Spain ANA KNEZEVICH: Missing from Madrid, Spain - 2 Feb 2024 - Age 40 *ARREST*

1707932148490.png 1707932256848.png

‘She has been taken against her will’: Missing Florida Woman Vanishes in Madrid After Unknown Man Blacks Out Security Cameras​

A 40-year-old Florida woman temporarily living in Madrid amid her divorce has gone missing.

Ana Knezevich was last seen on February 2 at around 10 p.m. at her Madrid apartment. Friend Sanna Rameau told 7News Miami that Ana had planned to meet a friend a few days into her visit, but failed to show up.

Ramaeu added that a suspicious man wearing a helmet tampered with the surveillance cameras outside and inside the elevator of Ana’s apartment building by blacking them out. The same person then proceeded to walk into Ana’s apartment.

That same night, Ana told Rameau that she intended to stay home due to the cold weather. The next day, Rameau received a supposed message from Ana, claiming that she had met someone and that they were heading to a summer house around two hours away.

“We received very bizarre messages from her phone, I have to say from her phone because I don’t believe it was her sending it, that Saturday afternoon after she disappeared. That she had met a man on the street,” Rameau explained.

“When we tried to respond, the messages were not going through and the phone is off. She has not left on her own. She has been taken against her will and by who, I don’t know.”



 
Last edited by a moderator:

Friend of Fort Lauderdale woman missing in Madrid speaks out as search continues​

A friend of a South Florida woman, who has been missing in Madrid for almost two weeks, is asking for help in bringing her friend back home.

“Ana is a sweet, sweet person. Very caring,” said Sanna Rameau, Ana’s best friend.

Ana Knezevich is a U.S Citizen and chose an apartment building in Madrid to stay at during her visit. She is a business woman who decided to work abroad while going through a divorce.

She was supposed to meet a friend a few days later after she disappeared but she never showed up.


Family members said that text messages from Ana’s phone were also sent to them. The family said that while Knezevich speaks Spanish, the Spanish text message were in a different dialect and she didn’t speak that way.

This raised alarm bells within the family as they suspected something was wrong and they started calling authorities in Madrid to begin investigating.

Ana was expected to travel to Barcelona two days later. Her friend said she is not a party girl, nor does any drugs or drinks.

“I’m living my worst nightmare. I’ve never felt this pain in my entire life because I don’t know what has happened to her, someone has hurt her and I don’t know why,” said Rameau.

Rameau said she flew to Madrid to get in touch with the Spanish authorities but had no luck. Now, she is asking for the U.S Embassy to step in.

“I just want her back. I want the American authorities to help. We have an American citizen that has disappeared abroad and no one in the America is doing anything about it. There is high suspicion of foul play regarding her disappearance. She has not just left. There is high suspicion that someone did something to her,” said Rameau.

Spanish Police as well as the FBI are now investigating.
 

Estranged husband of missing Florida woman who vanished in Spain has 'fled to Serbia', friends say​

The best friend of Ana Knezevich says the estranged husband of the missing Florida businesswoman has fled to his native Serbia, after being asked to help find her.

Knezevich, 40, had been going through a 'tough' divorce from husband David when she disappeared from her apartment while holidaying in Madrid on February 2.

Friends received stilted text messages from her phone claiming she would be uncontactable for a few days, and within hours her friend Sanna Rameau was on the phone to the husband to see what he knew.

'I suggested for him to meet me in Madrid to help with the investigation and to help, you know, find Ana,' she said.

'He did not come to Madrid, I did get in contact with him again that Friday where he told me he had gone to Serbia instead.'

David hasn't spoken out about his wife's case and has not been accused of wrongdoing by officials.
 

US tourist going through bitter divorce sent ‘bizarre messages’ to pals about mystery man before vanishing in Spain​

A Florida woman went missing in Spain two weeks ago amid a bitter divorce — and her loved ones say they’re concerned because they received “bizarre messages” from her before her disappearance, according to reports.

Ana Knezevich, a US citizen originally from Colombia, decided to travel to Europe while going through an acrimonious split from her Serbian husband, according to worried friends and family.

The Fort Lauderdale resident, 40, rented an apartment in Madrid in December and had been communicating regularly with pals since then.

But friend Sanna Rameau told WSVN that she was last seen by neighbors on Feb. 2.

Rameau sent her a text the day she vanished, but did not receive a response.


The following day, she got a message from Knezevich stating she had met a man on the street and they had an instant “connection.”

She told Rameau they were en route to a country home two hours from Madrid, and that she didn’t have a strong cell signal there.

“I’ll call you when I get back,” she said.

The unnerved friend told Ana to send her the address of her destination and questioned if it was a good idea to go away with the mystery man she had just met.

“We received very bizarre messages from her phone, I have to say from her phone because I don’t believe it was her sending it, that Saturday afternoon after she disappeared. That she had met a man on the street,” Rameau said, according to the station.


Adding to the mystery, investigators discovered surveillance footage from Knezevich’s building showing a man in a black helmet spraying paint over two cameras.

1707955221392.png
 

Exclusive audio recording of Ana Knezevich before disappearing​

Ana Maria Knezevich, a resident of Florida, has been missing for 12 days after traveling to Madrid. The disappearance occurred the same night as an unidentified individual was spotted vandalizing security cameras, further complicating the investigation into Knezevich’s disappearance.

Knezevich had traveled to Madrid as part of her efforts to cope with a recent divorce and to gather her thoughts. She had plans to continue her journey to Barcelona with a friend, but she failed to arrive at the designated train station. Concerns escalated when Spanish authorities found no evidence of robbery during a search of her apartment.

Adding to the mystery are text messages purportedly sent from Knezevich’s phone, indicating that she had met someone after therapy and intended to visit his house. However, friends and family members doubt the authenticity of these messages, citing inconsistencies in language and tone that suggest they were not authored by Knezevich herself.

Voice messages obtained by NewsNation’s “CUOMO” team offer insights into Knezevich’s demeanor leading up to her disappearance.

In one message sent a week and a half prior, she is meticulous and detailed, traits that seem incongruent with someone suddenly disappearing without notice.

“Hey, good morning. I woke up, went to the gym, got the apartment ready. I’m gonna buy some like cleaning stuff now. I fixed my hair, my nails and I’m just heading back. How are you? I miss you too. Bye,” she said.

Another message, believed to be from the day she went missing, shows her excitement about plans to visit another apartment and travel to Barcelona with a friend.

“I saw an apartment that I loved. Yes. So hopefully, it will be mine. I am now on my way to see another one. Everything’s doing great. I’m feeling actually really good. I’m going on Monday to Barcelona with a friend of mine. It’s just a day trip. She’s very excited about it,” she said.

Brandee Smith, a longtime friend of Knezevich and her estranged husband, David, said Knezevich is a calm and intelligent person, asserting that the purported text messages do not align with her character. Smith, along with others close to Knezevich, insists that she would have maintained communication with friends, making her sudden silence highly unusual.

“It absolutely feels like a missing persons investigation because she would have messaged her friends, her girlfriends. This is what women do. Women message each other and tell them what’s going on,” Smith said.

The absence of David Knezevich’s involvement in the search has raised eyebrows, with some questioning why he has not traveled to Spain to assist in locating his missing wife.

“I would say certainly think after all of this history that they spent together, that he would go looking for her,” Smith said.

NewsNation’s Brian Entin reached out to Ana’s husband, but he has not replied. Family members believe he is in Serbia.
 

Search intensifies for Fort Lauderdale woman missing in Spain​

Ana Knezevich was last heard from on Feb. 2 while she was away in Madrid. Loved ones and friends of missing the Fort Lauderdale woman are worried sick.

Her friend, Sanna Rameau, told Local 10 News that 18 days have passed since Knezevich was last seen while away in Spain.

“I’m absolutely devastated. I think about Ana every minute of the day,” Rameau said. “I couldn’t imagine anyone that would want to hurt her. She’s the sweetest person.”

The search for the missing 40-year-old has intensified, with posters popping up in Madrid.

“The police have entered her apartment, they are not saying much about the investigation,” said Rameau. “It’s a top priority case, from what I understand.”


Around the time of Knezevich’s disappearance, someone spray painted the lenses of two security cameras of the apartment building she was staying at, and disabled the cameras at the building’s entrance.

Knezevich’s loved ones say her estranged husband left for Serbia in January.

There was no sign of David Knezevish at the couple’s Fort Lauderdale home on Tuesday, and calls to his phone were not answered.

Rameau said she went to Spain to help search for Ana Knezevich. She said David Knezevich never went to help look and she was disappointed that he failed to do so.

“He believed that he didn’t have anything to do, that he couldn’t do anything in Spain with her investigation to be there.”

David Knezevich is not facing any charges and he has not been named a person of interest in this case.

Local 10 News had reached out to his attorney but have not heard back at the time of this story’s publication.
 

Missing Florida woman’s husband ‘has not been absent’: Lawyer​

The absence of David Knezevich’s involvement in the search for his estranged wife Ana Maria Knezevich has raised eyebrows, with some questioning why he has not traveled to Spain to assist authorities in the effort.

David’s attorney Ken Padowitz says his client “has not been absent” from the investigation to find Ana. David has been living in Serbia since their separation from Ana.

“He’s spoken to the police a number of times,” Padowitz said during a Monday appearance on “CUOMO.” “I have reached out to the FBI and let them know that we are available to aid in any way. He’s given police information on credit cards, attempted to hire a lawyer in Spain.”

Husband of American woman missing in Spain denies involvement, disputes couple was going through "nasty divorce," lawyer says​

The husband of an American missing in Spain under suspicious circumstances played no part in her disappearance and disputes her family's contention that their impending divorce was "nasty," his attorney said Tuesday.

David Knezevich was in his native Serbia when his wife, Ana, disappeared from her Madrid apartment on Feb. 2 and has been cooperating with both Spanish police and the FBI, said Ken Padowitz, his Florida-based attorney.


David Knezevich has been cooperative with authorities, his lawyer said.

"He has talked to detectives in Spain on a number of occasions. He's provided credit card information ... He obtained a lawyer in Spain to sign documents that might help the Spanish authorities go into the apartment that his wife had rented," Padowitz said. "He is doing everything that he possibly can ... from Serbia."

He said if Knezevich, 36, traveled to Spain, that would not help the investigation or search.

"He does not speak Spanish. He does not have family in Spain. He does not have friends in Spain. He does not have a house or an apartment or any place to live in Spain," Padowitz said.

Rameau said Tuesday that David Knezevich told both her and Ana's brother that on Feb. 2 he was at the couple's Fort Lauderdale home and not in Serbia.

"Whatever he did can obviously be confirmed by authorities," Rameau said.

Madrid police on Tuesday said the investigation is ongoing, but did not release further details.


David and Ana Knezevich, who sometimes spell their surname "Knezevic," have been married for 13 years. They own EOX Technology Solutions Inc., which does computer support for South Florida businesses. Records show they also own a home and two other Fort Lauderdale properties, one of those currently under foreclosure.

Ana's brother, Juan Henao, called the divorce "nasty" in an interview with a Fort Lauderdale detective, a report shows. He told police that David was angry that they would be dividing a substantial amount of money.

But Padowitz said the couple's split had been amicable and that they had even talked of hiring just one attorney to finalize their divorce and divide their properties and other assets.

"That they were having 'a nasty divorce,' that's just blatantly false," Padowitz said.

Rameau said Ana never told her the divorce was amicable, "but I also did not take part (in) all their conversations."
 
So her husband told Ana's brother and friend that he was still home in Ft. Lauderdale on February 2.
Some of her family is saying he actually left for Serbia in January.
I'm sure authorities are working to confirm exactly where he was. But that's interesting.
 

Liz Jassin
Updated: MAR 14, 2024 / 09:05 PM CDT

(NewsNation) — Florida resident Ana Knezevich has been missing in Spain since early February.

A new report claims authorities found biological remains in her apartment. However, Knezevich’s brother, Felipe Henao, says the FBI told him that the report is not true.

“We want to know the truth. We want to know where my sister is,” said Henao, a guest of NewsNation’s “Cuomo” on Wednesday. “If anyone has any information, any tips, please reach out to the FBI or the Spanish authorities.

FBI investigators “don’t want to share any information, because it could jeopardize the case. I understand. Justice moves slow,” Henao said.

Knezevich, a resident of Florida, went missing at the beginning of February. She disappeared while visiting Madrid. The disappearance occurred the same night as an unidentified individual was spotted vandalizing security cameras, further complicating the investigation into Knezevich’s disappearance.

Knezevich had traveled to Madrid as part of her efforts to cope with a recent divorce and to gather her thoughts. She had plans to continue her journey to Barcelona with a friend, but she failed to arrive at the designated train station. Concerns escalated when Spanish authorities found no evidence of robbery during a search of her apartment.

Adding to the mystery are text messages purportedly sent from Knezevich’s phone, indicating that she had met someone after therapy and intended to visit his house. However, friends and family members doubt the authenticity of these messages, citing inconsistencies in language and tone that suggest they were not authored by Knezevich herself.
 
If the feds deny it or he thinks it could jeopardize the case and that's why the feds deny it then what is he doing on Cuomo on News Nation talking of such? Seriously. The grief process especially if this is a murder here and no answers must be as difficult as all heck and he needs to express as you have no answers very understandable but getting on a "news" show and talking about jeopardizing the case while you talk about that very such that could?

I clicked the link on the new report and it goes to a Spain newspaper I guess it is that one needs to pay for so couldn't read it.

It certainly does appear to be foul play here and not her voluntarily going missing of he own volition although one can hope.
 

Liz Jassin
Updated: MAR 18, 2024 / 11:38 PM CDT

(NewsNation) — Florida resident Ana Knezevich has been missing in Spain for over 40 days. Her estranged husband, David, reportedly refused a polygraph test when the FBI offered him one.
Knezevich, a resident of Florida, went missing at the beginning of February. She disappeared while visiting Madrid. The disappearance occurred the same night as an unidentified individual was spotted vandalizing security cameras, further complicating the investigation into Knezevich’s disappearance

Knezevich had traveled to Madrid as part of her efforts to cope with her recent divorce and to gather her thoughts. She had plans to continue her journey to Barcelona with a friend, but she failed to arrive at the designated train station. Concerns escalated when Spanish authorities found no evidence of robbery during a search of her apartment.

Adding to the mystery are text messages purportedly sent from Knezevich’s phone, indicating that she had met someone after therapy and intended to visit his house. However, friends and family members doubt the authenticity of these messages, citing inconsistencies in language and tone that suggest they were not authored by Knezevich herself.

It’s unclear where David Knezevich was at the time of the disappearance. According to the husband’s attorney, Ken Padowitz, he was in Serbia when Ana disappeared and has been cooperating with both Spanish police and the FBI.

“He’s spoken to the police a number of times,” Padowitz said during an appearance on “CUOMO.” “I have reached out to the FBI and let them know that we are available to aid in any way. He’s given police information on credit cards, attempted to hire a lawyer in Spain.”

However, Sanna Rameu, Ana’s best friend, says David was at the couple’s Fort Lauderdale home, not in Serbia, when Ana disappeared.

Madrid police have said that the investigation is ongoing, but have yet to release further details.
 

Husband of South Florida woman missing in Madrid arrested at Miami International Airport​

FBI agents, in collaboration with the Spanish National Police, have arrested the husband of a South Florida woman who traveled to Madrid and vanished. He is being accused of being involved in her disappearance last February.

David Knezevich was arrested Saturday at Miami International Airport when he arrived on a flight from his home country of Serbia, where he had been for months.

Sources close to the investigation have told EFE that he has been arrested as the alleged perpetrator in the disappearance of his wife, Ana María Knezevich Henao.

In addition to the FBI agents who are participating in the investigation, agents from the Belgrade Interior Attaché Office and the Colombian Police took part in the arrest.

Estranged husband of woman reported missing in Spain arrested in South Florida​

David Knezevich, the estranged husband of Ana Maria Knezevich Henao, who vanished in Madrid, Spain, in early February, has been arrested, according to jail records.

Prior to his arrest, Knezevich had not been officially named a person of interest or a suspect, and no arrests had been made in the case of his missing ex-partner.

However, that changed when jail records confirmed he’d been arrested at Miami International Airport on Saturday and booked into jail in Miami-Dade County.

Jail records show Knezevich, 36, has been placed on a U.S. Marshals hold for kidnapping, pending a federal hearing where a court will review the assets he’d use to post his bail.

Local 10 News has reached out to the U.S. Marshal’s Office and Knezevich’s lawyer for more information about his return to the U.S. and his arrest.
 

FBI provides new details in case against man accused in wife's disappearance in Spain​

The FBI has laid out a detailed case showing why agents believe a Florida man is behind his estranged wife’s disappearance from her apartment in Spain but gave no indication about what they think happened to her.

Court documents released late Monday show that agents believe David Knezevich resembles the man wearing a motorcycle helmet who spray painted the security camera lens outside Ana Knezevich’s Madrid apartment on Feb. 2. The man left an hour later carrying a suitcase.

Spanish police say they have security video of the 36-year-old Fort Lauderdale business owner purchasing the same brand of paint and duct tape hours earlier. Investigators also interviewed a woman who says Knezevich asked her to translate a text message that was sent to his wife’s friends after her disappearance.

Knezevich’s attorney, Ken Padowitz, did not return a call Monday seeking comment. He has said his client is innocent and was in his native Serbia on the day his 40-year-old wife disappeared, 1,600 miles (2,500 kilometers) away. But agents say Knezevich rented a Peugeot in the Serbian capital Belgrade four days earlier.

A few days later, a Spanish driver reported his license plates were stolen. On the night Ana Knezevich disappeared, a license plate reader on her Madrid street recorded the stolen plate number, Spanish police found.

Additionally, hours after she disappeared, a Peugeot bearing the stolen license plates went through a suburban Madrid toll booth, surveillance video showed. The driver could not be seen behind the tinted windows.

The rental agency told investigators that when Knezevich returned the car five weeks later, the license plates had been replaced and the windows had been tinted. It had been driven almost 4,800 miles (7,700 kilometers).


The most detailed section of the FBI’s 11-page complaint against Knezevich involves an unnamed Colombian woman he met on a dating app last fall, about the time his wife moved to Europe.

On the morning after his wife disappeared, the FBI says Knezevich texted the woman seeking a favor — would she translate into “perfect Colombian” Spanish a few English sentences for a friend who was writing a screenplay?

The woman replied she doesn’t speak English and would have to use a generic online Spanish translator. Knezevich replied that’s fine, she could then tweak it to make it sound Colombian.

According to the FBI, he then sent the woman this passage in English: “I met someone wonderful. He has a summer house about 2h (two hours) from Madrid. We are going there now and I will spend a few days there. There is barely any signal though. I will call you when I come back. Kisses.”

The woman made her translation and sent it back.

That morning, that translated message was texted to two of Ana’s friends from her phone.

They said it didn’t sound like her. They contacted Spanish police, launching the investigation.
 

Arraignment reset for man charged in Ana Knezevich’s disappearance​

David Knezevich appeared briefly in court Monday to face charges in connection with his estranged wife’s February disappearance in Spain.

A federal judge postponed his arraignment until 1:30 p.m. June 3.

Knezevich has temporary legal counsel; however, the attorney must be retained as permanent counsel for the arraignment. His attorney is expected to enter a not guilty plea during next month’s arraignment.


On May 10, a federal judge ordered Knezevich to be held without bond, rejecting his lawyer’s argument that the prosecution case is entirely circumstantial and shouldn’t be tried in the United States. The court said he was a flight risk.
 

FBI provides new details in case against man accused in wife's disappearance in Spain​

The FBI has laid out a detailed case showing why agents believe a Florida man is behind his estranged wife’s disappearance from her apartment in Spain but gave no indication about what they think happened to her.

Court documents released late Monday show that agents believe David Knezevich resembles the man wearing a motorcycle helmet who spray painted the security camera lens outside Ana Knezevich’s Madrid apartment on Feb. 2. The man left an hour later carrying a suitcase.

Spanish police say they have security video of the 36-year-old Fort Lauderdale business owner purchasing the same brand of paint and duct tape hours earlier. Investigators also interviewed a woman who says Knezevich asked her to translate a text message that was sent to his wife’s friends after her disappearance.

Knezevich’s attorney, Ken Padowitz, did not return a call Monday seeking comment. He has said his client is innocent and was in his native Serbia on the day his 40-year-old wife disappeared, 1,600 miles (2,500 kilometers) away. But agents say Knezevich rented a Peugeot in the Serbian capital Belgrade four days earlier.

A few days later, a Spanish driver reported his license plates were stolen. On the night Ana Knezevich disappeared, a license plate reader on her Madrid street recorded the stolen plate number, Spanish police found.

Additionally, hours after she disappeared, a Peugeot bearing the stolen license plates went through a suburban Madrid toll booth, surveillance video showed. The driver could not be seen behind the tinted windows.

The rental agency told investigators that when Knezevich returned the car five weeks later, the license plates had been replaced and the windows had been tinted. It had been driven almost 4,800 miles (7,700 kilometers).


The most detailed section of the FBI’s 11-page complaint against Knezevich involves an unnamed Colombian woman he met on a dating app last fall, about the time his wife moved to Europe.

On the morning after his wife disappeared, the FBI says Knezevich texted the woman seeking a favor — would she translate into “perfect Colombian” Spanish a few English sentences for a friend who was writing a screenplay?

The woman replied she doesn’t speak English and would have to use a generic online Spanish translator. Knezevich replied that’s fine, she could then tweak it to make it sound Colombian.

According to the FBI, he then sent the woman this passage in English: “I met someone wonderful. He has a summer house about 2h (two hours) from Madrid. We are going there now and I will spend a few days there. There is barely any signal though. I will call you when I come back. Kisses.”

The woman made her translation and sent it back.

That morning, that translated message was texted to two of Ana’s friends from her phone.

They said it didn’t sound like her. They contacted Spanish police, launching the investigation.
He thought he was so smart and was laying out the perfect plan! What an arse.
 
He is toast. Did anyone think it was anyone else from the start in this one? Sure sounded good yah he was allegedly in another country but it was obvious who was likely just due to what was going on. Of course that's not enough to convict but what they now have IS. Dumbarse. Evil. Senseless.
 

Husband of missing Fort Lauderdale woman indicted; blood was found in Madrid apartment, FBI agent says​

Months after a Fort Lauderdale woman went missing in Spain, a grand jury indicted her husband on kidnapping charges, prosecutors announced Friday. Meanwhile, his defense attorney has filed a motion arguing for his release from a Miami prison.

The motion and a recent cross examination bring new details to light about what might — or might not — have happened the day that Ana Knezevich disappeared in Madrid. Blood was found in her apartment, and yet detectives have not concluded whose it is. Knezevich had been feeling suicidal, but because of her husband, investigators said. Meanwhile, defense attorneys argued that her husband, David Knezevich, flew to Serbia days before her disappearance, not as part of a kidnapping plot, but to take care of his disabled, elderly mother.


David Knezevich, 36, was arrested at Miami International Airport on May 4, months after Ana’s disappearance in early February. He is accused in a federal complaint of driving from Serbia to Madrid, where his 40-year-old wife was staying, spray-painting the cameras at her building, and leaving with a suitcase. He also had a woman translate a message for him into Spanish; the same message was later sent to Ana’s friends and family from her phone the last time anyone ever heard from her.

Last week, a grand jury indicted David Knezevich on one count of kidnapping, the U.S Attorney’s Office announced Friday. If convicted, he faces a maximum sentence of life in prison, with a likely sentence of 10 to 12 years, Assistant U.S Attorney Lacee Monk said at the court hearing over his detention earlier this month. But if Ana Knezevich is found dead, he could face the death penalty.

Chief Magistrate Judge Edwin G. Torres ultimately ruled in favor of keeping David Knezevich jailed because he is a flight risk, though he said the decision was a “close call” and that the evidence is largely circumstantial. On Thursday, Knezevich’s defense attorney, Jayne Weintraub, filed a motion opposing the ruling, pointing to Torres’ own comment and arguing that her client has no reason to leave South Florida, where he has a brother and two businesses.

“There are significant legal issues presented in this case and, as Magistrate Judge Torres noted, it is a defensible case, which is a reason for Defendant to stay and fight the charges and not to flee,” the motion concludes.

Prior to Torres’ ruling, Weintraub cross examined Agent Alexandra Montilla, one of the lead Federal Bureau of Investigations agents on the case, pointing to the limitations of the evidence investigators currently have on David Knezevich.

Some of the details raised in the cross examination paint a more harrowing picture than previously known. Ana Knezevich had gone to Madrid not just for a vacation but to escape her husband, who she was afraid of, Montilla said, according to a transcript of the cross examination. Despite reports earlier on that there was no sign of struggle in the apartment, police had found blood “in various places of the apartment,” though Montilla said they did not include that in the complaint because they do not have the DNA results yet.

Weintraub pointed out other details to complicate the story. The two were in an open relationship and Ana Knezevich was dating other men, Montilla confirmed. Ana Knezevich also had a history mental health issues and had described herself as suicidal in messages with other people, though Montilla said that was because of “the issues she was having with David.”

Investigators have interviewed all of the men Knezevich went on dates with, Montilla said.

Another issue raised in the defense motion was whether the case should be tried in the U.S in the first place. Prosecutors had argued during the hearing that it should because David Knezevich only flew to Serbia from the U.S to commit a crime. But the defense said that he went to Serbia to visit his mother, and investigators do not have enough evidence to suggest that he went to Spain for criminal purposes.

“The defendant’s mother lives in Serbia, she is an amputee, she’s elderly and sick and disabled. She’s in a wheelchair and he tries to see her as often as he can and take care of her properly. He goes there frequently through the years to see his mom and that’s why he flew into Serbia,” Weintraub said, according to the transcript. “He did not go to Serbia to go to Spain.”
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Forum statistics

Threads
3,080
Messages
257,103
Members
1,019
Latest member
bhman
Back
Top Bottom