Sins & Survivors: A Las Vegas True Crime Podcast - The Murder of Maria Flores
Episode Date: May 6, 2025Maria Flores planned a brave escape from domestic violence, but tragedy struck, devastating her family forever. Screaming and the sound of gunshots broke the silence early in the morning of June 1st,... 2013, on Cotton St in East Las Vegas, shocking Manuel Mata's daughter awake. Who was that screaming? Did she just hear 3 gunshots, or was it 4? Terrified, she locked her bedroom door and hid in the closet, and called the first person she thought of, her grandfatherShe told him she’d heard gunfire in the house and didn't know what to do.In a panic over his family’s safety, he went to the house that his son Manuel shared with his girlfriend Maria Flores. What he found would change their lives forever.https://sinspod.co/77sourceshttps://sinspod.co/77blogDomestic Violence Resourceshttp://sinspod.co/resourcesClick here to become a member of our Patreon!https://sinspod.co/patreonVisit and join our Patreon now and access our ad-free episodes and exclusive bonus content & schwag! Get ad-free access for only $1 a month or ad-free and bonus episodes for $3 a monthApple Podcast Subscriptionshttps://sinspod.co/appleWe're now offering premium membership benefits on Apple Podcast Subscriptions! On your mobile deviceLet us know what you think about the episodehttps://www.buzzsprout.com/twilio/text_messages/2248640/open_sms Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/sins-survivors-a-las-vegas-true-crime-podcast--6173686/support.
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Screaming and the sound of gunshots broke the silence early in the morning of june 1st 2013
on cotton street in east las vegas shocking manuel mata's daughter awake who was that screaming did
she just hear three gunshots or was it four terrified she locked her bedroom door and hid
in the closet and called the first person she thought of her grandfather she told him she'd
heard gunfire in the house and she didn't know what to do.
In a panic over his family's safety, he went to the house that his son, Manuel,
shared with his girlfriend, Maria Flores. What he found would change their lives forever.
Hi, and welcome to Sins and Survivors, a Las Vegas true crime podcast where we focus on
cases that deal with domestic violence, as well as missing persons and unsolved cases.
I'm your host, Sean.
And I'm your co-host, John.
We've talked a few times about the Great Recession, which lasted from late 2007 into mid-2009,
and how it had a huge impact here in Nevada. During that time,
we saw sky-high, actually nation-leading unemployment and a drastic increase in both
gun and domestic violence. We'll talk about that and some related statistics in a bit,
but first let's get into today's case, which took place in the spring of 2013.
Maria Flores, a 43-year-old mother of five daughters, had been dating 38-year-old
Manuel Mata III for about three years. They lived together on the 5500 block of Cotton Street in
East Las Vegas, along with two of Maria's daughters, her 17-year-old that we'll call Julie
and her four-year-old that we'll call Olivia, along with Manuel's 18-year-old daughter.
As always, we're changing the names of all the minor children involved to protect their and her four-year-old that we'll call Olivia, along with Manuel's 18-year-old daughter.
As always, we're changing the names of all the minor children involved to protect their identities and privacy. Julie had recently finished her senior year in high school and
was busy shopping for graduation dresses. After that, she was looking forward to pursuing her
passion, a career in fashion design. According to several sources, including Maria's friends,
Maria and Manuel's
relationship was rocky and deteriorating fast. Manuel was becoming more and more angry and
controlling, drinking more and more and frighteningly stockpiling firearms in their home.
He also started becoming jealous and accusing Maria of cheating on him.
Maria decided that she needed to get out of the relationship and the house.
She threatened to move in mid-May, but Mata talked her into staying, and by the end of the month, she'd had
enough. She told her friends about her plans to leave, but given his instability, she had to find
the right time. She got her opportunity after 10 p.m. on Friday, May 31st, when Mata left the house.
She planned to get everything together and leave
early Saturday morning. While he was out, he sent her a text message that seemed ominous and pretty
threatening and seemed to show that he thought she still planned to leave him. It read,
I'm never going to let you go. You're stuck with me forever. She wasn't going to let it stop her,
though. As soon as he was out the door,
she started packing clothes and important items into suitcases for her and her two daughters and even took all the family photos off the walls. Seemed like she didn't want to risk coming back
to get anything. After she was done, everyone went to bed, planning to get up early the next day
and go. When Mata went out on Friday night, Maria didn't know where he was
going. She was just glad he was gone, so she had a chance to get everything ready so that she and
the kids could finally leave. But it turned out he didn't go far. He was seen drinking outside
around 10.30, and later that night, between 2 and 3 a.m., his car was spotted still outside the house,
and he was still nearby, drinking heavily. When Mata walked back into their house after his night of binge drinking between 5 and 6 a.m.,
Maria and the girls were in the middle of leaving, and he went ballistic.
They started arguing, and it escalated quickly.
As we said before, Mata was a gun collector, and unfortunately, he went right for his shotgun,
and according to a police report, went on a rampage.
He shot Maria, then he found 17-year-old Julie and shot her, and then he found little 4-year-old Olivia and shot her in the neck.
When he was done, he turned the gun on himself, shooting himself in the chin from below, attempting to die by suicide.
His own daughter, who, remember, also lived in the home, was awakened by the screaming and gunfire.
From the way she described it, it's clear
she was hearing shotgun blasts. Not knowing what was happening, she locked her bedroom door, hid in
her closet, and called her grandfather, Mata's father, instead of calling 911, and told him she
was hearing gunshots and didn't know what to do. It must have been terrifying for her, not knowing
what was going on, hearing gunshots downstairs, and then silence. Mata's father sped over to the house around 6 a.m., and when he arrived, she finally left her
bedroom, and on her way out of the house, she saw the horrific and tragic scene. She saw Maria and
her father on the floor, covered in blood. It was then that her grandfather finally called Las Vegas
Metro at 6.12 a.m. When they arrived with paramedics, they saw right away that Maria and
Julie were both gone, but somehow, miraculously, Olivia had survived, and she was rushed to UMC
trauma, where she fell into a coma. Incredibly, Manuel survived his self-inflicted gunshot blast
to the face, and was also rushed to the hospital for emergency trauma surgery. He was booked in
absentia the same day and charged with two counts of murder
with a deadly weapon,
attempted murder,
and battery.
As the police began their investigation,
it didn't get any better for Mata.
They found 41 grams of cocaine in the home
and determined that
the 12-gauge shotgun used was stolen,
along with a few other firearms
they found in the home.
When they counted them all up,
there were 13 guns recovered from the home
and three of them were allegedly stolen.
It was members of Maria's family that told detectives
that Mata had been having serious financial problems
and had started drinking heavily in the last months
leading up to the murders
and was getting more and more erratic and unstable.
We've talked before on the podcast
how those are all warning signs of a family
annihilator. In spring of 2013, Maria and Julie were laid to rest on the very day that Olivia
came out of her coma. She had her childhood stolen, and according to her aunt, she still
struggles with memory loss, self-expression, comprehension, anxiety, and has trouble with her balance. Mata's murder trial finally began nearly six years later on November 6th, 2019,
but it lasted less than two weeks. He faced two counts of first-degree murder with use of a deadly
weapon, attempted murder with use of a deadly weapon, trafficking in a controlled substance,
and three counts of possession of a stolen firearm.
Mata's defense was centered around his complete and pretty implausible denial of having nothing to do with the murders. His account of what happened that day was that some unknown intruders
came into the home while he was outside drinking, shot Maria, Julie, and Olivia, and then just left.
According to him, Maria and Julie were already dead when he came into the house. His defense team admitted that he had shot himself, but they claimed it was
because he was so overcome with grief at finding Maria and Julie that he just couldn't live with
it. There are a lot of problems with this story. We know that he was nearby all night, and there
was no explanation about how it was possible that if an intruder had been responsible, that he hadn't heard the gunshots. There were also no signs of forced entry, nor any evidence of any intruders. There's
also the question about ballistics. Maria and the girls were shot with the same shotgun that Manuel
owned. So, did this intruder go in and find the weapon, shoot everyone, and then just leave the
weapon behind? Nothing about his story adds up.
His daughter's testimony seemed to support a version of his story, but the problem was that her testimony changed a lot between what she initially told the police and what she said in
the trial under oath. Initially, she told the police that she heard screaming and then several
gunshots, but later she said that the first thing she heard was the gunshots. She also said in her revised story that she heard the gunshots,
then looked out of her bedroom window and saw her father walking into the house,
and then heard the final gunshot, which seemed to support Manuel's story.
The prosecutor pressed her on that last one,
asking if she was changing her testimony to make it seem like her father might be innocent,
which she denied.
It's also totally possible that her memories were fuzzy after six years, and of course,
it was an incredibly traumatic thing and likely quite hard to remember clearly,
but she did admit that her story had changed. She also went back and forth on whether the house was locked. Initially, she said it was, but later she said it wasn't. When pressed,
she just said, it might have been locked. I don't know. That's another thing that would
have been a little strange. It's not clear why they would have left the house unlocked overnight.
The prosecution, led by Chief Deputy District Attorney Mark DiGiacomo, portrayed Mata as
increasingly angry and controlling in the relationship, which was corroborated by
witnesses that Maria spoke to about her relationship. Of course, they were trying to convince the jury that it was also
Mata who murdered Maria and Julie and seriously wounded Maria's four-year-old, which was the
obvious and likeliest version of what had happened. They also brought up Mata's criminal past, which
includes a long history of abusing and threatening domestic partners going all the way back to the 1990s.
In the words of the prosecutor,
Mata has a very lengthy history of violence against women that almost always includes a threat to kill them.
According to testimony, he told one of his ex-wives,
I promise you will die. I only have to pick up the phone and my hands will be clean.
The lake is very big and they will never find you.
That's pretty terrifying stuff.
Like you said, the trial was fairly short, and the jury took about four days to come to a verdict.
Mata was found guilty of second-degree murder with the use of a deadly weapon for Maria's murder,
first-degree murder with the use of a deadly weapon for the murder of her daughter Julie,
attempted murder with the use of a deadly weapon for the shooting of Olivia, child abuse, neglect, or endangerment with substantial bodily harm, and trafficking in
a controlled substance. Somehow the prosecution couldn't prove the charge of the stolen weapons,
but it hardly mattered given the other charges he was found guilty of.
Next up was the penalty phase, and the state decided to try and get the death penalty for
Mata given the horrific nature of his crimes. That same jury that found him guilty had to now decide if he would get decades
of prison time or a death sentence. The prosecution urged the jury to give him the death penalty.
They said, today is your chance to tell Mr. Mata what justice is for a mother lost, a daughter
lost, a companion, and a friend. Mark D'Giacomo argued that there was no mitigation
in this case for someone who had committed such a heinous act, killing two people,
including a young girl, and shooting a four-year-old in the neck. Mata's defense team
leaned hard into his time in the military—he served in Afghanistan for eight months—and
brought up the idea of an intruder being responsible for the murders.
Family members spoke up for him, including his
daughter, and they actually said, Mata had a strong work ethic and love for his family.
They also said that if he were given a long prison sentence, they would stay in contact with him.
The defense team told the jury, death isn't necessary, choose life. We'll talk a little
bit more about the death penalty in general and some of those arguments in our Swing Shift
Overtime episode right after this. If you want to hear that, head over to
sinspod.co slash subscribe and join our Patreon or sign up on Apple Podcasts, and you'll get all
the bonus episodes for only $3.99 a month. The jury came back in four days, and he avoided
the death penalty. One juror had written in a mitigating factor that said, see the good in people and
forgive. Mata did end up getting a very long sentence, including multiple decades of time,
on top of a life sentence without the possibility of parole. It's a long list, but the net effect
is that he will spend the rest of his life in prison, however long that is. We didn't mention
this before, but although he survived his suicide attempt, his face was left permanently disfigured.
We want to take a few minutes and talk about the gun violence statistics at the time.
The domestic violence rates in Nevada are part of the reason why we started doing the podcast, but there is an undeniable link between domestic violence and gun violence.
From 2003 to 2012, Nevada ranked 21st among U.S. states for gun murders, and the rate was actually below the national average, according to the Center for American Progress.
For that same time frame, Nevada ranked eighth for the highest rates of gun murders of women, which was 38% higher than the national average.
Not only that, but in 2012, Nevada ranked first in the nation for domestic violence killings in a report from the Violence Policy Center.
The rate there was 2.62 in 100,000 people. South Carolina was a distant second with 1.94 per 100,000 people. There was also an uptick in domestic violence homicides and murder-suicides
around the same time. All of those statistics are from the economic downturn that started in 2008
and hit Las Vegas particularly hard. We've mentioned before that Las Vegas got hit harder in that recession because of our reliance
on tourism, and it took a lot longer to recover than most of the country. Unemployment peaked
here at 14.5%, much worse than anywhere else. Unfortunately, though, the rates of violence
outlasted the high unemployment rate, and Nevada has consistently been in the top 10 for rates of women being killed by men. In 2024, it ranked number two in the nation for rates of domestic
violence. More than half of those deaths are as a result of gun violence. The rates of gun violence
in general are higher here too, with 18.4 deaths per 100,000 people, compared with 13.7, the national
average. We have to acknowledge that these things are
related and there's a clear problem. Without acknowledging that, there's no way to solve
the problem. Every week, we share resources in our show notes that you can use if you or someone
you know is in an abusive relationship, and we encourage you to get help no matter where you are,
because what happens, happens everywhere.
Thanks for listening.
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If you or someone you know is affected by domestic violence or needs support,
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A list of resources is available on our website, sinsandsurvivors.com.
Sins and Survivors, a Las Vegas true crime podcast, is research written and produced by
your hosts, Sean and John. The information shared in this podcast is accurate at the time of recording. If you have questions,
concerns, or corrections, please email us. Links to source material for this episode can be found
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those of the podcast creators, hosts, and their guests. All individuals are innocent
until proven guilty. This content does not constitute legal advice. Listeners are encouraged
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