More than four decades after the crimes that shocked the country, one piece of information once again generates impact: Yiya Murano was not buried with her real name. Years after his death, this information renewed interest in his history.
46 years after the crimes that shook the country and eleven years since his death, the name of Jeuroon gives something to talk about again. The recent premiere of “Go”, the series based on her life, revived interest in the life of the woman who earned the nickname “the poisoner of Monserrat”.
In this context, a fact that at the time went almost unnoticed reappeared in the media: Yiya Murano does not rest under the name that made her famous and feared.

Murano was convicted of the murder of three friends whom he would have poisoned with contaminated dougha case that became one of the most shocking police episodes of the 70s.
For years he maintained a defiant attitude and a striking inclination towards media exposure. His memorable visit to the program Mirtha Legrand showed her smiling, sure of herself and even willing to be ironic with his own fame by mentioning the phrase “to have some tea”. That public profile, far from diminishing, was consolidated over time.
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However, for her family, the phenomenon that surrounded Yiya was always a source of discomfort. As the years went by, and especially in its final stage, They sought to distance themselves from the character that she herself had built.
According to one of her relatives, shortly before her death the woman suffered from advanced cognitive impairment. A niece told Infobae that the situation was delicate and that they had decided to protect their privacy: “She doesn’t remember anything. She is delirious, and we have resolved that no one else can see her.”.
The last decision on Yiya Murano
In line with this protective posture, They tried to prevent the news of his death from becoming public and they made a clear decision regarding his burial: not use the name by which the whole country knew her.
Murano’s own son explained it clearly: “She is buried like Mercedes Bolla”. This gesture sought to remove his grave from the circuit of curious people, morbid visitors or fans of police stories who could try to locate his remains.
Yiya’s bond with her family was always complex, but in her last years the distance became definitive. Martin Muranoher son, even stated that he did not know her as a mother and She expressed her disagreement with the way she was represented in television fiction. According to reports, he was not even notified when his mother died.
The figure of Murano, who always denied the crimes and She never accepted the three deaths for which she was convictedseems to have been caught between two realities: on the one hand, her insistent search for attention and recognition, and on the other, her family’s need to separate her from the dark myth that she herself helped create.
At the moment, his grave remains anonymousfar from the name that marked an era and that still arouses fascination. In a country that remembers its history with trepidation, the silence surrounding his final rest reveals a firm family decision.
