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Girlfriend of Pennsylvania Dentist Who Killed Wife on Safari Breaks Her Silence from Jail in New Interview

Girlfriend of Pennsylvania Dentist Who Killed Wife on Safari Breaks Her Silence from Jail in New Interview

Yahoo28-07-2025
Lori Milliron maintains her innocence regarding the 2016 death of Bianca Rudolph
The girlfriend of Larry Rudolph, the Pennsylvania dentist convicted of killing his wife while they were on safari in Zambia, has broken her silence from prison.
Lori Milliron began an affair with Larry in 2002, and she was ultimately convicted for her involvement in the 2016 shooting death of his wife of 34 years, Bianca Rudolph.
At the time, prosecutors argued that Milliron gave Larry an ultimatum that he needed to choose between her or his wife, and that she also knew about his crime while they continued to date after the murder. Millron is currently serving a 17-year sentence for perjury and being an accessory to a murder after the fact, as well as obstructing a grand jury.
Now, in Hulu's new three-part docuseries about the case, Trophy Wife: Murder on Safari, Milliron maintains that she had no involvement in the crime.
'There was no ultimatum. Why would I wait 15 years to give him an ultimatum? It just didn't make sense," Milliron said over a prison phone, according to video shared by Inside Edition.
'The police did an investigation, and they said it was an accident. Everyone believed it was an accident. So I assumed it was an accident as well,' she added.
In another part of the series, Milliron said she never planned on becoming romantically involved with Larry when they first met as coworkers at his dental practice.
'I was reluctant, but after a little while, I slowly, slowly got to know him,' she said, explaining that she eventually became 'the girlfriend' despite the fact that he was married.
While Bianca's death was initially declared an accident by Zambia law enforcement, federal authorities in the U.S. were not convinced and ultimately accused Larry of killing his wife so he could collect millions of dollars in life insurance benefits.
He was eventually sentenced to life in prison in 2023 on charges of foreign murder and mail fraud.
During his trial, which took place in July 2022, Larry told jurors, 'I did not kill my wife. I could not murder my wife. I would not murder my wife.'
However, a witness for the prosecution testified that he had overheard Larry making statements that indicated otherwise.
According to Brian Lovelace, a bartender at a Phoenix steakhouse that Larry and Milliron frequented, he heard the dentist confess to the crime during a heated argument.
Want to keep up with the latest crime coverage? Sign up for for breaking crime news, ongoing trial coverage and details of intriguing unsolved cases.
'Larry and Lori were having a drink," federal prosecutor Bishop Grewell said during opening statements. 'The music in the background made it difficult for Brian Lovelace to hear the conversation going on around him, but at some point, all of a sudden, the music stopped. And in that brief interlude, that brief silence between the songs, Larry Rudolph growled, 'I killed my f------ wife for you!' '
Both Milliron and Larry continue to maintain their innocence and are currently appealing their convictions.
Trophy Wife: Murder on Safari premiered on July 21 and airs weekly.
Read the original article on People
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Amanda Knox: I Want To Reconcile With Murdered Meredith Kercher's Family
Amanda Knox: I Want To Reconcile With Murdered Meredith Kercher's Family

Newsweek

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Amanda Knox: I Want To Reconcile With Murdered Meredith Kercher's Family

Amanda Knox has rarely been far from the public eye, or, as she puts it, "global vilification." Convicted in 2007 of the murder of her roommate Meredith Kercher in Perugia, Italy, Knox became the subject of a global media frenzy. What followed was a yearslong tabloid obsession with her—her sexual history, her high school nickname "Foxy Knoxy," and lurid prosecution theory that Kercher was killed during a Satanic sexual orgy. Knox, now 38, is reclaiming her narrative with a second autobiography released in May and a new eight-part Hulu drama series launching August 20. In a wide-ranging, no-holds-barred interview with Newsweek, Knox—who was twice convicted and twice acquitted of murder, and served nearly four years in prison—speaks candidly about her hope to reconcile with the Kercher family. She says she believes they could find her new book and TV series "healing." "I hope that they will recognize the value in my attempt at revealing the truth of what happened to Meredith in my revealing of the truth of what happened to me," she says. In this picture released on June 11, Amanda Knox is seen on the set of the television show "Cinque Minuti" at Rai Studios, on June 10, 2024 in Rome, Italy. In this picture released on June 11, Amanda Knox is seen on the set of the television show "Cinque Minuti" at Rai Studios, on June 10, 2024 in Rome, Italy. Antonio Masiello/Getty Adversary or Ally? Knox's Complicated Bond With Her Prosecutor Knox has struck up a complex friendship with Giuliano Mignini, the prosecutor in her case. He developed the unfounded theory that Kercher was killed by Knox, her Italian boyfriend Raffaele Sollecito and Rudy Guede, from the Ivory Coast, in a drug-fueled sex orgy gone wrong. Knox and Mignini began regular correspondence in 2019 and met up in 2022. "Some people say to me, 'Is he your friend?' And I don't really know how to answer that question.... He's my perpetrator and he is someone who cares about me," she explains. Despite struggling with a lot of anger at the narrative Mignini concocted to try and secure her conviction, she says she wanted to understand why he hurt her. "An unexpected consequence of putting myself in that position is that the term adversary became complicated by other feelings and interactions with this fully fleshed-out human being," she says. Knox's mother, Edda Mellas, was not supportive of the meeting. But Knox said: "I very much have a relationship with my prosecutor where I do not let him off the hook. But I also... embrace his humanity and I am able to see him for whatever good intentions he might have had even in the midst of committing grievous harm." Knox adds that she thought the relationship was more meaningful to him than her, and that he feels guilt for what he put her through. 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Relatives of murdered British exchange student Meredith Kercher, Stephanie Kercher (R), Arline Kercher (L) and father John Kercher (C) arrive for a press conference in Perugia November 6, 2007. 21-year-old Kercher, who was found dead with her throat slit in her room in an apartment she shared with other exchange students in Perugia. More STR/AFP/Getty Knox said she had recently found the first letter she drafted to the Kercher family from jail. In the letter, she says she writes: "How I'm so sorry about everything that they have gone through and that I recognize their pain. And that that pain is never going to go away and that I want to share with you everything that I know because you deserve that from me, including all these amazing, beautiful memories that I have of your sister. And I would love to have the opportunity to grieve with you, so I'm here, waiting if you want that." 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