Snapped: Women Who Murder - Anne Trovato
Episode Date: February 19, 2023A family trying to recover from one devastating loss are hit with another when a man discovers his sister stabbed to death in her living room.Season 25, Episode 10Originally aired: May 5, 201...9Watch full episodes of Snapped for FREE on the Oxygen app: https://oxygentv.app.link/WatchSnappedPodSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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In the wake of a horrific tragedy, a mother struggled to move on.
She lost her son. He was killed in a tragic accident.
I know that it devastated her.
But she was able to find a light in the darkness.
The most important thing in her life was her granddaughter.
I said, Happy Mother's Day. Enjoy your granddaughter.
And she's, I'll tell you all about it on Monday when I see you
But what should have been a day marked for celebration
Becomes forever stained by an unsinkable crime
The body was laying in the living room on the floor with a plastic bag over her head
The victim had obviously been beaten and stabbed multiple times. As investigators search for the killer,
they find more than one person with a motive for murder.
He was really in the litany of people
who could be the real killers.
They asked me to come in.
We weren't asking some questions, Mr. Travado.
And I certainly had a motive.
She believed that he was involved with the quote unquote
mafia.
She kept calling it a cult is what she kept calling it.
I think she was taken over by their tarot card reading.
She was scared for her life.
It's so messed up in so many ways.
Sunday, May 14, 2006.
In Austin, New York, Michael Mary Senior has found himself
at the home of his sister, 59-year-old Patricia Mary.
Michael's concerned because he hasn't
been able to reach her in several days.
The family hadn't heard from her,
so they were all sort of talking to each other and looking for her.
With each unanswered knock, Michael's fears begin to mount.
He was looking for Patricia, and there was no sign of her being around the house.
My knew that she left a certain window open and he climbed through.
But once Michael is inside, nothing could prepare him for the horror he finds.
Patricia Mary's body was in the house, she was dead.
His body was in the house, she was dead.
Michael calls 911, and within minutes, Ossening PD officers arrive on the scene.
The body was laying on the floor.
With them, I believe there'd be a plastic bag over there.
They had portion of the victim's body.
The victim had obviously been beaten and stabbed multiple times.
There was a bat and a knife laying next to the body.
And the bat and the knife both had blood on them.
We had blood on all the walls.
It just made for a particularly gruesome and horrible scene.
It's clear that whoever killed Patricia Mary
had really wanted her dead.
It could tell Pat was targeted by someone
who was very angry at her.
It doesn't take long for investigators to realize
this crime scene is all too familiar. Before the murder, there was a few incidents.
Pat was concerned that someone might have tried to break into their house.
Patricia Mary was born on April 11, 1947,
in Austin, New York,
to a devout Roman Catholic family.
After high school, Patricia attended college
and then started a career in teaching in Westchester County,
where Pat was beloved by her students and co-workers.
You kind of sensed that there was an aura about her
that there's nothing negative with toucher.
She truly believed in the inherent goodness of people.
She was very religious and had a lot of friends,
and a lot of friends in the teaching community.
Soon after her teaching career began,
Pat met and fell in love with George Travato, a fellow teacher.
I met Pat at my first teaching job, and we started dating,
and then a couple of years later, we got married.
In 1979, shortly after saying, I do,
George and Patricia welcomed their first child into the world,
a daughter named Anne.
In June of 1981, their second child into the world, a daughter named Anne.
In June of 1981, their second child was born,
a son named John.
She was a fantastic mother, caring,
considerate, giving, selfless.
Even though Pat's relationship with her children
was strong, after just two years,
Pat and George's marriage began to deteriorate.
We filed for divorce and started the proceedings and things.
She got sole custody, which means I couldn't look at those kids.
I was a non-entity, and that's how screwed up the divorce laws are in New York State.
After her and George's contentious divorce,
Pat and the children settled into a home in Austin.
As the kids grew, their daughter and's creative side
began to blossom.
She was very artistic.
She makes the most wonderful cards,
birthday cards, Christmas cards, Mother's Day, you know, she's very talented.
As for their son, John, he matured into a hard working,
responsible young man and developed a tight bond with his mother.
Her son was a light of her life, her golden child, if you will,
and she was exceedingly close with him.
By 2002, Pat, now 55, had just retired from teaching and was looking forward to spending
even more time with her two beloved children.
Then, on August 1, 2002, tragedy struck. John had gotten his motorcycle permit.
He just took off on the bike.
And unfortunately, a car pulled out, gotten his way,
and he went directly into the side of the car and died instantly.
With Pat, it was instantaneous that she had fallen into a abyss of depression. This is a woman who is consumed with grief
and does not know how to dig herself out of it.
Looking for comfort, Pat devoted herself to her church
and also returned to the workforce,
starting a new job teaching Spanish
in nearby Stanford, Connecticut.
I do know that she was consumed by work.
I don't think she had a lot of activities going on.
Pat's coping mechanism was closing herself off
and not wanting to be a member of society anymore.
Not wanting to socialize.
a member of society anymore, not wanting to socialize. Anne's coping mechanism was quite different.
Anne was coping with it almost in a way that, yet,
happened, I'm mad, I'm rebellious.
She had a fascination with nightclubs and wanted to go out and die life.
In the fall of 2002, a few months after John's death, Ann received a surprise that put the breaks on her wild life,
a positive pregnancy test.
Both Ann and Patricia were thrilled by the news.
I know that she was very excited about becoming a grandmother.
I think that that was going to bring joy into her life.
On June 18, 2003, Anne and her mother Pat welcomed Arianna
Travato into the world.
For both Anne and Pat, Arianna brought them out
of a dark place and gave them hope for the future.
I sensed it for Pat.
That was a way to overcome her grief
was through being the best grandmother
that she could possibly be.
But on May 14, 2006, Patricia's family suffers another tragic blow when her brother
Mike finds Patricia dead inside her own home.
Clues at the scene suggest this was a targeted attack.
One investigators believe may have started several weeks back.
Before the murder, there was a few instances
where she thought someone had tried to break into the residence.
I know the police responded, but there was no evidence
that someone had entered the house or may have tried.
Then, just two weeks before the murder, on April 27th,
Patricia had filed an even more disturbing report.
She called the police to make a report.
She was very concerned that the breaklines were cut,
met her at a local gas station,
and we found breaklines weren't that cut.
She had continued to drive and not made her way
to the mechanic.
She could have easily have died as a result.
Coming up, could a new clue help police pinpoint a motive,
one that centers around a shady figure from daughter
Anne's to multivast past?
She believed that he was involved with the mafia.
The note was from the killers,
talking about some kidnapping plot.
On May 14, 2006, Michael Mary arrived at the home of his sister, 59-year-old Patricia Mary,
to find she had been brutally murdered.
The harassment that Patricia had been experiencing in the week's prior to her murder leads detectives
from the Austin-New York Police Department to believe that Patricia was specifically targeted.
But by whom?
We didn't have forced entry, so that was significant to us.
We saw that the last time that she had retrieved a newspaper and brought it inside was May 10th.
So we're starting to get a picture that May 11th was the day of homicide.
When detectives take a closer look at Patricia's body, So, it was starting to get a picture that May 11th was the day of the homicide.
When detectives take a closer look at Patricia's body,
they find a handwritten note.
The note made no sense as far as what it purported to be.
Ostensibly, the note was from the killers,
talking about some kidnapping plot.
The note basically said said this is too risky
to kidnap your granddaughter.
The note said it had something to do with some kind of
with a kidnapping going wrong,
and not getting paid for a kidnapping of Ariana.
It also seems as though Patricia isn't the only person
in on the kidnapping plot.
The note seemed to be referencing Mike Mary Patricia's brother.
Could Patricia's own brother, who initially reported the crime
to police, actually be involved in her murder?
The whole case was bizarre, and this note was like the conclusion of the craziness involved
here.
We brought all of them to the police station, and all the family members were interviewed
separately.
Detectives asked Mike Pointe-Blanck if he was involved in Patricia's killing.
Mike admits that he and his sister didn't always see eye to eye.
But he also supplies police with an airtight alibi for May 11th.
The day they believe Patricia was murdered.
There were some family issues between Pat and her brother Mike, but he was never really
looked at as a suspect.
Mike and other family members tell detectives that Patricia was not the type of woman to make
enemies, but if they want more information, they should speak to Pat's daughter Anne.
At 1am on May 15, investigators ask Anne Travato to come to the station.
By the time Anne arrives, relatives have already informed her
of her mother's brutal death.
Her mother had just been murdered.
Emotionally, she was a little upset,
little peers and crying.
She calmed down and she was cooperative.
I wanted to detect as if she knew anything
about her mother's death.
Anne admits that she hasn't spoken
to her mother in some time.
We learned that this was an ongoing dispute between them
and that the relationship had become very strange.
According to Anne, that strain largely stemmed from arguments
regarding Anne's two-year-old daughter, Arianna.
A big piece of it was that Antivato did not want her mother, Ariana's grandmother, to have anything to do with this child.
And Patricia was unfit, delusional even in her morning for her son, John,
and accused her mother of walking around the house and talking out loud to her dead son,
as if he were still present. around the house and talking out loud to her dead son
as if he were still present.
Anne says that she'd been living with her mom ever since the birth of Ariana,
but after weeks of this disturbing behavior
Anne became worried for Ariana's safety.
So in November 2005, she and her daughter moved in with her best friend, 30-year-old Carmella
Magnetti.
Anne says that her mom was so livid that she pursued legal action against her.
Patricia Mary was suing for visitation of her granddaughter, Ariana.
So there was this visitation battle between Patricia and her daughter. Her position as maternal grandmother was quite strong,
and that I did not see her losing her requests for visitation.
Anne says that her mother won the right to limited visitation in late spring 2006.
Patricia was granted the right to visit
Little Ariana just once a month for like an hour.
Anne says she wasn't thrilled about Pat's influence on Ariana,
but she accepted the court's ruling,
and she last saw her mother on May 9th
during a scheduled visitation at the YMCA.
She was asked about her whereabouts
at the time frame that we believe the homicideMCA. She was asked about her whereabouts at the time frame
that we believe the homicide had happened.
She said that she wasn't in the area
and she pulled out a parking ticket to St. Clayton.
She was at the gallery and more shopping.
The gallery and mall was over in white planes.
And she told the police that she was at the mall
with Carmella Magnetti and her daughter.
Detectives ask Anne if she knows anything about the harassment against her mother in the
weeks before her murder.
Anne says that her mother had told her about the incidents, but she asserts that Pat wasn't
the only victim.
She very much wanted the police to know that there were people following her.
There was a black van, there was a white Jeep,
and that she thought someone was out to get Carmella Magnetti.
According to Anne, the incident started a few weeks before the murder.
At the same time, Pat was being tormented.
And made a call to the police department, claiming that there had been a
black van and eggs had been thrown at the magnetic residence. The police
responded and they took a police report. Anne says that the black van and white
Jeep continued to follow them throughout the city.
Then, a couple of weeks before the murder,
the threats escalated.
On a day where Antrawada was supposed to bring
her child to see Patricia Mary as part of a family court
ordered visitation, her Melo Magnetti and Antrawada,
called the police, claimed that they were being threatened,
and that they had a message on their phone
from a person that they didn't know,
saying, if you bring the baby to visitation,
Carmella is going to be killed.
She was scared for her life.
Detectives ask Anne, who might have a grudge against her family and an interest in Ariana's
custody battle.
Anne tells police she can only think of one person, her ex-boyfriend, and the father of
baby Ariana, a man named Ron Kerner. She believed that he was involved
with the quote unquote mafia.
According to Anne, she had been drawn to Ron's tough guy attitude
when they first started dating back in 2001.
When Anne became pregnant in 2002,
she says that Ron was adamant that she get an abortion.
When Anne decided to keep the baby,
she cut off all contact with Ron and delivered her daughter
in secret.
She hadn't seen him in a long time.
Ron didn't even know that he was had a baby daughter.
Anne says that if Ron found out she hadn't gone through
with the abortion, he would have been angry,
maybe even angry enough to kill.
This was very significant to us.
Coming up, detectives tracked down Ron Kurner.
We thought maybe it's Ron Kurner.
She mentioned some connection he had with, you know,
some kind of crime.
And Pat's co-workers provide another more sinister lead.
She kept calling it a cult,
is what she kept calling it.
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On May 15, 2006, and Travato told New York investigators that her ex-boyfriend, Ron Kerner, might be the person responsible for the brutal beating and stabbing deaths of
her mother, Patricia Mary. As the interview ends, Anne's best friend and roommate,
Carmella Magnetti, arrives at the station to pick Anne up.
Detectives take the opportunity to ask her about her whereabouts
on May 11th.
She gives a very similar, almost identical story
that Antivato had given.
She also told the police that she was at the Galleria Mall
with Antivato and the baby,
and she also mentioned the ticket.
After releasing Anne into the care of the Magneti family,
detectives double down on efforts to find Ron Kerner.
His name was Ronnie the Rotwala Kerner,
and he was a really tough guy.
Police quickly track him down in New York City.
Two homicide detectives came to my door.
So what's the problem?
That's when I say what's going on.
We found Patricia Mary murdered.
Ron tells police that he last saw Patricia and Ann
back in 2002.
Although Ron does not confirm or deny
his connections to the mob, he says
that Ann was drawn to rumors of his shady dealings.
And he saw on me against her.
She liked the tough guy.
Ron says that sometime in 2002,
Anne told him that she was pregnant,
and then just as quickly, told him she wasn't.
She said, I got an abortion.
We're good. It's all good.
Then I didn't hear it from her.
And she pretty much
from there vanished out of my life.
Detectives tell Ron
that Anne might not have been honest with him
about her 2002 abortion.
Detectives say there's a chance you have a daughter.
Boom.
You want to talk about getting hit by a Mack truck.
It's like, I got a daughter.
He was really bewildered that he had a no idea
that he had a baby.
I was in a happy shock.
There was no way in help that I was not going to take a DNA test,
then go to court to win custody in my child.
Detectives ask Ron where he was on May 11, 2006.
He says he was working as a promoter at a boxing match.
I was at the professional fights in New Jersey.
I said there's pictures on the wall from that night.
Go look over there.
He had a airtight alibi, and you know, it was very clear to us
early on that he had nothing to do with this.
If Ron Kurner isn't responsible for Patricia Mary's death,
then who is?
Detectives track down one person who allegedly had a rocky past
with Pat, her ex-husband George Travato.
It was just like you see in the movies.
You know, they asked me to come in.
We weren't asking some questions, Mr. Travato.
Investigators begin by asking George
to describe his relationship with Pat.
The relationship after the divorce was pretty contentious.
George felt that he was shut out of the family.
That woman did her best.
It keep me and my family away from those kids.
When John died, it was as if I never existed.
Detectives ask George point blank
if he had anything to do with Pat's murder.
I certainly had a motive,
but there's no way I could have been involved in this.
I was on the road, I had to have the company I was working for
and you know, sign an affidavit,
say that I was on the road.
With Pat's ex-husband in the clear,
the search for information continues.
On the afternoon of May 15th,
Austinning detectives arrive at West Hill High School,
where Pat taught Spanish.
There, they break the news of Pat's death to her fellow teachers.
There was a buzz that Pat had not come to school.
We thought maybe she was hospitalized,
but no one thought that she had been murdered.
All of the teachers tell detectives the same thing.
We knew right away just inherently inside of ourselves.
It had something to do with a granddaughter.
According to Pat's colleagues, after the death of her son, side of ourselves, it had something to do with a granddaughter.
According to Pat's colleagues, after the death of her son, Pat had leaned on her Catholic
face for strength during those dark times.
But that Pat's daughter Anne had coped in a very different way.
Antrovada went to see a tarot card reader, a fortune teller,
in the hopes of getting some answers regarding her deceased brother.
And she came upon a woman who started to read
Travato's cards, tell her information about communications with her deceased brother.
Through the tarot card reader, Antrovato Matt Carmella Magnetti.
They became inseparable.
Co-workers say that Pat was disturbed by Carmella's
hold over Anne.
I knew that they had some heavy influence over Pat's daughter.
Pat, she kept calling it a cult.
Pat's co-workers explain that she was especially disturbed
by Carmella's relationship with two-year-old Ariana.
Carmella Magnetti really was attached to Ariana.
She wanted to be caretaker of Ariana.
Co-workers tell detectives that when Pat pushed back against her influence,
Carmella turned Anne against her.
Antrovato moved out of her mother's house and into the Magneti's home.
Pat kept asking to see the child, kept asking Anne to bring the baby over,
and it just never materialized.
She was worried about her granddaughter,
and that was what prompted her to seek visitation
from a legal standpoint.
Co-workers say that as the visitation case progressed,
Pat believed that Ann retaliated against her
on Carmella Magnetti's orders.
When Pat filed her visitation petition,
that's when the acts of violence escalated.
The break-in in her house, the slashing of her tires,
the tampering with her breaks.
Pat was not to be deterred.
The most important thing was her relationship
with her granddaughter.
Colleagues were called talking to Pat talking so excitedly about the weekend.
She wanted things to be perfect and they went so tragically wrong.
If Carmella Magnetti had orchestrated the threats of violence against Pat, could she also be behind her death?
Detectives order a search warrant of the Magnetti House, including the bedroom that Ann, Carmella, and Ariana share.
Police find Carmella's personal computer and bring it back to the station for further examination.
That's when they make a discovery
that will change the course of the entire case.
Carmella McNetti was sending emails to Antravato
purporting to be Travato's dead brother John.
And trying to convince Travato that her mother was evil and that she needed to be out of the picture.
It's so beyond anything that you could imagine.
That was significant piece of evidence.
Had Carmella Magnetti convinced Ann Travato
to kill her own mother?
Or had she been forced to do the dirty work herself?
Before detectives can answer that question,
they are contacted by New York Child Protection Services.
CPS tells detectives about a peculiar call they received
the day before Patricia's body was discovered.
On Saturday, May 13, it was in phone call made
to Child Protective Service of Westchester County.
The individual was claiming there was child abuse taking place at that moment, at the house in Austin.
The house belonged to Patricia Mary, and CPS says that local officers were dispatched to the scene. House is dark, it's locked.
There doesn't seem to be any activity in it.
The allegation that this anonymous caller
was making to CPS didn't seem accurate.
So they left.
Investigators believe at the time of the welfare check,
Patricia Mary would have already been dead for nearly 48 hours.
So who called CPS and why?
We were able to track down where that phone call was made.
It was made from a pay phone at the Pleasantville train station.
Fortunately, we were able to recover video
that showed a person making phone call.
And this person was Antrovato.
Coming up, detectives catch their prime suspect in a lie.
Look, we said you were at the mall with Antrovato,
but we don't see her here.
And they learn what was really tormenting Patricia
in the weeks leading up to her murder.
Pay money and we'll let you see your baby.
May 15, 2006. Detectives in Austin, New York
have discovered video evidence that seems to implicate
Anne Travato in the death of her mother, Patricia Mary.
One of the things we learned is that Anne called
Child Protective Services herself after the murder
and alerted them that there was abuse in that home.
The question naturally arises, why did Trivato
make that call?
Detectives decide to take another look at Anne's alibi
for the night of the murder.
She said she was at the mall with Little Ariana
and Carmilla when this murder took place.
The police were able to pull video and see Carmella
magnetic with the baby in a stroller.
And Antivada was not there.
If Anne wasn't at the mall on May 11,
like she had claimed,
then where was she?
Search warrants were issued for their cell phones
and data was recovered.
We learned from the cell site information
that at the time of the homicide,
Carmella Magnetti was at the gallery at mall,
but Antrovada was an ozman.
Detectives are suspicious that Anne knows more than she claims,
but rather than speak to Anne, they reach out to her best friend, Carmella Magnetti.
They've confronted her, basically saying, look, you said you're at the Maul with Antrovato,
but we don't see her here. And she said, well, look, you said you're at the mall with Antivato, but we don't see her here.
And she said, well, Ann, Annie has social phobia.
So I went in, and she stayed in the car.
During the interviews, we knew that she wasn't telling all that she knew.
Detectives inform Carmella that they also have her cell phone records
from the night of the murder.
At that point, Carmella breaks down in tears.
Her story yet again changed.
And at that point, she said she had dropped Travato
at her mother's or in the vicinity of her mother's
and that she had gone by herself with the baby
to the Galleria. And she told the police that she had picked Trevato up and that Trevato seemed very upset but that she didn't press her on it.
But that's all investigators can get before Carmella stops cooperating.
That was sort of her final story which again was getting closer to the truth, but she never told us the whole truth.
Thankfully, detectives are able to track down another family member of Carmella's, who is willing to talk.
Her cousin, Ardie Walsh, Arty tells investigators that before Patricia's murder,
he had several unsettling conversations with Anne and Carmella.
And Trevato told Arty Walsh,
they had previously broken into Patricia Mary's house.
They had stolen things.
They were trying to maybe bribe Pat in order to you pay money
and will let you see your baby.
It was very significant to us in order to, uh, you pay money and will let you see your baby.
It was very significant to us that we could prove this premeditated scheme by Carmella Magnetti and Antrovato
leading up to the homicide of Patricia Mary.
Arti says that in early May, and and Carmella started asking him some disturbing questions.
Prior to the homicide, Carmella Magnetti and Antrobato
had asked Artie Walsh for a gun.
Artie says that he refused to provide them with a gun.
But then, on May 11th, he had another alarming interaction
with Anne and Carmella.
Arty Walsh said that Carmella Magnetti and Antrovato
came back into the house.
Carmella Magnetti called him upstairs.
He came up into the room.
Carmella Magnetti and Antrovato's room.
And Antrovato was in a praying position on her knees.
And Carmella Magnetti said in the presence of Antrovato
to Arty Walsh, she killed her mother.
Antrovato just sort of nodded.
That was a huge piece of evidence for us.
But is this confession enough for an arrest?
On July 30, 2006, detectives pin all their hopes on one last interview
with Carmella.
She didn't divulge everything she knew.
We believe that she knew what was going to happen.
Coming up, Carmella tells all,
it was part of this really complex scheme
that Antivato and her friend Carmella Magnetti
had perpetrated.
But as pressure mounts, would the bond between the two women
hold firm, or is it about to completely unravel?
She had nothing to do with this.
She wasn't involved.
She was innocent of this? On July 30, 2006, detectives meet Carmella Magnetti at a diner in Austin, New York.
There, she finally agrees to come clean about the night 59-year-old Patricia Mary was murdered.
Carmella admits that she helped Pat's daughter and Travato
vandalize Patricia's property after Patricia
sued for visitation of Anne's daughter, Arianna.
Patricia was living a few towns away.
The one person was threatening to take this little girl away from them,
so they hatched this plot.
But Carmella says that when she dropped off Anne in awesoning on May 11, 2006,
she had no idea what Anne was about to do.
She had dropped Annie off. She had picked her up.
Annie said that her mother had a knife,
and she confronted her, and then she blacked out.
And she woke up and her mother was dead.
Antravato had a bag with bulletin clothes,
and our evidence was Antravato and Carmella Magnetti took those clothes
to a dumpster in Elmsford.
Carmella didn't know anything about what was going to happen,
and this was sort of a spontaneous event.
She was charged with hindering prosecution,
destruction of evidence, and criminal facilitation,
which is helping someone commit a crime.
With Carmella in custody, detectives track down Ann
at a friend's house on August 4, 2006.
She's charged with murder in the second degree,
burglary in the first degree, for breaking into
Patricia Mary's house.
After she would speak with us and she said she refused to join the lawyer.
Anne's trial begins in September 2007.
Anne's demeanor is sort of a rollercoaster.
There's days she's stoic.
There's days she's hysterical.
There is a day that we had to stop court because she was so hysterical.
Prosecutors argues that Anne's sudden outpouring of emotion
doesn't change the fact that she is a cold-blooded killer.
I believe Annie's waiting for her mother to return home.
I would imagine that there was an argument again
about the baby. waiting for her mother to return home. I would imagine that there was an argument again
about the baby.
I ended up being struck several times with one object,
which would really be a baseball bat.
And we believe that the assault continued.
And she was stabbed and murdered.
And even planted this letter, a handwritten note on her mom's body at the time to try and show police that something else had happened here.
Certainly, this was a premeditated plan homicide, and not a situation where something happened in the spur of the moment in a person blacked out.
in a person blacked out.
Prosecutors also present surveillance footage and phone records to bolster their case.
The defense argues it's not enough to warrant a conviction.
The argument was that we'd improve our case.
We didn't have a videotape statement to the police.
We didn't have that smoking gun.
On October 22nd, 2007, the jury hands down its verdict.
They find, and Travato guilty on all charges.
Judge was very stern and fair and sentenced
over 25 years of life.
You want to know what I think Annie should have
got as a punishment?
Life without parole.
No possibility of parole.
This is not someone you want on the street.
This is someone who needs to sit quietly
in a cage and reflect on what they've done.
In July of 2008, Carmella's trial begins.
We had pretty hard evidence against Carmella Magnetti.
A lot of that evidence just showed Magnetti's involvement
with this scheme leading up to the homicide.
However, unlike Anne's trial, Carmella's trial
is plagued by problems, starting with Antravato's
very own testimony.
In her testimony, she tried to protect Carmella, basically
saying that she had nothing to do with this.
She wasn't involved.
She was innocent of this.
Then, Arty Walsh, who was a crucial witness at Ann's trial,
flees to Canada just days before he is scheduled to take the stand
at his cousin's trial.
He never came, and we had to give the case to the jury,
so they had to consider it without his testimony,
which was a huge blow to us.
Without Arty's testimony, Carmella is found guilty
of the lesser charges of tampering with evidence
and hindering prosecution.
She is sentenced to three to seven years in prison.
However, the tragedy of Pat's death ultimately
has a touching ending.
After Anne is imprisoned, Ron Kurner receives full custody of the daughter he never knew he had.
I have such a special relationship with Ariana. It's unbreakable.
People wouldn't understand it. I can't live without this girl.
We have such a great relationship, me and my father,
and I'm just happy how my life is present right now,
present day is very happy.
I couldn't ask for more.
However, not a day goes by that Ariana doesn't wonder
why her mother made the choice to take her grandmother's life.
Thus ensuring neither of them would ever
get to see Ariana grow into the young woman she is today.
I was thinking about it like, wow, how can someone's daughter kill their own mother on
Mother's Day?
It's so messed up and so many ways.
You want your daughter all to yourself,
and so you kill your mother,
and now you don't have your daughter at all.
And you don't have your mother.
I think legacy wise,
Pat does kind of live on
in Ariana's personal and in character.
In 2011, after serving just over two years of her sentence, Carmella Magnetti was released
from prison, and Travato is eligible for parole in 2031.
She currently has no contact with her daughter.