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Police: Killing Of Canadian Professor In Florida Linked To Bitter Divorce

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Jun, 2016 11:57 AM
    TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — The shooting of a Canadian law professor in his upscale neighbourhood two years ago was part of a murder-for-hire scheme that may have been set in motion by a bitter divorce between Daniel Markel and his ex-wife, according to court records released Thursday.
     
    Sigfredo Garcia was arrested last week in South Florida in connection with the July 2014 death of Daniel Markel, who was shot in the head in his garage as he talked on his cellphone. Garcia's lawyer, Jim Lewis, says his client will plead not guilty to the murder charge filed against him and will ask to be released from jail.
     
    A Tallahassee Police Department affidavit that was unsealed by a judge contends Garcia did not act alone, however, and that his alleged involvement in the case was connected to Markel's contentious divorce from fellow attorney Wendi Adelson. It does not, however, say who is suspected of arranging the killing.
     
    Garcia was arrested in Hallandale Beach. David Northway, a spokesman for Tallahassee police, said that so far no additional arrests have been made. He said investigators are "actively working" the case, but he wouldn't elaborate.
     
    Wendi Adelson, who lives in Miami Beach and works for a federal judge, has not returned phone calls made to her in the past week, but in an email she sent last Friday she stated that she hoped Garcia's arrest "will finally bring some closure" to the case. She did not respond immediately to calls and an email Thursday.
     
    Markel and his wife divorced in 2013, but before it was finalized court records show that the two fought over Wendi Adelson's push to move her two small children to South Florida to be closer to her family. At the time of Markel's death, the records show, the two were battling over money, with Adelson contending that Markel did not pay her as much as he was supposed to under their divorce agreement. Markel also complained that his mother-in-law was disparaging him and wanted the court to prohibit her from having unsupervised visits with his children.
     
    The arrest affidavit states that "investigators believe motive for this murder stemmed from the desperate desire of the Adelson family to relocate Wendi and their children to South Florida, along with the pending court hearing that might have impacted their access to the grandchildren. These new developments will finally bring some closure."
     
     
    According to court documents, investigators contend that Garcia and another man followed Markel from a nearby gym before he was shot.
     
    The police say that cellphone information showed the two men were in the Tallahassee area shortly before Markel's death and that there are records linking the two men to a Prius that a neighbour of Markel reported seeing pull out of the driveway right after hearing a gunshot. Investigators also say that an unidentified eyewitness met with Garcia and the other man in Tallahassee a month before the shooting.
     
    Lewis, however, said that none of the information contained in the court documents shows that his client killed Markel.
     
    "What's absent in this case is that there's no physical evidence linking my client to it," Lewis said. "There's no eyewitness. I'm not aware of any video showing them there."
     
    He also scoffed at the idea that Markel's killer drove a Prius.
     
    "I don't know if you put a hit on someone you take a green Prius," said Lewis. "There's a lot of things in this that don't make sense."
     
    Markel's shooting in the middle of the day stunned colleagues as well as residents in the affluent Tallahassee neighbourhood where he lived. He died at a hospital where he was taken after being shot.
     
    The 41-year-old Markel, who was born in Toronto, was well known in national and international legal circles. The father of two boys and a 2001 graduate of Harvard Law School, he practised white-collar criminal defence and civil litigation before joining the Florida State law school faculty in 2005. He was tenured in 2010.

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