Rodriguez held on no bond on the murder and tampering charges and
set bond at $5,000 for the child abuse charge.
Rodriguez appeared remotely via video for the
hearing, and groaned at the start because of the handcuffs behind
her back.
“Ms. Rodriguez, you’re charged with killing
your mother, OK?” the judge later told Rodriguez, who was
represented by a public defender.
Rodriguez responded, “She didn’t die,” before
her attorney cut her off and told her not to say anything.
The judge then ordered her not to have any
contact with a 15-year-old girl who allegedly saw the crime. The
judge referred to her as Rodriguez's daughter.
“No. My daughter wasn’t there,” Rodriguez said,
before her attorney and the judge urged her not to speak.
The Department of Children and Families said
the girl is Rodriguez's niece.
Rodriguez lived with her mother Sonia
Santiesteban, 66, and three children on the 17300 block of
Southwest 232nd Street. But on Sunday afternoon, Rodriguez fought
because Santiesteban wanted her to move out, and Rodriguez pushed
her mother to the floor, Miami-Dade Police said in an arrest
affidavit.
“Ms. Santiesteban’s 15-year-old granddaughter
began calling 911 when Ms. Rodriguez slapped the 15-year-old girl
several times and removed the telephone from her hand to hinder or
delay police contact,” police wrote.
Rodriguez then armed herself with a knife and
fatally stabbed her mother, the affidavit said.
Neighbor Sandy Squire told NBC 6 the teenager
“ran out screaming ‘She has a knife, she has a knife.’”
Rodriguez invoked her right to remain silent,
refused to speak with investigators and was arrested and taken to
jail, the affidavit added.
As the bond court hearing began, Judge Venzer
asked Rodriguez, who was leaning backwards, if she was alright.
Rodriguez asked for the handcuffs behind her
back to be taken off.
“I’m in too much pain,” she said, groaning.
Rodriguez whimpered, and Judge Venzer asked
corrections officers what was going on. One officer said that
Rodriguez had to be cuffed that way because she was aggressive.
Rodriguez disagreed.
She told the judge that she was bent over
backwards because she was hurting.
Corrections officers then got Rodriguez a
chair. She then told the judge that she was not physically
injured.
Judge Venzer ultimately recommended that
Rodriguez be seen by a doctor immediately.
Rodriguez’s attorney asked the judge not to
order psychological evaluations right away. Judge Venzer did not,
but she did ask the attorney to get those evaluations quickly.
Neighbor Barbara Cruz said that Santiesteban
was the biological grandmother of the 15-year-old and decided to
adopt her and her two smaller siblings to keep them together.
During an emergency shelter hearing Monday
afternoon, temporary custody of the children was given to the
family's pastor, Treavor Pound of Redland Church of the Nazarene.
“As the pastor of the church and the pastor to
these kids, they're like family to me and we can take them in,” he
said.