A federal grand jury has indicted a Florida man who allegedly went to Spain to kidnap and murder his estranged wife in an elaborate scheme that included driving across Europe and spray painting camera lenses.
David Knezevich had already been charged in the U.S. District Court’s Southern District of Florida in the disappearance of 40-year-old Ana Maria Knezevich, who has not been seen since February in Madrid. But a grand jury on Wednesday filed a superseding indictment charging him with kidnapping resulting in death, foreign domestic violence resulting in death and foreign murder of a United States national. If convicted of the kidnapping resulting in death, he could face the death penalty.
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Authorities have yet to find Ana Knezevich’s body but believe her husband traveled from Miami to Madrid “with the intent to kill” her, the indictment said. Cops say he murdered her and disposed of her body in a yet-to-be-identified location. The search for her body remains ongoing and authorities in recent months have focused their efforts to a heavily-wooded area in northern Italy.
While the alleged crimes occurred in Spain, statute 18 U.S.C 1119 allows the DOJ to prosecute the case if a U.S. national kills another U.S. national in a foreign country. According to the DOJ, the attorney general, deputy attorney general, or assistant attorney general must provide written approval for the case to proceed as charged. The prosecution can only take place after the AG consults with the secretary of state, the suspect is “no longer present” in the country in question and that country “lacks the ability to lawfully secure the person’s return,” the DOJ states.
Agents arrested David Knezevich, a Yugoslavian-born naturalized U.S. citizen as he arrived at Miami International Airport on May 4. Ana Knezevich is a U.S. citizen from Colombia, per the feds.
As Law&Crime previously reported, the FBI described in a criminal complaint described how the couple were going through a contentious divorce.
Ana Knezevich flew from Miami to Madrid on Dec. 26, 2023. Her family and friends lost contact with her after Feb. 2. She and her friends had a trip planned to Barcelona but she never showed up, cops said. All of her nonautomatic bank transactions stopped following that date, the complaint said. She also was charged a fee on Feb. 10 for missing a reservation at a Madrid restaurant, according to the FBI.
Friends and family told federal agents that Ana Knezevich and her husband were going through a contentious divorce because he did not want to split marital assets with her, the complaint said. The victim was “very fearful” of her husband because she believed he was “surreptitiously monitoring her whereabouts,” agents wrote.
Ken Padowitz, David Knezevich’s attorney, has denied his client had anything to do with the disappearance.
“David has worked with authorities. 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 told The Associated Press in February.
According to Spanish authorities, surveillance cameras captured Ana entering her apartment in Madrid around 2:20 p.m. on Feb. 2. It’s the last time she was seen alive. The complaint says about 9:30 p.m. the same day a man wearing a helmet entered the apartment building after some people were walking out. The man, holding a can of spray paint, walks down a set of stairs and uses the spray paint to cover the lens, according to the complaint.
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The paint didn’t completely cover the lens and still showed a man putting a piece of duct tape over the door lock to prevent it from closing, the complaint said.
“Notably, the male, who looks directly at the camera, has physical characteristics that resemble those of [David] Knezevich,” the feds wrote.
The man is then seen leaving the apartment about 10:30 p.m., apparently holding a suitcase.
Spanish authorities completed a welfare check on Feb. 4 for Ana Knezevich but did not find her. Her cellphone, laptop and chargers were missing, the feds noted. Cops also noticed the spray paint brand and tracked the purchase to a store in Madrid. Surveillance camera footage from the store showed a man who appeared to be David Knezevich buying the paint and two rolls of duct tape, feds wrote.
FBI agents also spoke with a Colombian woman who previously met David Knezevich on a dating app. She told agents that on Feb. 3, the day after his wife went missing, he allegedly asked her to translate a message from English into “perfect Colombian.” He claimed he had a friend from Serbia who was writing a script about a Colombian character and wanted it to sound “authentic,” the complaint said.
“I met someone wonderful!!” the translated message reportedly said. “He has a summer house about 2h from Madrid. We are going there now and I will spend a few days there. Signal is spotty. I’ll call you when I get back.”
Other messages allegedly said “Yesterday after therapy I needed a walk and he approached me on the street!” and “Amazing connection. Like I never had before[.]”
Ana Knezevich’s best friend, Sanna Rameau, previously said those messages didn’t make sense.
“She doesn’t do those things,” Rameau told the Law&Crime Network’s Sierra Gillespie. “It was worded very differently than how she writes.”
Rameau said that Knezevich “wouldn’t meet a man in the street and say that she’s going to go away for a few days like that.”
“That is definitely not my friend,” she added, noting that Knezevich had plans to go to Barcelona just days later.
She responded immediately to the “bizarre” message purportedly from her friend.
“I said, what’s happening? What do you mean? I got worried and I said, please share your location. This does not sound safe,” Rameau told Gillespie. “My messages didn’t go through. I got concerned immediately. And then when I heard nothing back from her, first thing Sunday [Feb. 2] morning, I contacted the police in Madrid.”
Knezevich’s brother, Juan Felipe Henao, said he received a similarly odd text from his sister on Feb. 2. It was in Spanish — which Ana Knezevich speaks fluently, having been born in Colombia — but according to Henao, something was off.
“He stated it is not like his sister to do something like this plus the text in Spanish appeared to be translated from English to Spanish via Google translator and the message made no sense whatsoever and was definitely not written by his sister who is fluent in both English and Spanish,” a Ft. Lauderdale police report says.
Henao was “very concerned something bad happened to Ana,” the police statement says, noting that he told officials that his sister was going through a tough divorce.
“Juan stated that Ana and David are going through a nasty divorce and there is a substantial amount of money on the line to be split up between the two and David is not happy about it,” the police statement says. “Juan advised that Ana has a long time friend in Spain so she traveled there three months ago to clear her head.”
According to the FBI, the Colombian woman who translated the message for David Knezevich told her mother about her new love interest. She Googled him and saw news stories that said he was a suspect in his wife’s disappearance, the complaint said.
Agents also were able to track down the suspect’s movements, starting on Jan. 27 when he flew out of Miami International Airport to Istanbul, Turkey, before traveling to his native Belgrade, Serbia. He allegedly left Serbia on Jan. 30 and returned on Feb. 5. Agents noted it takes around 26 hours to drive the 2,592 kilometers (about 1,600 miles) from Belgrade to Madrid. They also learned that David Knezevich rented a Peugeot 308 between Jan. 29 and March 15.
The rental car agency noticed that when he returned the vehicle, the windows were tinted and the license plates changed. David Knezevich had driven for over 7,600 kilometers (more than 4,700 miles) while he was in possession of the car.
Spanish authorities also discovered that someone had reported their license plates stolen. The plates were allegedly seen on the street outside the victim’s apartment. The plates also reportedly turned up at two toll booths outside of Madrid but the driver can’t be seen because of the tinted windows.
Agents then spoke with an employee of the alleged kidnapper’s business. She told agents that David Knezevich forced her to pose as his missing wife over the phone to cancel insurance policies and open a new bank account, the FBI said. In one of the calls, children could be heard in the background and, as agents noted, Ana Knezevich does not have kids.
David Knezevich allegedly told the employee that the calls had to be made for people to be paid.
“Knezevich further stated ‘I cannot call with my voice because I sound like a guy,”” the complaint said.
He remains in jail without bond.
Marisa Sarnoff contributed to this report.
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