at the Ushuahia Penitentiary museum, where he spent most of life On 17 January 1912, Godino broke into a cellar in the affluent
Avenida Corrientes in Buenos Aires and set the building on fire, which took up to four hours for
firefighters to extinguish. Godino recalled that he enjoyed watching firefighters work and fight the flames. Days later, on 26 January, police found the body of Arturo Laurora, a 13-year-old boy who had been reported as missing the day before. Laurora's body was discovered inside an empty house which was up for rent; it was half-naked and had a ligature around the neck. Godino confessed to this murder after his arrest. Godino committed his third murder on 7 March 1912, when he attacked five-year-old Reyna Bonita Vaínicoff, setting her dress on fire. The girl suffered serious burns and died sixteen days later at the
Hospital Pedro de Elizalde. Between Vaínicoff's murder, his subsequent attacks and final murder, Godino committed several
arsons across Buenos Aires. He also killed a
mare at a country house where he was working, repeatedly stabbing the animal with a knife. On 8 November 1912, Godino lured two-year-old Roberto Russo to an isolated area, where he tied the boy's feet and attempted to strangle him with a cord. A construction worker saw the crime and called the police, who arrested Godino and took him for questioning. He testified that he had found the boy with his hands tied and was trying to set him free. Police subsequently released him. On 16 November, Godino assaulted and beat a three-year-old girl, who was saved by a man passing by. The man chased Godino away, who escaped again. On 20 November, he asked five-year-old Catalina Naulener to help him find an empty lot; when the girl refused to go with him, Godino got angry and brutally assaulted her. She was saved by a neighbour who heard her screaming. Godino, once again, managed to escape before police arrived to the scene. Godino's last murder occurred on 3 December 1912, a year after his parents withdrew him from his juvenile reformatory, when he lured three-year-old Gesualdo Giordano to an abandoned country house under the promise of giving him sweets and chocolates. In the abandoned building (today the
Bernasconi Institute), Godino brutally assaulted the boy, who fiercely resisted Godino's attempts to strangle him with a ligature. Godino subsequently tied the boy's hands and feet and went outside for something to kill the child. He encountered Giordano's father, who asked him if he had seen his son. Godino replied that he had not seen Gesualdo and advised the man to search in nearby areas. When the boy's father departed, Godino returned to the house and murdered the agonising boy by introducing a nail into one of the boy's temples. After killing the child, Godino covered the body and escaped. The body of Gesualdo Giordano was quickly found, with his funeral taking place that same night. Godino attended the funeral and left crying after seeing that the nail had been removed from the boy's temple. Two investigators in attendance at the funeral suspected of Godino and linked the other cases to him. Police raided Godino's home in the early hours of 4 December 1912, arresting him for murder. ==Legal proceedings==