David Tronnes “had spent thousands of dollars on renovations and had hopes of appearing on the reality television show, ‘Zombie House Renovations,’" prosecutors said.
A jury convicted a Florida man of first-degree murder Wednesday in the 2018 strangling and beating death of his wife after she refused to appear on a home renovation reality TV show, prosecutors said.
David Tronnes, 55, killed his wife, Shanti Cooper-Tronnes, on April 24, 2018, in the couple’s home in the Orlando neighborhood of Delaney Park, the State Attorney’s Office for the Ninth Judicial Circuit said in a statement Wednesday.
She chose poorly. Don't tolerate abusive behavior. It's a sign of something.
This guy's obviously the problem, and not her, but get away from crazy people for ducks sake. The crazy is not all there is. It's just the label.
She did NOT deserve to die, not saying that. But she might have lived if she had had hard boundaries of tolerable behavior. If this was the first time he acted out, then I'm sorry for judging, it couldn't be helped. But I don't think so.
75% of women killed by intimate partners are killed when they attempt to leave or after they have left. Getting away is in no way, shape, or form a path to safety.
It's not the same. Not every abusive relationship is a threat to your life but 75% of the time escaping an abusive relationship adds a new threat to life. Maybe a better way of putting it would have been "a guaranteed path to safety" but at that point you're just arguing semantics. I would be extremely surprised if escaping a war-torn country adds another 75% chance you'll be murdered. And it's not an argument to not leave the relationship if that's what you're taking from all this.
You may want to reconsider your math. There’s a big difference between “75% of women who are killed by a partner are killed when they leave” and “75% of women who leave an abusive partner are killed”.
There's an easy way to prevent the deaths of women by their male partners! It's called "men don't kill their female partners." It's that easy. Try it sometime!
Unfortunately you cannot control other’s actions, only your own. So obviously don’t hurt your partner, or anyone else for that matter, but also GTFO if you recognize abusive behavior in your partner.
Sigh. I really wish that people who don't know what they are talking about would just not post.
I "escaped" my abusive marriage, just to watch my kids be abused by him for fifteen years. It's not a decision between good and bad. It's mostly a choice between bad and bad. Abuse leaves victims no good choices.
Much of the time, the first definitive sign is the one that ends up with you dead.
I've been in a largely invisible one-sided war for almost twenty years. I have a lot of resources many victims simply don't have, and still I'm stuck. The last thing any of us needs is an armchair referee telling us what we should be doing while stuffing metaphorical Cheetos up his nose.