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		The woman who killed Tejano music icon Selena in 1995 has been denied 
		parole
		[March 28, 2025] 
		By JUAN A. LOZANO 
		HOUSTON (AP) — The woman convicted of killing Tejano music legend Selena 
		Quintanilla-Pérez has been denied parole and will continue serving a 
		life sentence for fatally shooting the rising young singer at a Texas 
		motel in 1995, the state’s parole board announced Thursday.
 Yolanda Saldívar, 64, was up for parole for the first time since the 
		killing of the singer, known to fans as simply Selena.
 
 One of the first Mexican American artists to break into the mainstream 
		music scene, Selena shattered barriers for women in Latin music. She was 
		23 years old and on the verge of crossing over into English-language pop 
		superstardom when she was killed.
 
 The singer's family and Chris Pérez, her widower, expressed gratitude to 
		the Texas Board of Pardon and Paroles.
 
 “While nothing can bring Selena back, this decision reaffirms that 
		justice continues to stand for the beautiful life that was taken from us 
		and from millions of fans around the world far too soon,” they said in a 
		statement posted on social media.
 
 In explaining the decision to deny parole, the board said in a statement 
		that the panel found that Saldívar continues to pose a threat to public 
		safety. It also said the nature of the crime indicated “a conscious 
		disregard for the lives, safety, or property of others.”
 
 Saldívar, who is serving her sentence in a Gatesville prison, will be 
		eligible to be reviewed again for parole in 2030.
 
 Saldívar founded Selena’s fan club and was the manager of the singer’s 
		clothing boutiques, Selena Etc., until she was fired in early March 1995 
		after money was discovered missing.
 
 Selena, a Corpus Christi native, was shot in the back with a .38-caliber 
		revolver at a Days Inn motel in Corpus Christi on March 31, 1995. She 
		was able to run to the motel lobby, where she collapsed, and she was 
		pronounced dead at a hospital an hour later.
 
		
		 
		Motel employees testified that Selena named “Yolanda” in “room 158” as 
		her attacker.
 “I didn’t mean to do it. I didn’t mean to kill anybody,” a sobbing 
		Saldívar said during a nine-hour standoff with police. She told officers 
		she had bought the .38-caliber revolver to kill herself.
 
 More than 50,000 people lined up to view Selena’s body the day before 
		she was laid to rest in Seaside Memorial Park on April 3, 1995, just 13 
		days before her 24th birthday.
 
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            This combination of photos shows Yolanda Saldívar, who is serving a 
			life sentence at the Patrick L. O'Daniel Unit prison in Gatesville, 
			Texas, left, and Tejano music star Selena posing in Corpus Christi, 
			Texas on March 7, 1995. (Texas Department of Criminal Justice via 
			AP, left, and Paul Howell,/Houston Chronicle via AP) 
            
			
			 Saldívar’s trial was moved to 
			Houston because of the publicity surrounding the case. Saldívar 
			testified that she had intended to kill herself during the 
			confrontation with Selena but the gun misfired.
 On Oct. 23, 1995, a jury convicted Saldívar of first-degree murder. 
			She was sentenced to life in prison with the possibility of parole 
			after 30 years.
 
 While in prison, Saldívar, a former nurse, obtained her paralegal 
			and associate degree in criminal justice. She has filed several 
			civil rights complaints alleging mistreatment by the state’s prison 
			system, according to court records, and she also helped other 
			inmates file petitions.
 
 In court documents from 2016, Saldívar said she was being held in 
			protective custody — meaning she was segregated from other inmates — 
			because prison officials were concerned for her safety due to the 
			“high profile” nature of her case. She filed several appeals of her 
			conviction, but all were rejected.
 
 Known as “the Queen of Tejano,” Selena rose to stardom and won a 
			Grammy during a Tejano music boom in the early 1990s. Her hits 
			included “Bidi Bidi Bom Bom,” “Como la Flor,” “Amor Prohibido,” “No 
			Me Queda Mas” and “Tu Solo Tu.”
 
 She opened the floodgates for a new generation of contemporary 
			artists of Latin descent who would go on to enjoy huge popularity 
			with mainstream American audiences. She often sang in Spanish and 
			spoke in English, reflecting a cross-cultural identity that 
			resonated with listeners.
 
 “Dreaming of You,” her English-language crossover album released a 
			few months after her death, topped the Billboard 200 and featured 
			the hits “I Could Fall in Love” and “Dreaming of You.”
 
 Jennifer Lopez played the singer in the 1997 biopic “Selena.”
 
 The Grammys awarded Selena a posthumous lifetime achievement award 
			in 2021.
 
			
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