RALEIGH, N.C. — Investigators searched a Raleigh home Thursday afternoon of the estranged husband of a woman fatally shot at an apartment complex earlier in the day.
A police spokesman said Agata Flipska Vellotti, 43, was killed just before 9 a.m. at the Meridian at Wakefield apartments, at 11501 Colbert Creek Loop, in north Raleigh.
He did not provide further details, including a motive or whether anyone had been charged in the crime.
Based on a witness account and interviews with neighbors, however, a man believed to be Vellotti's husband, Mario Vellotti, 64, of 2728 Kinsley Place, was taken into custody shortly after the shooting at the Raleigh Police Department's Downtown District substation.
Neighbors said the couple, who were married in Krakow, Poland, in 2005, had a volatile relationship and that Agata Vellotti moved out of the home with their 6-year-old son several weeks ago.
Court documents show that District Judge Lori Christian issued a domestic violence protective order last month against Mario Vellotti and that the couple had been fighting for custody of their son.
At one point, according to the judge's ruling in the custody case, Agata Vellotti left with the boy for five days in June following an incident in which Mario Vellotti allegedly assaulted her in front of the child.
Also, acccording to court documents, Mario Vellotti did not let his wife have friends, a cellphone, a house key and he kept her from attending church.
As of Thursday afternoon, police would not confirm that Marco Vellotti had been taken into custody, but a woman, who did not want to be identified, said she was in the police station lobby shortly after 10 a.m. when a dozen officers converged on the area and were talking about how they were waiting for a man to surrender for killing his wife.
The witness said she was ushered into a storage area as a safety precaution until the man was detained. When she was able to return to the lobby, the woman said, she heard officers talking about transporting the man to WakeMed because he complained of chest pains.
WRAL News video captured emergency workers placing the man in an ambulance. Neighbors identified him as Marco Vellotti.
A silver 2007 Lexus sedan, similar to one police were looking for in connection with the shooting, also sat outside the downtown police station and had been cordoned off by crime scene tape by 11 a.m.
Records indicate the car is registered to Mario Vellotti.
In Internet postings last month on a blog about corruption in family courts, someone by the name of Mario Vellotti took issue with Christian's rulings and denied the accusations in her custody ruling, saying he is disabled and incapable of the claims his wife made.
In one post, on July 18, "Being in Jude Christian [sic] court brought out the worst of me."
In a posting three days later, the same author wrote, "The allegations against me were not proven and they were false! … By the way my wife was the one that abducted my son and for five days I lived in hell! Don’t worry your honor every dog gets his day in the sun!"
When reached by phone Thursday afternoon, Christian had no comment on the situation, citing judicial ethics.
A compilation of daily news articles from around the United States about deaths (including both people and animals) that appear to occur in the context of a past or present intimate relationship, focusing on 2009-present. (NOTE: this blog is limited to incidents that appear in the media and are captured by our search terms. We recognize this is not an exhaustive portrayal of all deaths resulting from intimate violence.) When is society going to realize intimate violence makes victims of us all?
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