Crime & Safety
Trio Sentenced For Deadly Main Line Home Invasion
Charles Fulforth, Jeremy Fuentes, and Kelvin Roberts have learned their fates for their roles in the deadly Wynnewood home invasion.

WYNNEWOOD, PA — The three men who were convicted of murder and related crimes in connection with the December 2024 Wynnewood home invasion that left a woman paralyzed and her son dead have learned their fates.
Jeremy Fuentes, 27, of Philadelphia; Kelvin Roberts Jr., 42, of Philadelphia, and Charles Fulforth, 41, were all sentenced to life in prison Thursday, according to court documents.
The three were charged following the Dec. 8 home invasion on Meredith Road in Wynnewood.
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Roberts and Fulforth went to the home of Bernadette and Andrew Gaudio, where they shot and paralyzed Bernadette Gaudio, 61 at the time, and fatally shot Andrew Gaudio, 25.
The two were planning to rob a Bucks County home with a similar address after Fuentes told them about a large cache of weapons there, but they got the address wrong and ended up at the Gaudio residence, authorities said.
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Fuentes was convicted of second-degree murder, conspiracy to commit robbery, and conspiracy to commit burglary on Sept. 18. Roberts and Fulforth were found guilty in July of first-degree murder, attempted murder, robbery, burglary and related charges.
The three were sentenced to life in prison on their individual murder charges.
Additionally, Fulforth was sentenced to 60 to 120 consecutive years; Roberts to 55-and-a-half to 120 consecutive years, and Fuentes was sentenced to four to 20 consecutive years.
Fuentes was charged about a month after the deadly home invasion and the arrest of Fulforth and Roberts. Authorities said he gave Fulforth and Roberts information that led the two to break into the Gaudio's home in search of guns.
Investigators found that Fuentes, an employee of Junkluggers, met with Bucks County homeowners who had a similar address as the Lower Merion home on Dec. 6, 2024. He provided them with an estimate for removal of items by Junkluggers.
While in the home, authorities said Fuentes noticed a large gun safe, multiple firearms boxes, gun parts and ammunition, none of which were part of the estimate to be removed by Junkluggers.
Fuentes later called Fulforth and told him what he saw, and relayed the owner were elderly.
Fuentes and Fulforth were interested in stealing the firearms in furtherance of their gun trafficking organization that illegally sold factory-made firearms as well as privately made ghost guns, machine gun conversion devices and silencers using multiple 3D-printers, authorities said.
Authorities also said five people from Philadelphia were charged in connection with the gun trafficking organization that Fulforth and Fuentes are accused of running.
Somewhere in the pipeline of information relayed to Roberts and Fulforth, the target address got mixed up with the Wynnewood address.
According to authorities, after getting inside the home, Roberts and Fulforth went upstairs, shot Bernadette Gaudio, then fatally shot Andrew Gaudio when he came to his mother's aid.
Bernadette was able to call 911 using Siri on her iPhone, which authorities called incredibly brave, as Roberts and Fulforth were still in her home when she made the call. Authorities said she is paralyzed, but has regained some movement since the shooting.
Authorities identified Roberts as a suspect after conducting vehicle record searches and visiting a home on Sansom Street in Philadelphia. When investigators searched the Meredith Road home shared by the Gaudios, they found 11 spent shell casings, among other things.
Three of those fired cartridge casings were from a 9mm gun and eight were from a .25 caliber firearm. The two different shell casings led authorities to believe at least two people were involved in the home invasion.
When Fulforth was taken into custody, authorities said he was carrying bags that contained, among other things, various tools, gun parts, .25 caliber ammunition, and 9mm ammunition. A search of Fulforth’s apartment found a loaded 9 mm ghost gun, a black balaclava mask, a 3D printer, and other materials used to make ghost guns and ammunition.
A firearms and ballistics expert matched the recovered ghost gun to projectiles recovered from Andrew Gaudio’s body at the autopsy.
In addition to the jewelry box, a 2004 Jeep Cherokee was stolen in the incident.
Dashboard camera footage from Lower Merion Police captured Roberts driving his girlfriend's Hyundai early Sunday morning, while the driver of the stolen Jeep was unaccounted for. Authorities later tracked the Hyundai to Sansom Street in Philadelphia.
While reviewing surveillance footage from that area after the home invasion, authorities saw who they said was Roberts pull up in a white vehicle and then a Jeep Cherokee pull up shortly thereafter.
The video also showed an unidentified man get out of the Jeep. The two men were seen walking toward Roberts' girlfriend's home on that block of Sansom Street.
The Jeep was found that same block, authorities said.
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