CALIFORNIA
A woman advertised on the popular classified ads site Craigslist for an assassin to kill the wife of a man with whom
she'd had an affair, authorities said Saturday.
The
ad by Ann Marie Linscott, 49, was posted in November as a generic
request for somebody to perform a "freelance" job, court documents
said. Her true intention was communicated only to those who e-mailed
her seeking additional information about the job, the Craigslist CEO
said.
Linscott
offered $5,000 for the hit, had the name and work address of the woman
she wanted dead, and described successful candidates as "silent
assassins," according to agents and court documents.
"I've seen some screwy things, but I've
personally never heard of anything like this," said Drew Parenti,
special agent in charge of the Sacramento FBI office. "For a person to
advertise openly for a hit man on Craigslist."
Agents
arrested Linscott, whom they say went by Ann Marie and used the simple
alias "Marie," on Thursday at her home in Grand Rapids, Mich. Federal
prosecutors will ask a judge on Tuesday to make her stand trial in
Northern California, where Butte County authorities worked with the FBI
to identify the victim and her husband.
Eradicate a female
Linscott is accused of asking people who responded to her ad to
"eradicate a female living in Oroville, California," and she provided
additional information on the intended victim, including her physical
description, age and employment address. On two separate occasions
following the November ad posting, she offered payment of $5,000 upon
completion of "the eradication task," according to court documents.
"Out of 550 million classified ads posted over
12 years, this is the first such incident that we're aware of,"
Craigslist CEO Jim Buckmaster wrote in an e-mail to The Associated
Press. "But again, the ad itself was generic, and we're not a party to
subsequent private e-mail communications."
Buckmaster
said the arrest demonstrated the vigilance of Craigslist users, who are
urged to report fraud and scams on the site to keep it clean.
It's
not the first alleged crime ever solicited over the popular online
bulletin board. There have been instances of ads posted by prostitutes
and a Minnesota woman was killed last year after responding to an ad
for a baby sitter. However, authorities and company officials say the
murder-for-hire scheme appears to be the first of its kind.
The
intended victim and her husband have not been identified, but Parenti
said the man acknowledged meeting Linscott through an online college
course over two years ago.
Parenti
said the two forged an intimate relationship online and met at a hotel
room for two days in Reno, Nev., in 2005. Linscott also had met him
near the couple's home, about 70 miles north of the state capital, last
spring. They continued to communicate by phone and e-mail.
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