Donna was scared. She left a voice recording with her attorney beginning with the words, "In case I disappear," and going on to state that "someone wearing a badge may turn out to be a serious criminal."
In March 1985 while she was serving a sentence in Las Colinas jail the 22-year-old Philadelphia native wrote "My life is in danger when I get out." Then three months later her brutally murdered body turned up on Mt. Laguna in the rural part of San Diego county. Gravel was stuffed in her mouth, something the mob does when it wants to warn others against being a "snitch." Donna's autopsy was sealed the first and only autopsy ever to be sealed in the city of San Diego.
Someone wanted to silence Donna. But who? "The Donna Gentile Story," written by Donna's first cousin Anita DeFrancesco, lets you decide, and it gives voice to future runaways forced to survive on the streets as sex workers. It shows how Donna Gentile was a trailblazer who carved a path for women by not remaining silent in the face of harassment and abuse. In this way she was an early pioneer of the "Me Too" movement which, at long last, is telling women that not only can they speak out, but that they can also act.
This high profile story exploded in the media and was nationally televised. Artists unveiled a billboard with the logo NHI, "No Humans Involved," bearing Donna's picture and facing toward the SDPD headquarters. We believe her murder was a "cover-up," perhaps of police incompetence, or perhaps of something much more sinister.
No one should be both a criminal and a victim! Read the story behind Donna Marie Gentile's murder as told by her first cousin, author, sex and relationship counselor, teacher and activist Anita DeFrancesco.
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