Rosa was born on 2 February 1967 in Tegucigalpa, Honduras to Fernando Bonilla MartĂnez and Maria Elena Avila. She spent her childhood in El Basque neighborhood and studied at "Escuela 14 de julio". She graduated in interior designing from "Instituto Alfa", Tegucigalpa in 1987. In early 1990s Rosa served as secretary in the office of Porfirio Lobo, who was then the director of the Honduran Forest Development Corporation. Porfirio and Rosa got married in 1992 and have three children Amber, Said and Luis Fernando. On the morning of 28 February 2018, Rosa Elena was arrested at her home in the El Chimbo sector of Tegucigalpa, under accusations of corruption, which were the result of an investigation between the Public Prosecutor's Office and the Mission of Support against Corruption and Impunity in Honduras, which called this case "the lady's petty cash". On that day Rosa Elena was placed under judicial arrest and sent to the Penitentiary for Women's Adaptation in Camara.6 In August, pre-trial detention was ratified for those involved in the case. According to the accusation, Bonilla was part of a money-laundering network that appropriated some 16 million lempiras, which were state funds earmarked for social works. On 22 January 2014 Rosa allegedly opened a personal account to transfer 12 million lempiras from the official account of the Office of the First Lady. Her brother-in-law, Mauricio Mora, and her former private secretary, SaĂșl Escobar, were also implicated in the case. On August 20, 2019, Bonilla was found guilty of three counts of misappropriation and eight counts of fraud, and was acquitted of the crimes of money laundering and embezzlement of public funds. On September 4, she was sentenced to 58 years in prison: 10 years for the charges of misappropriation and 6 years for each charge of fraud, in addition to a fine of 1.2 million lempiras - 10% of the appropriated value - and the confiscation of property and the total value of the fraud. SaĂșl Escobar was sentenced to 48 years in prison and Mauricio Mora was acquitted of all charges of insufficient evidence. In March 2020, the Supreme Court of Honduras overturned Bonilla's conviction and ordered a new trial.