Natalia Améstica, the former manager of Tyrone González, the Venezuelan rapper fondly called Canserbero, has confessed to killing him.
In January 2015, Canserbero and Carlos Molnar, his friend and producer, were found dead near the Camino Real Building, in Maracay city, Venezuela.
The deaths of the two friends were initially documented as murder-suicide cases.
It was earlier reported that Canserbero had killed his friend in a knife fight before throwing himself from a 10th-floor window.
But on Tuesday, Tarek William Saab, the Venezuelan attorney general, disclosed that there were new revelations into the case.
#VEA aquí las #escalofriantes#confesiones sobre el doble asesinato de#Canserbero y Carlos Molnar que Natalia
Amestica y Guillermo
Amestica, nos #revelaran a través de un largo interrogatorio que les hice a ambos -en presencia de #Directores y de #Fiscales del @MinpublicoVEN en… pic.twitter.com/7lewWWCSYA— Tarek William Saab (@TarekWiliamSaab) December 26, 2023
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Saab also released video statements via X wherein Natalia admitted that she carried out both murders and staged the suicide with the help of her brother Guillermo Améstica.
In the confessional video, Natalia told authorities she was furious after learning Canserbero planned to cheat her out of payment for a tour to Chile she had organised, and intended to sack her.
“This hurt me a lot and left me with a lot of internal pain,” she said.
Natalia said a “chance arose” when the artistes visited her home in the city of Maracay on January 19, 2015.
She said she laced their tea with a powerful tranquilizer before stabbing both Canserbero and Molnar, who was her ex-lover, repeatedly.
Canserbero’s ex-manager added that she thereafter called her brother to help her clean up the murder scene.
She said her brother Guillermo also involved Sebin officers to alter the crime scene.
Corroborating Natalia’s account, Guillermo said: “We lifted the body between the two of us and threw it”.
He also claimed that forensic detectives quickly made the crime scene appear to be “manipulated”.
“They told me: ‘If you want us to collaborate, it’ll cost you $10,000 (£7,850),'” he added.
Saab assured that the suspects “are going to pay for these serious crimes”.
He added that arrest warrants had been issued for the Sebin officers who were at the scene, including a forensic pathologist and two investigators indicted in the case.
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