Sr. Mainetti was known to the girls, who did not have any prior history of violence or crime. They confessed that they had originally planned to kill the parish priest, but decided that, because he was larger, it would prove too difficult. Investigators said that the girls' notebooks were filled with Satanic writings and they had made a blood oath some months earlier.
The three served sentences in different juvenile prisons. After their release, between six and seven years later, at least two of them spent time in community recovery centers. According to media reports, the women changed their names, and now have jobs and families.
After her release from prison in 2006, Milena was a guest for several years of the Exodus communities in the area of Verona -- residences for the prevention and treatment of drug addiction, founded by Fr. Antonio Mazzi.
Mazzi once said, as recounted by Amedeo Mainetti, the murdered nun's brother, that Milena "is fully aware of what she did and at the same time repentant and convinced that she can be reborn and recover better and better."
Speaking to Il Giorno Milano newspaper in June this year, Mazzi said that Milena had been an active participant in the communities, though she never spoke about the murder and they never "fully faced the fact" with her.
The priest also noted that Milena "never declared herself a believer and neither the opposite."
"She did not want to give testimony for the sister. However, she radically changed her life, and with her actions she clearly showed that she was repentant and that she understood that she had made a great mistake," he said. "Today she has her own life and her own job."
In a 2008 interview in the magazine Panorama, Veronica asked the public to forget her.
"Prison, psychologists, and the recovery community have allowed me to become the person I otherwise would never have been," she said.
"It was decided to kill at age 16 while sitting for six hours over a beer in a small village bar," she recalled. "Everything we said, thought and did was worthless. What was I terrified of? Of Sr. Maria Laura's gaze? Of blood? I don't know, because it was dark and I didn't look at her face, just as I didn't look at the blood. At that moment and only then, I was afraid of everything, even of Ambra and Milena."
In her biography of the slain religious sister, Mariani wrote that when she was among young people, Mainetti felt "at ease and loved to entertain them both in scheduled meetings and in casual ones."
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Someone who knew her said in an interview for the book that "only God can know how much she sacrificed herself for young people! Meetings, talks, school camps, world youth days, catechesis, individual accompaniment."
The biography reproduced what Mainetti wrote in her journal on the day of her perpetual profession in 1964: "Give me your feelings, Jesus, those of the Beatitudes: the poor who trusts, abandons himself/the child who feels loved by him/the affliction that is participation in that of Christ and is salvation/Mercy, Benevolence, Purity of body and heart, Humility. To serve Christ is to reign: Here I am… The joy of my service every instant in conformity with Your Divine Will."
From this life, "a spring gushes out, a gush of evangelical life," Sr. Kitty Hiriat Urruty, the superior of her congregation, wrote at the time of Mainetti's martyrdom.
"This spring speaks to us of our consecration, of our life offered to the Trinity, of our desire of identification with Jesus Christ, of our choice of the poorest, of the wounded in life. And this leads to the origins of our Congregation," the sister said.
"She showed that our charism is alive and very current," she continued. "In this style of love and gift, she gave herself with both hands, without calculation, just like someone who knows that all she has is a gift of love, to be shared and made to bear fruit."
Hannah Brockhaus is Catholic News Agency's senior Rome correspondent. She grew up in Omaha, Nebraska, and has a degree in English from Truman State University in Missouri.