Lester Holt
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Appearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
The motivation, just jealousy that if he couldn't have her, no one was going to have her.
Ferranti, the prosecutor said, thought he could get rid of his wife quickly by slipping her cyanide.
When she didn't die immediately, he had to come up with a plan B to mislead the paramedics and doctors.
The prosecution was establishing Dr. Ferrante's attempts to lead everybody that he encountered, starting with the 911 operator.
And he said, well, I think she's had a stroke.
Then when Autumn finally died, according to the prosecutor, Ferrante said something that he thought would keep the cause of death secret.
Lois Klein testified that her son-in-law said flatly he did not want an autopsy.
The prosecution had described a man who had lost control of his wife, killed her, and then tried desperately to cover it up.
Defense attorneys Bill Diffenderfer and Wendy Williams.
You get this picture of a jealous guy whose career is being eclipsed by his wife, thinks she's got a lover, and bang, she's dead.
Well, that's the spin that the Commonwealth put on this thing, and obviously we think the reality is that's not the case.
They said the prosecutor's alleged motive here made for great melodrama, but it was miles away from the truth.
Bob Ferrante, they countered, was a brilliant researcher and a loving man devoted to helping his wife, not hurting her.
And to sell that image, they flabbergasted the courtroom by calling the defendant himself to the stand.
So in this case, the defendant made that choice.