After an investigation spanning nearly two years, a South Florida man has been arrested in the killing of a Toronto-born Florida State University professor.
But the arrest of 34-year-old Sigfredo Garcia hasn’t answered a long line of questions about why Daniel Markel was gunned down in the garage of his Tallahassee home in July 2014.
Garcia, charged with cocaine possession and murder, appeared briefly in a Broward County court on Thursday where a judge ordered that he remain in jail.
Top police officials in Tallahassee are releasing scant details about how they linked Garcia, who lists a Miami Beach address, to the slaying or whether others are involved.
They also got a judge to seal records related to the case. Hallandale Beach police arrested Garcia at a gas station late Wednesday night.
Tallahassee Police Chief Micheal DeLeo said the case was still active and that they made the request to keep the records private “in order not to jeopardize this ongoing investigation.” DeLeo and other Tallahassee police officials refused to answer any questions about whether other arrests are coming or what led them to Garcia.
Markel’s shooting in the middle of the day stunned colleagues as well as residents inside the upscale neighbourhood where he lived in Tallahassee. He was shot in the head and died later at a nearby hospital.
The 41-year-old Markel was well known in national and international legal circles. The father of two boys and a 2001 graduate of Harvard Law School, he practiced white-collar criminal defence and civil litigation before joining the Florida State law school faculty in 2005. He was tenured in 2010.
Markel’s parents and sister, who all live in Canada, put out a statement late Thursday saying that “although it does not diminish their immense pain, Ruth, Phil, and Shelly are grateful to local, state, and federal authorities for their tireless work resulting in today’s arrest.”
The statement also said that the family would not make any further comments “at this time.” Ruth Markel, the mother of Daniel Markel, declined to answer questions when reached by phone at her home in Toronto.
Victim was in midst of contentious divorce
Markel finalized a contentious divorce from his ex-wife, Wendi Adelson, in 2013. The two had split custody of sons Benjamin and Lincoln, but they had follow-up litigation over money settlements. Adelson, who is also a lawyer, had worked at FSU but moved to Miami Beach about a year and a half ago.
Police initially had few leads in the case and eventually circulated pictures of the car believed to have been used by those involved in the killing.
When he appeared in court, Garcia declined a public defender. He told Judge Mary Rudd Robinson he has a lawyer, but just met him Wednesday and couldn’t remember the name. He said he put the lawyer’s card in his wallet, which had been confiscated.
“I didn’t know I needed one until yesterday,” Garcia told the judge. Robinson then asked him: “You didn’t know you had a murder warrant?” she replied. He told her no.
The judge ordered he be given access to his wallet so he could contact his attorney.
State arrest records show Garcia has multiple arrests dating back to 1997. Charges included car theft, cocaine possession, burglary, threatening a witness and a strong-arm robbery charge in 2012. Those records show that other charges were filed against him — including possession of an explosive device — but that the charges were dropped.
His occupation is listed on his arrest records as a heavy machine operator.
Florida police have arrested a man suspected of the murder of Dan Markel, a Jewish law professor who was shot in his Tallahassee driveway in 2014.
Authorities arrested Sigfredo Garcia, 34, at a Miami-area gas station on May 25, and charged him with first-degree murder.
The Tallahassee Democrat reported May 26 that Markel’s death is being investigated as a murder for hire, and that law enforcement officials expect to make further arrests in the case.
The Tallahassee Police Department said in a statement that they had investigated and vetted hundreds of leads on the case that came in through a telephone hotline.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation, along with other state and federal agencies, assisted in the department’s effort.
“This is still an active criminal investigation,” said the chief of the Tallahassee Police Department, Michael DeLeo, in a statement.
“My heart and prayers are with the Markel family as they continue to grieve for their loss. My only hope is that today’s information will offer some solace to the family and, in some small way, help them to heal.”
Markel was a well-known legal scholar at Florida State University. He was prominent in online legal circles as a founder of the website PrawfsBlog, and was an active member of a Conservative Jewish congregation in Tallahassee.
In the wake of the murder, police investigated vitriolic online comments targeting Markel on a number of blogs.
A memorial fund honoring Markel raised $54,000 for the benefit of his two young sons.