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Family marvels over 4-year-old's survival amid rampage
By JOSE CARDENAS, EILEEN SCHULTE and LORRI HELFAND, Times Staff Writers
Published December 16, 2007
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Andrea Pisanello, 53, was shot while in her bed Friday morning.
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[Joseph Garnett, Jr. | Times]
"There was something there that protected Annie," says her biological mother, Megan Szczepanik, left, of Largo. Szczepanik's mother, Connie, came down from St. Joseph, Mo.
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LARGO -- On Saturday morning, a 4-year-old opened an early Christmas gift in the safety of her home in Largo. It was a tranquil scene considering the girl, Annie Pisanello, was the only survivor of a killer's horrifying rampage 24 hours earlier. Annie was sleeping on the living room floor of her mother's apartment on Ulmerton Road about 6:40 a.m. Friday when Oliver Thomas Bernsdorff slipped in through a window. He passed Annie on his way to a bedroom. There, he fatally shot Annie's mother, Andrea Pisanello, 53, and her new girlfriend, Jennifer Renee Davis, 27. Bernsdorff left without harming Annie. Raashon Mayers, 25, who lived directly above, heard Annie call "Mommy, Mommy" after the shots rang out. "I don't really believe in divine intervention, but there was something there that protected Annie," Megan Szczepanik, Annie's biological mother and Pisanello's partner of eight years, said Saturday. "I believe that somebody had a hand in it." Police say Bernsdorff, 36, shot Pisanello and his ex-wife Davis while they were in their bed at the Monterey Lakes Apartment complex in Largo. He is also believed to have killed his and Davis' two children -- Magnus, 2, and Olivia, 4 -- at his Clearwater home. Bernsdorff then drove south and turned the gun on himself after crossing the Sunshine Skyway. Dressed in a blue skirt and a green shirt, Annie behaved like a typical 4-year-old Saturday while playing at Szczepanik's Largo home. She skipped across the floor and ripped open the plastic cover of a present. She has talked a bit about what she saw and heard with her mother and Szczepanik's mother and sister -- Connie Szczepanik and Valerie Meyer -- who arrived from St. Joseph, Mo. "She said she heard a very loud noise and it smelled very bad," said Megan Szczepanik, 32. "She said she cried for her mommy and her mommy would not wake up. She said the police came to make sure she was okay." Connie Szczepanik said Annie brings up Andrea Pisanello about every 20 minutes. "Can we talk about Dre Dre now?" she quoted Annie as saying. "Dre Dre's dead." The grandmother said she's trying to see the silver lining. "It's a monstrous act," Connie Szczepanik said. "The only time he became human is when he stepped over Annie." Annie appears to know her other mother is dead, Megan Szczepanik said. But the girl still expects Pisanello to walk in through the door any minute. "At 4, they don't have the ability to grasp that," Szczepanik said. Szczepanik and Pisanello came from Missouri to Pinellas County six years ago. When the couple decided to have a child, they joined Unitarian Universalists of Clearwater to give her a spiritual foundation. Szczepanik carried Annie. But both were doting mothers. "Guess what day it is?" Pisanello would ask her daughter every morning as she woke her up. "It's another lucky day." The couple split up on friendly terms about three months ago, Szczepanik said. She said the two considered the separation temporary. Pisanello and Davis moved into the apartment about a quarter of a mile away. Pisanello wanted to see Annie every day. "She was very determined to remain Annie's mom and we were determined to do that together," Szczepanik said. She is a clinical psychologist with Hospice of Florida Suncoast and works with young people who have lost family members, including those who have been murdered. Szczepanik said staff members of Suncoast, where Pisanello also worked, have been greatly supportive and are offering to counsel Annie. "She's asking why did the bad man kill my mommy," Szczepanik said. "But she's doing great. She's surrounded by great people." Szczepanik said her daughter still hasn't talked in detail about all she saw. "We're trying not to push her," she said. Jose Cardenas can be reached at jcardenas@sptimes.com or (727) 445-4224.
[Last modified December 15, 2007, 23:49:05]
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Comments on this article
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by t
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12/17/07 03:06 PM
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Beth - who said the bio mother gave up the child? Szczpanik is the biological mother and has custody from what I read.
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by beth
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12/17/07 01:39 PM
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why did the bio mother give up her kid to begin with?
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by Tony
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12/17/07 09:16 AM
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Heidi - Why would you think that anybody wouild think what this man did was ok? As a man from the right, these women were murdered in cold blood, and there is no way to justify what he did. Gay & Lesbians are good people. You have some issues.
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by N
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12/17/07 01:20 AM
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I can't believe that anyone would take away a child's mother like that. I don't care if you don't agree with same sex relationships, that is unacceptable. And why is a judge letting a man who made threats like that keep his kids?I pray 4 the families
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by Heidi
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12/16/07 09:17 PM
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I'd like to know what the right wing holy rollers think about this murder.Was it justified since the women were lesbians?Are they in hell for defying God's law?You would condemn them if they were trying to marry,so what do you say to their deaths?
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by Ermin
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12/16/07 04:33 PM
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I knew Oliver and his family well. I can't even begin to believe that he comitted these terrible killings. Oli was a very intelligent, easy-going, non-violent individual as was Jenn. And the kids were so beautiful and so full of life. What a tragedy!
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by Elizabeth
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12/16/07 03:32 PM
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It's hard to really even know what to say. "I'm sorry" doesn't cut it, but I am. Kids are resilient, but things like this do stick with them. I'm glad she has the support she'll need to be o.k. I wish you much peace and love.
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by amanda
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12/16/07 03:24 PM
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i am so sorry i hope eveyone who lost this little girl and the others are going to be ok. r.i.p children. :(
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by Kaline
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12/16/07 02:43 PM
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It is a terrible situation for all involved, but so fortunate that Annie has so many capable people to help her through this. Annie will be the force to help her family deal with the grief and healing. The community will support each other.
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by Joan
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12/16/07 08:17 AM
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I am so very sorry for this little girl. The silver lining is that she has a network of loving and caring people to support her now and in the future.
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