HomeCrimeProsecutor picks apart Charlie Adelson extortion story

Prosecutor picks apart Charlie Adelson extortion story

Charlie Adelson closing arguments

Charlie Adelson’s defense lawyer Daniel Rashbaum (left), Chief Assistant State Attorney Georgia Cappleman (center), and Charlie Adelson (right) pictured during closing arguments on Nov. 6, 2023 (Law&Crime Network)

Prosecutors and the defense appeared in court for closing arguments on Monday in the murder-for-hire case against Charlie Adelson in the 2014 shooting death of his 41-year-old former brother-in-law Dan Markel, a Florida State University law professor who was in a heated child custody battle at the time he was killed.

Late last week, the defense put forth its theory that Charlie Adelson, a 47-year-old Florida dentist, was actually the victim of extortion and that he “never” looked into hiring a hitman to kill Markel, despite repeatedly telling a “complete joke” about buying a TV as a divorce present for Wendi Adelson because it was cheaper than getting his sister a hitman.

On the other hand, prosecutors emphasized that Adelson’s elaborate story about being an extortion victim didn’t ring true, as it didn’t make sense that Dan Markel had to die in order for Miami-based Latin Kings gang members Sigfredo Garcia and Luis Rivera, the convicted hitmen, to shake down the defendant for a third of a million dollars with the help of Adelson’s then-girlfriend Katherine Magbanua.

Chief Assistant State Attorney Georgia Cappleman of the 2nd Judicial Circuit kicked off her closing arguments by drilling down on the same theme Monday morning.

“When you zoom out from the defense’s theory, it’s really unreasonable, right?” Cappleman asked the jury. “These two dudes, with no connection at all to Dan Markel, and without two nickels to rub together, rented a car and paid for gas to come to Tallahassee and stay at a hotel — twice — in order to kill someone the defendant hated, to harm him [the defendant].”

“And for what?” the prosecutor asked with emphasis. “To maybe get money? Maybe he just turns them in for murder. Why not just kill and rob him if what you’re after is money and there’s no hired hit? Why not just kill and rob him if your motive is we hate him?”

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