Millions of music fans mourned on March 31, 1995, when news broke that popular Tejano singer Selena Quintanilla-Perez had been shot and killed by her fan club president, 34-year-old Yolanda Saldivar in Corpus Christi, Texas. For the crime of first-degree murder, Saldivar received a life sentence with no possibility of parole for 30 years.
Beloved by many Mexican Americans, Selena—who was born in Lake Jackson, Texas—seemed on the verge of crossing over into wider English-language superstardom. Only a month earlier, she'd performed to more than 60,000 people at the Houston Astrodome. Her first album to feature songs in English, Dreaming of You, was released a few months after her death and went on to hit No. 1 on the Billboard 200 albums chart on August 5, 1995. The album, which won Female Pop Album of the Year at the third annual Billboard Latin Music Awards, contained what is still one of the singer's most popular English songs, "I Could Fall in Love." Thousands attended her funeral—forcing the service to be moved from a funeral home to a convention center.
For fans of the 23-year-old pop star, her murder was a shocking tragedy. But for those more intimately involved in her life, it was an event foreshadowed by multiple warning signs of Saldivar's nefarious intentions.
Yolanda Saldivar's Possessive Side
Yolanda Saldivar first met Selena in 1991 when she contacted Selena's father, Abraham Quintanilla, with hopes of forming a fan club. In the months that followed, fan club membership boomed, and Selena's relationship with Saldivar blossomed. As Selena grew more successful, Saldivar earned more responsibility: She was hired to manage a series of design houses and boutique stores that Selena opened; she had her own set of keys to Selena's home.
But she also had fraught relationships with others in Selena's orbit. Martin Gomez, one of the designers who shared office space with Saldivar, quit his job as Selena's fashion designer because he found Saldivar so off-putting. He said she lied, stole, and sabotaged other people's work. He recalled finishing up clothing he was working on, leaving on a business trip and returning to find the hems ripped out, presumably by Saldivar. "The last call I had with Selena…I told her to be careful," Gomez told The Washington Post.