• #241

2/27/26

Woman found guilty in 2015 killings of 4 family members in Anderson Co.​

 
  • #242

2/26/26

In the first of two murder trials tied to the notorious Halloween 2015 quadruple homicide (her husband, Ross Vilardi, will be tried separately), the 40-year-old was convicted in connection with all four deaths despite the lack of any physical evidence tying her to the murder scene.

Not only that, jurors rendered their verdicts in just ninety minutes.

S.C. circuit court judge R. Scott Sprouse handed down four consecutive life sentences to Vilardi – one for each victim: Vilardi’s 60-year-old mother, Cathy Scott; her 58-year-old stepfather, Terry Michael Scott; her 80-year-old step-grandmother, Barbara Scott; and her 82-year-old grandmother, Violet Taylor.

According to prosecutors, money motivated these murders.

“People will kill and do desperate things for money,” senior assistant deputy attorney general Heather Weiss said during her lengthy closing argument, concluding Vilardi murdered her relatives because she and her husband had “no money in (their) account and were behind on bills.”

Indeed, Weiss stated, the couple paid numerous outstanding debts in cash in the days immediately following the savage slayings.
 
  • #243
  • #244
  • #245
There’s a reason pretty much no defense was put forward. There were no answers to any of the evidence!
I really don’t understand why she and Ross weren’t charged earlier. I’m starting to think local and county LE truly needed Cold Justice to come in and put the pieces together. Like, LE had all the pieces but could not do it do the puzzle. Cold Justice sat at the table did it.
Justice finally came!
 
  • #246
There’s a reason pretty much no defense was put forward. There were no answers to any of the evidence!
I really don’t understand why she and Ross weren’t charged earlier. I’m starting to think local and county LE truly needed Cold Justice to come in and put the pieces together. Like, LE had all the pieces but could not do it do the puzzle. Cold Justice sat at the table did it.
Justice finally came!

IMO, the delayed arrest was probably due to a couple of things. LE knew they had probable cause for an arrest but they didn't have the buy-in from the state prosecutor to charge them because they didn't believe they could convince a jury beyond a reasonable doubt to convict the Vilardi couple with only circumstantial evidence.

There was no physical evidence connecting the couple to the actual murders -- no gun, ammo, or knife. They also had a failed alibi-- they sent the kids away for the weekend, and the couple also allegedly left town after the murders-- believing the bodies would be discovered while they were away. Except nobody discovered the victims, so Amy felt forced to "discover the bodies" more than 30 hours after they were killed.

While the money from Mike's safe found in Vilardi's house was indeed significant here, without any physical evidence connecting the couple to the murders, there was always the possibility that the money was gifted to the couple or that they stole the money before/after the murders. In other words, being a thief doesn't make you a murderer.

While Amy put herself inside the crime scene when she called 911 to report the crime, I think finally recognizing Ross's footwear in the convenience store surveillance video, and connecting that same unique footwear print to what would have been in "fresh blood" helped put Ross inside the house at the time of the murders-- and he was the individual skilled with using the knife (Marine training).

We've all heard the motto of the State Prosecutor that they only get one bite at the apple, and they don't want to try a case that they don't believe they can win. IMO, I think Cold Justice helped move the charges forward by providing the Investigators with the foundation. They recreated the crime scene and demonstrated how both one or two persons could have carried out the murders. They also provided the forensics to recover the trove of Amy's vile social media posts on FB attacking her mother publicly.

It's been a few years since I watched the episode of Cold Justice for this case, but this is what I recall from the evidence. JMO.
 
  • #247
IMO, the delayed arrest was probably due to a couple of things. LE knew they had probable cause for an arrest but they didn't have the buy-in from the state prosecutor to charge them because they didn't believe they could convince a jury beyond a reasonable doubt to convict the Vilardi couple with only circumstantial evidence.

There was no physical evidence connecting the couple to the actual murders -- no gun, ammo, or knife. They also had a failed alibi-- they sent the kids away for the weekend, and the couple also allegedly left town after the murders-- believing the bodies would be discovered while they were away. Except nobody discovered the victims, so Amy felt forced to "discover the bodies" more than 30 hours after they were killed.

While the money from Mike's safe found in Vilardi's house was indeed significant here, without any physical evidence connecting the couple to the murders, there was always the possibility that the money was gifted to the couple or that they stole the money before/after the murders. In other words, being a thief doesn't make you a murderer.

While Amy put herself inside the crime scene when she called 911 to report the crime, I think finally recognizing Ross's footwear in the convenience store surveillance video, and connecting that same unique footwear print to what would have been in "fresh blood" helped put Ross inside the house at the time of the murders-- and he was the individual skilled with using the knife (Marine training).

We've all heard the motto of the State Prosecutor that they only get one bite at the apple, and they don't want to try a case that they don't believe they can win. IMO, I think Cold Justice helped move the charges forward by providing the Investigators with the foundation. They recreated the crime scene and demonstrated how both one or two persons could have carried out the murders. They also provided the forensics to recover the trove of Amy's vile social media posts on FB attacking her mother publicly.

It's been a few years since I watched the episode of Cold Justice for this case, but this is what I recall from the evidence. JMO.

Agree.
To me, matching the shoe print to shoes Ross was caught wearing by security camera at a nearby convenience store, the night of the murder(when they had told LE they were out of town), was the clincher.
How long LE had that information was unclear from the Cold Justice episode.
 
  • #248
This is such good news for this case. Those sadly departed victims.

I wish the names of Amy and Ross Vilardi were in the title of this thread. Can we have that added so this comes up under the correct individuals? Thank you.

And condolences to the family and friends of the victims. :( MOo
 
  • #249
Curious, what was her part in the murders? Did she help plan it or actually do some of the killing?
 
  • #250
Curious, what was her part in the murders? Did she help plan it or actually do some of the killing?
planned, was present whilst husband did the killing, benefitted, lied and lied again to try to get away with murders, lived in the house where the murders were committed till arrested
 
  • #251
Curious, what was her part in the murders? Did she help plan it or actually do some of the killing?

Amy V seemed to be the catalyst behind everything. She was described by others as entitled and a narcissist. She carried grudges especially against her mother.
I feel certain she planned it all. She most certainly was there during the killing.
 
  • #252
planned, was present whilst husband did the killing, benefitted, lied and lied again to try to get away with murders, lived in the house where the murders were committed till arrested

LE also thinks that she stopped one of the victims from getting a gun from under her bed too.
 
  • #253
Curious, what was her part in the murders? Did she help plan it or actually do some of the killing?

Fortunately for SC, the State's Statute recognizes felony murder where being part of the plan was sufficient to equally charge Amy the same as Ross ( or Ross as Amy). Personally, I think she was guilty of all the above. I also think she was likely responsible for the "overkill" -- shooting them in the head after they'd already been stabbed.

2/24/26

THE STATE’S OPENING: ‘THE HAND OF ONE IS THE HAND OF ALL’​

Assistant attorney general Joel Kozak told jurors the evidence will show Amy and Ross Vilardi acted together in carrying out the killings.

“In South Carolina,” Kozak said, “the hand of one is the hand of all.”

Under that legal doctrine, a person can be convicted if they participated in a common plan — even if they did not personally inflict every fatal injury.
 
  • #254
planned, was present whilst husband did the killing, benefitted, lied and lied again to try to get away with murders, lived in the house where the murders were committed till arrested

They weren't living in Pendleton (Mike & Cathy Scott's property).

The suspects, who were taken into custody at their current home in Columbia, have been booked into the Anderson County Detention Center.
 

Guardians Monthly Goal

Members online

Online statistics

Members online
79
Guests online
3,296
Total visitors
3,375

Forum statistics

Threads
644,393
Messages
18,816,040
Members
245,346
Latest member
Looking4YouNow!
Top