Crime and Courts

Citing 34 stab wounds, judge orders wife/suspect in Cal Fire captain's wife death held without bail

Rebecca "Becky" Marodi sought to leave her marriage shortly before she was killed, according to an arrest-warrant declaration filed by a detective with the San Diego County District Attorney's Office.

Yolonda Marodi (left), is shown in custody accused of killing her wife, Cal Fire Capt. Rebecca "Becky" Marodi (right).
Baja California Citizen Security Secretariat/Cal Fire

Yolonda Marodi (left), is shown in custody accused of killing her wife, Cal Fire Capt. Rebecca “Becky” Marodi (right).

An ex-con suspected of fatally stabbing her wife, a veteran state firefighter, at their Ramona home and then fleeing to Mexico, pleaded not guilty Wednesday to a murder charge.

Yolanda Marodi, 53, is accused of killing her spouse of two years, Cal Fire Capt. Rebecca "Becky" Marodi, at the couple's Rancho Villa Road home on the night of Feb. 17.

Deputies responding to a report of an assault found the 49-year-old victim suffering from stab wounds to her neck, chest and abdomen. Becky, who had worked for the state firefighting agency for more than 30 years, died at the scene.

Yolanda allegedly headed across the U.S.-Mexico border shortly after the killing. Mexican authorities arrested her on Saturday near a hotel in the Ferrocarril neighborhood of Mexicali, according to the San Diego County District Attorney's Office.

At Yolanda's initial court appearance on Wednesday afternoon, Superior Court Judge Peter Lynch ordered that she remain in custody without bail, citing 34 stabbing or slashing wounds that Becky allegedly sustained in the fatal attack. The judge also referenced Yolanda's "violent criminal history" through her prior voluntary manslaughter conviction, which involved the stabbing death of her previous spouse.

Marodi appeared in court remotely from a hospital bed, though the reason for her hospitalization was not disclosed. Though she will be jailed without bail after she's discharged from the hospital, a hearing was set for next month to potentially revisit her bail status.

According to an arrest-warrant declaration filed by a detective with the San Diego County District Attorney's Office, Becky had sought to leave the marriage shortly before she was killed, .

The day after the slaying, the court document asserts, the suspect sent someone a text message stating, "Becky came home and told me she was leaving me, she met someone else, all the messages were lies. We had a big fight and I hurt her ... I'm sorry."

The warrant declaration states that surveillance-camera footage captured images of Rebecca Marodi fleeing their home as her wife chased her.

The bloodied victim was "yelling out, 'Yolanda! Please ... I don't want to die,"' the document states. Yolanda, who appeared to be holding a knife and seemingly had blood on her arms, responded, "You should have thought about that before," according to the document.

The mortally wounded victim repeatedly asked her wife to call 911 before the pair re-entered the home, the declaration states.

About 10 minutes later, the camera recorded video of Yolanda Marodi, who also goes by the last name Olejniczak, loading items into a Chevrolet Equinox and then driving off, the declaration states.

Moment woman accused in Cal Fire Captain killing is turned over to U.S officials
53-year-old Yolanda Marodi was processed by U.S. Marshals in San Diego County before being booked into custody on suspicion of murder.

Yolanda pleaded guilty to voluntary manslaughter and served prison time from February 2004 to November 2013 for the October 2000 stabbing death of her first spouse, James Olejniczak, in San Bernardino County Family court records filed at Vista Courthouse indicate that the couple had filed for divorce in May of 2000.

Deputy District Attorney Maura Duffey, who is prosecuting the latest case, said after Wednesday's arraignment, "This is a very tragic case of intimate partner violence.... The victim was a beloved member of the Cal Fire community, and I know that this loss is being felt in that community."

Rebecca's state firefighting service began in 1993 as a volunteer crew member in Moreno Valley. She went on to serve as a seasonal firefighter in Riverside and San Bernardino counties before being promoted to fire apparatus engineer in 2007 and captain at the Cal Fire/Riverside County Fire Department in 2022.

On Sunday, Cal Fire officials released a statement thanking their "law enforcement partners in San Diego and Mexico for their hard work" in apprehending the suspect.

"Becky was a beloved member of our community and department, and we miss her greatly," they added.

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