Las Vegas Sun

April 26, 2024

Report says Gatti may have committed suicide

Gatti

Associated Press

Floyd Mayweather Jr., right, of Las Vegas, Nev., hits Arturo Gatti of Jersey City, N. J. in second round action of their WBO World Super Lightweight Championship bout at Atlantic City’s Boardwalk Hall Saturday, June 25, 2005 in Atlantic City, N.J.

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Amanda Rodrigues, center, is escorted by police officers after being arrested in Recife, Brazil, Sunday, July 12, 2009. Brazilian authorities say they have detained Rodrigues, wife of former boxing champion Arturo Gatti, as a suspect following his death at a posh seaside resort.

Click to enlarge photo

Arturo Gatti, left punches Micky Ward during the junior welterweight fight in Atlantic City, N.J. Saturday, June 7, 2003. The fight lasted the the full 10 rounds and Gatti defeated Ward by a unanimous decision This was the third fight between the fighters.

SAO PAULO — An autopsy indicates former boxing champion Arturo Gatti may have committed suicide, been accidentally killed or murdered, according to a Brazilian newspaper that said it obtained a copy of the coroner’s initial findings.

Police have said they are certain Gatti’s 23-year-old wife strangled the boxer with her purse strap as he drunkenly slept July 11, but the autopsy report raises some doubts.

Gatti was found dead in the apartment he was renting with wife Amanda Rodrigues in the Brazilian seaside resort of Porto de Galinhas in the northeastern state of Pernambuco.

In the state capital of Recife, the Jornal do Comercio newspaper reported Saturday that the autopsy findings it obtained stated Gatti’s body was “suspended and hanged, indicating he may have committed suicide.”

The autopsy report, according to the newspaper, also said that “murder or accidental death” could not be ruled out. There was no explanation for “accidental death.”

Paula Cysneiros, the spokeswoman for the medical examiners office that performed the autopsy, would not confirm the newspaper’s report.

Police arrested Rodrigues on suspicion of murdering the former two-division champion. She maintains her innocence and is being held in a prison in Recife. She has not been charged—according to Brazilian law, police have until this Wednesday to hand over their findings to prosecutors, who will decide if charges are to be filed.

A visitation for Gatti is scheduled for Sunday at Maison Funeraire Magnus Poirier in his adopted hometown of Montreal, with a funeral on Monday at Notre Dame De La Defense.

Rodrigues told investigators she awoke July 11 and found her husband’s body about 9 a.m. She then called police.

Investigators said she was the only suspect and they are certain she killed Gatti in the apartment where they and their 10-month-old son arrived for a second honeymoon. The boy was unhurt and was in the care of Rodrigues’ family.

Investigators said there was no sign of forced entry and that the electronic locks on the apartment indicated only Gatti and his wife had entered it.

Police said Gatti had marks on his throat, indicating he was strangled.

Rodrigues’ sister, Flavia, told the newspaper Folha de S. Paulo earlier this week that there is “no way she could have strangled a man of that size.”

Rodrigues’ attorney, Celio Avelino, told The Associated Press that he agreed.

“She is fragile, young and skinny—how could she kill a boxing champion?” Avelino said. “When she awoke, she presumed he had committed suicide. But she had nothing to do with it.”

Police also said there was a knife wound in the back of Gatti’s head and displayed a small steak knife along with the bloodied, white purse strap—both found near his body.

Citing the results of the autopsy, the Jornal do Comercio newspaper said the wound “may have occurred when the body fell to the floor.”

Police have also said they think the crime scene had been altered before they arrived—indicating that Rodrigues could have tried to make it appear as if Gatti had committed suicide, police spokeswoman Milena Saraiva told the AP earlier this week.

Saraiva said the death may have been premeditated and Rodrigues may have encouraged Gatti to drink excessively so she would be able to overpower him later.

Rodrigues, in a letter given to the AP on Wednesday, said she didn’t commit the crime.

“I’m innocent and I know that this will be proven in a few days,” she wrote in the letter. She ended the note by addressing the couple’s infant son, writing: “Junior—soon mama will be at home!”

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