Julia Merfeld, Mother, Asked Hit Man To Kill Husband Because It's 'Easier Than Divorcing Him' (VIDEO)
Unbeknownst to her, Julia Merfeld was being filmed while she matter-of-factly discussed murdering her husband with an undercover cop posing as a hit man.
How much? The 21-year-old Muskegon, Mich. woman offered $50,000 of her husband Jacob Merfeld's $400,000 life insurance policy to the supposed hit man, paid out over several weeks. When and how? Merfield was full of ideas. It could potentially look like a robbery, she suggested, should be painless (if possible) and must occur on one of two days when Merfeld would be working. She asked the fake hit man to "surprise her."
"The more shocked I am when it happens, the better," she said. And if at all possible, she requested, could he get the 27-year-old target outside before killing him? "Because it would be messy in the house," she explained.
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Merfeld first told coworker Carlos Ramos she wanted her husband killed. Ramos originally thought she was joking and hoped the topic would never come up again, he told local ABC affiliate WZZM 13. But when she continued to talk about the plan in more detail, Ramos made the decision to go to the police, who set up the sting with the fake hit man. Watch the video from their first meeting in April above, provided to MLive by the Muskegon County Prosecutor's Office, and the footage from their second meeting below.
In the video, Merfeld seems slightly nervous, but is easily prompted to discuss the murder plot. Wearing a Batman sweatshirt to the second meeting, she shows the man, an undercover Michigan State Police detective, directions to her house, a map of the outside, a floor plan and a photograph of her husband.
"When I first decided to do this, it's not that we weren't getting along," she explained. "As terrible as it sounds, it was easier than divorcing him. I didn't have to worry about the judgment of my family, I didn't have to worry about breaking his heart."
Merfeld pled guilty to solicitation of murder in June and is set to be sentenced on July 30, with the minimum set at six years, according to local news station WOOD TV 8. Jacob Merfeld didn't want his wife to go to prison at all, MLive reports.
As she talked to the man she planned to pay to murder the father of her two children, Merfeld expressed some advance remorse.
"This is kind of like a clean getaway," she said. "I mean, it's going to break my heart when it happens, but it's something I've been thinking about for awhile."
Caught on video: Fake hit man and Muskegon's widow wannabe discuss husband's murder
Julia Charlene Merfeld said she wanted her husband killed because "it was easier than divorcing him."
That explanation came in a meeting with a man Merfeld thought she was hiring to do the murder.
Fake hit man, Julia Merfeld talk husband's murder (part 2)
A fake hit man, actually a Michigan State police detective, and Julia Merfeld discuss plans to murder Merfeld's husband. Video was shot April 10, 2013. Merfeld was arrested shortly after. Footage courtesy of Muskegon County Prosecutor's Office and was edited for length by MLive.
Merfeld, 21, of Muskegon didn't know the man was really an undercover police detective, or that she was being recorded on a hidden videocamera.
"When I first decided to do this ... it's not that we weren't getting along," she says on the video. "But ... terrible as it sounds, it was easier than divorcing him.
"You know, I didn't have to worry about the judgment of my family, I didn't have to worry about breaking his heart, all that stuff like this. It's, like, how I got a clean getaway."
Another motive, authorities have said, was the 27-year-old husband's $400,000 life insurance policy. Julia Merfeld told the fake hit man he'd be paid $50,000 from the proceeds, in a series of weekly $9,000 installments to avoid suspicion from her bank.
Merfeld pleaded guilty June 27 to solicitation to murder.
Her husband and intended victim asked that she get no jail time at all, the sentencing judge said in court at the time of her guilty plea. Instead, Chief Muskegon County Circuit Judge William C. Marietti committed to cap her minimum sentence at six years. The maximum can be anything up to life in prison, depending on Marietti's decision at her sentencing July 30.
After Merfeld's guilty plea, the Muskegon County Prosecutor's Office released videos of two meetings between Merfeld and a Michigan State Police detective. The recordings were released to MLive and the Muskegon Chronicle at a reporter's request.
Fake hit man and widow wannabe discuss husband's murder
Unbeknownst to her, Julia Merfeld was being filmed while she matter-of-factly discussed murdering her husband with an undercover cop posing as a hit man.
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