Post by abbey1227 on Nov 9, 2022 2:16:08 GMT
US News
EERIE WARNING Teacher makes heartbreaking admission before she was stabbed to death at home by ex-boyfriend
Rachel Dobkin 20:41 ET, Nov 7 2022Updated: 23:14 ET, Nov 7 2022
A TEACHER has been stabbed to death inside her home by her ex-lover after she warned police about his "thousands" of text messages.
Although the crime took place four years ago, the ex-boyfriend was found guilty for the teacher's murder on Friday.
His ex-girlfriend warned police about his 'thousands' of text messages he sent to her before she was stabbed to death in her apartment
On September 8, 2018, Cornel Myers, 39, fatally stabbed his ex-girlfriend, Danielle Fasciocco, 29.
Fasciocco was in her apartment in Middletown, Connecticut, when Myers "viciously attacked her with a knife," according to Middlesex State's Attorney Michael A. Gailor.
During Myer's trial, it was revealed that he entered her home at around 10.20pm on September 7 of that year.
The teacher's throat was slit, and she had several other cuts and stab wounds on her body, according to officials.
Police arrived to the bloody scene at around 3.30am the next day after Myers reported it.
He told the cops that he found Fasciocco covered in blood in her bedroom and then called 911, according to official documents.
Fasciocco was found in a "kneeling position" on the floor with her upper body leaning against a bed and her back toward the door, police said.
Myers had dried blood on his clothes and body as witnessed by the cops.
Two bloody knifes, one in the bedroom on the bed next to Fasciocco and another in a trash can with a broken off tip, were found by police.
One of the knives matched a knife brand that was found in Myers' home, according to the cops.
Blood was also discovered in the kitchen, according to official documents.
WARNING SIGNS
Fasciocco, who was a teacher at Hartford’s Betances STEM Magnet School, reportedly broke up with Myers weeks before she was murdered.
She warned police three weeks before her untimely death that she received “thousands" of text messages from Myers.
The teacher told the cops that she didn't want to have any more contact with her ex-boyfriend.
At one point, Fasciocco told her friends that she was considering filing a restraining order against her ex-lover, according to court documents.
Police said at the time that Myers was told by them to stay away from Fasciocco and her home.
EX-LOVER'S STORY
Myers told police that he wanted to visit Fasciocco at 3am, so he walked to her apartment and unlocked the door with a key he had.
At the scene, police found Fasciocco's door slightly opened and the deadbolt "extended" so it couldn't be closed, which indicted that it wasn't a forced entry, according to the cops.
Fasciocco's ex-boyfriend denied any wrongdoing.
Myers said he thought Fasciocco was drunk when he saw her in the position she was found in and when he tried to pull her up she felt "stiff and heavy," according to official documents.
Investigators also found a handwritten note on the living room coffee table which read: “I did not do it again I did not do it [two people’s names] you guys are the reason for this."
“You guys are the cause of this … I hope you Lady are happy now that the reason why I do it I write this so yoo know everyone is gonna really think I kill her This is what yoo want for me to get in trouble she would’n be by ‘her self.’”
EERIE WARNING Teacher makes heartbreaking admission before she was stabbed to death at home by ex-boyfriend
Rachel Dobkin 20:41 ET, Nov 7 2022Updated: 23:14 ET, Nov 7 2022
A TEACHER has been stabbed to death inside her home by her ex-lover after she warned police about his "thousands" of text messages.
Although the crime took place four years ago, the ex-boyfriend was found guilty for the teacher's murder on Friday.
His ex-girlfriend warned police about his 'thousands' of text messages he sent to her before she was stabbed to death in her apartment
On September 8, 2018, Cornel Myers, 39, fatally stabbed his ex-girlfriend, Danielle Fasciocco, 29.
Fasciocco was in her apartment in Middletown, Connecticut, when Myers "viciously attacked her with a knife," according to Middlesex State's Attorney Michael A. Gailor.
During Myer's trial, it was revealed that he entered her home at around 10.20pm on September 7 of that year.
The teacher's throat was slit, and she had several other cuts and stab wounds on her body, according to officials.
Police arrived to the bloody scene at around 3.30am the next day after Myers reported it.
He told the cops that he found Fasciocco covered in blood in her bedroom and then called 911, according to official documents.
Fasciocco was found in a "kneeling position" on the floor with her upper body leaning against a bed and her back toward the door, police said.
Myers had dried blood on his clothes and body as witnessed by the cops.
Two bloody knifes, one in the bedroom on the bed next to Fasciocco and another in a trash can with a broken off tip, were found by police.
One of the knives matched a knife brand that was found in Myers' home, according to the cops.
Blood was also discovered in the kitchen, according to official documents.
Myers' was detained at the crime scene and later arrested.
Fasciocco, who was a teacher at Hartford’s Betances STEM Magnet School, reportedly broke up with Myers weeks before she was murdered.
She warned police three weeks before her untimely death that she received “thousands" of text messages from Myers.
The teacher told the cops that she didn't want to have any more contact with her ex-boyfriend.
At one point, Fasciocco told her friends that she was considering filing a restraining order against her ex-lover, according to court documents.
Police said at the time that Myers was told by them to stay away from Fasciocco and her home.
According to the State’s Attorney’s Office, Fasciocco repeatedly told her ex-boyfriend to leave her alone in the days leading up to her murder.
Myers told police that he wanted to visit Fasciocco at 3am, so he walked to her apartment and unlocked the door with a key he had.
At the scene, police found Fasciocco's door slightly opened and the deadbolt "extended" so it couldn't be closed, which indicted that it wasn't a forced entry, according to the cops.
Fasciocco's ex-boyfriend denied any wrongdoing.
Myers said he thought Fasciocco was drunk when he saw her in the position she was found in and when he tried to pull her up she felt "stiff and heavy," according to official documents.
Investigators also found a handwritten note on the living room coffee table which read: “I did not do it again I did not do it [two people’s names] you guys are the reason for this."
“You guys are the cause of this … I hope you Lady are happy now that the reason why I do it I write this so yoo know everyone is gonna really think I kill her This is what yoo want for me to get in trouble she would’n be by ‘her self.’”
Myers said he wrote the note “because he didn’t think he would be able to explain himself” and thought he’d “get in trouble for what happened to the victim because of the circumstances,” official documents revealed.