The perks of fame are obvious. While most people toil away in obscurity, a select few have the privilege of being adored by millions.
But that adoration can come with a steep price: The more people who know you, the more nefarious people who know you, too. Some folk's fandom leads them to dark places where love and obsession result in murdering the celebrities they once adored.
Yolanda Saldivar Kills Selena Quintanilla-Perez
Known to her admirers simply by her first name, "Selena," the 23-year-old Grammy-award-winning singer reigned as the "queen of the Tejano music world" when she was gunned down by the president of her own fan club on March 31, 1995.
Her assassin, Yolanda Saldivar, had met the Texas-born vocalist in 1991, after introducing herself to Selena's father, Abraham Quintanilla, Jr., with the idea of starting a Selena fan club.
Soon after she started the club and became its president, it grew into the most successful Selena fan club in the San Antonio area. And as Selena's popularity grew, Saldivar earned more responsibility with the family—including managing some of Selena's businesses. But then some members of the fan club lodged complaints with Quintanilla, saying they had paid Saldivar membership fees and received nothing in return.
Quintanilla confronted Saldivar in early March of 1995 and told her he would go to the police with allegations of embezzlement. Three weeks later, as Selena met with Saldivar to get some financial documents, Saldivar shot and killed her.
Saldivar was convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to life imprisonment with the possibility of parole after 30 years. She filed her first petition for parole in January 2025, which was denied on March 27, 2025.
The Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles said in a statement: "After a thorough consideration of all available information, which included any confidential interviews conducted, it was the parole panel's determination to deny parole to Yolanda Saldivar and set her next parole review for March 2030. The reason provided by the panel for denial was the Nature of the Offense: The record indicates that the instant offense has elements of brutality, violence, assaultive behavior or conscious selection of victim’s vulnerability indicating a conscious disregard for the lives, safety, or property of others, such that the offender poses a continuing threat to public safety."