Woman charged with first-degree murder in Canadian scholar’s U.S. death
A woman arrested in the death of a Canadian legal scholar in Florida has been charged with first-degree murder for her alleged role in what investigators have suggested was a murder-for-hire rooted in a bitter divorce.
A U.S. grand jury indicted Katherine Magbanua this week in the 2014 killing of Dan Markel, a law professor at Florida State University who was born in Toronto.
Magbanua — the third person arrested in the case — was initially taken into custody and charged with second-degree murder in October.
That month, one of the two others arrested in the case, Luis Rivera, suddenly pleaded guilty to second-degree murder. He told investigators he and his co-accused, Sigfredo Garcia, were paid to kill Markel because the academic’s ex-wife allegedly wanted full custody of their two children.


