Murder-for-hire trial will ‘get hot,’ judge says Puerto Rico woman accused of hiring a hit man to kill former Winnipegger
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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 29/08/2018 (2311 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — The long-awaited federal trial of a Puerto Rico woman accused of hiring a hit man to kill her rich Canadian husband began on Thursday, and the judge warned the jury “it would get hot.”
A decade has gone by since Aurea Vazquez Rijos was charged with offering a man US $3 million to kill real estate developer Adam Anhang, a Winnipeg native who had moved to Puerto Rico a year before he was killed.
Vazquez was extradited three years ago from Spain with her one-month-old baby after a lengthy manhunt.
“This is a murder case,” Jose Ruiz, assistant U.S. district attorney, said in his opening statement. “It was to collect money from him.”
Anhang was killed Sept. 22, 2005, at nearly midnight on a Friday, on the corner of a cobblestone street in the historic part of San Juan’s capital. He was hit in the head with an object and then repeatedly stabbed. Twelve hours earlier, he had told his wife he wanted a divorce, prosecutors said.
“That is something she didn’t want,” Ruiz said, adding that the couples’ therapist had earlier recorded her reaction in his notes: “I am not going to let you go that easy.”
The couple had begun dating two years before the killing, with Anhang buying Vazquez a car, an apartment and a business in Old San Juan called “The Pink Skirt.” A day before the wedding, they signed a prenup, with Anhang’s value estimated at more than US$24 million and Vazquez’s at nearly US$62,300.
If Anhang died, his wife would receive US$8 million. Six months after he was killed, Vazquez sued his parents seeking US$1 million in damages and US$8 million from his estate. Shortly after filing the lawsuit, she left for Florence, Italy. Once there, prosecutors said she wrote emails to her family pleading for money.
Defence attorney Lydia Lizarribar rejected the allegations and told the jury that her client is innocent. She said she would prove that Vazquez had been wanting to go to Italy to study and work since 2002, and that she was living there under her real name.
“She was not hiding at all,” Lizarribar said, adding that the couple was a perfect match and liked to travel together. “The evidence will show that Adam was in love with his wife.”
Among those testifying in the trial is Alex Pabon Colon, whose nickname is “The Crazy One.” Prosecutors said he sold drugs at The Pink Skirt and elsewhere, and that Vazquez, her sister and a friend agreed to hire him as a hit man. They said he killed Anhang and injured Vazquez to make it look like a robbery, but that he forgot to steal Anhang’s wallet and other belongings.
Prosecutors said he then told a friend what he had done and asked him to drive by the crime scene to ensure Anhang was dead.
Also testifying is a man who sued for wrongful conviction after he was convicted of killing Anhang and spent eight months in jail. He was released when Pabon was charged.
When police interviewed Vazquez, she said that a tall, black man with tattoos on his forearms had attacked them.
In the weeks after the murder, prosecutors said Pabon kept sending letters to Vazquez’s sister with demands for money and other things: “I don’t give a damn if the victim’s old man kept everything,” they said he wrote.
Lizarribar, however, said that Pabon only mentions “loans” in the letters, and that he does not specifically ask for a payment.
Meanwhile, Vazquez was thinking about moving from Italy to Israel, falsifying documents to prove she was Jewish and asking a lawyer whether Israel had an extradition agreement with the U.S., prosecutors said.
In June 2013, she was arrested when she flew to Spain from Italy. Two years later, in September 2015, she was extradited to Puerto Rico. A pair of female twins that she had with a man in Italy stayed with their father.
Abraham Anhang, the victim’s father, told The Associated Press that he is looking forward to seeing an ending to the case.
“Closure is something we’re praying for,” he said in a phone interview.
“Thirteen years is a very long time to wait for justice.”