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Cold-blooded killer Jodi Arias has secretly penned a prison memoir in a sick plot to profit off the grisly murder of her ex-boyfriend!
Photo credit: Files
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In this second part of a blockbuster investigation, The National ENQUIRER is publishing excerpts of Arias’ handwritten book, which she hoped would cement her status as America’s most notorious femme fatale!
Photo credit: Mega
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“Jodi thought she was going to be famous,” her former cellmate and confidante Donavan Bering told The ENQUIRER. “She wanted to write the book to explain her story — thinking it was going to be a No. 1 bestseller,” Donavan claimed. “But once you start reading it, you find out how warped she really is!”
Photo credit: Files
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Arias jotted down her thoughts inside her prison cell, and mailed the pages to Bering to pitch to publishers. In a chapter titled “Brighter Days,” Arias confessed her real motive for killing Travis Alexander was her hatred of being rejected, according to Donavan.
Photo credit: Files
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She confessed she refused to tell Travis she loved him for “fear that he might not say it back … fear of ridicule, rejection or indifference.” When Travis dumped her for another woman, Arias savagely attacked the 30-year-old in his Mesa, Ariz., home on June 4, 2008.
Photo credit: Files
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As The ENQUIRER revealed, Arias admitted in a jailhouse confession she had an accomplice who helped her slaughter her former lover. Sickeningly, Arias intended to use the book to shore up her bogus battered-woman defense by describing Travis as a womanizing brute.
Photo credit: Files
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“With flagrant incidents with other women and a jealous, possessive tendency to control, why stick around?” Arias wrote, according to Donavan. “I was asked that often by friends. ‘Oh he’s not that bad. He’s actually a great guy,’ I usually said, describing him positively. Things eventually got worse … much worse.”
Photo credit: Files
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Jodi’s fear of rejection explains why she’s such a control freak, behavioral expert Susan Constantine told The ENQUIRER. “She has a fear of abandonment,” she noted. “When you read through it you can see she lives in a place of pain.
Photo credit: Files
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"Her whole existence revolves around what others think of her, and the fear of being rejected by the person that she loves.” In a chilling sign of Arias’ obsession with her public image, she demanded a clause be put in any TV-interview contract.
Photo credit: Files
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“No footage of me crying will be broadcast should I cry during any part of the interview,” she whined in letters obtained by The ENQUIRER.
Photo credit: Files
Cold-blooded killer Jodi Arias has secretly penned a prison memoir in a sick plot to profit off the grisly murder of her ex-boyfriend!
Photo credit: Files
In this second part of a blockbuster investigation, The National ENQUIRER is publishing excerpts of Arias’ handwritten book, which she hoped would cement her status as America’s most notorious femme fatale!
Photo credit: Mega
“Jodi thought she was going to be famous,” her former cellmate and confidante Donavan Bering told The ENQUIRER. “She wanted to write the book to explain her story — thinking it was going to be a No. 1 bestseller,” Donavan claimed. “But once you start reading it, you find out how warped she really is!”
Photo credit: Files
Arias jotted down her thoughts inside her prison cell, and mailed the pages to Bering to pitch to publishers. In a chapter titled “Brighter Days,” Arias confessed her real motive for killing Travis Alexander was her hatred of being rejected, according to Donavan.
Photo credit: Files
She confessed she refused to tell Travis she loved him for “fear that he might not say it back … fear of ridicule, rejection or indifference.” When Travis dumped her for another woman, Arias savagely attacked the 30-year-old in his Mesa, Ariz., home on June 4, 2008.
Photo credit: Files
As The ENQUIRER revealed, Arias admitted in a jailhouse confession she had an accomplice who helped her slaughter her former lover. Sickeningly, Arias intended to use the book to shore up her bogus battered-woman defense by describing Travis as a womanizing brute.
Photo credit: Files
“With flagrant incidents with other women and a jealous, possessive tendency to control, why stick around?” Arias wrote, according to Donavan. “I was asked that often by friends. ‘Oh he’s not that bad. He’s actually a great guy,’ I usually said, describing him positively. Things eventually got worse … much worse.”
Photo credit: Files
Jodi’s fear of rejection explains why she’s such a control freak, behavioral expert Susan Constantine told The ENQUIRER. “She has a fear of abandonment,” she noted. “When you read through it you can see she lives in a place of pain.
Photo credit: Files
"Her whole existence revolves around what others think of her, and the fear of being rejected by the person that she loves.” In a chilling sign of Arias’ obsession with her public image, she demanded a clause be put in any TV-interview contract.
Photo credit: Files
“No footage of me crying will be broadcast should I cry during any part of the interview,” she whined in letters obtained by The ENQUIRER.
Photo credit: Files