For a decade and a half, she lived between two prisons: the one built by public judgment, and the one inside her own mind. While Brazil debated facts, trials, and sentences, she relived the last moments with her daughter in an endless loop of “what ifs.” Each interview she refused, each comment she read in silence, deepened the feeling that her pain had been turned into spectacle, while her questions remained unanswered.
Now, by finally breaking her silence, she isn’t trying to rewrite the past, but to reclaim her place in a story that was told over her, never with her. Her confession exposes not new evidence, but a raw, human truth: justice in court does not mean peace in a mother’s heart. In sharing her doubts, guilt, and love, she reminds the country that behind every notorious case lives someone who never stops waiting for a daughter who will never come home.
