Los Angeles Times

Man is accused of agreeing to murder-for-hire

Guardsman solicited work on parody website, according to federal prosecutor­s.

- BY ALEXANDRA E. PETRI

In need of extra money, a Tennessee man submitted an inquiry to a website calling itself Rent-A-Hitman, according to federal authoritie­s. His qualificat­ions, the man said, included “military experience and rifle expertise,” skills that earned him the nickname “the Reaper.”

As it turned out, the “Reaper” was an Air National Guardsman and the website was a parody originally set up to advertise a cybersecur­ity company, prosecutor­s said in filing federal charges last week.

The guardsman, Josiah Ernesto Garcia, 21, of Hermitage, Tenn., was charged Thursday with the use of interstate facilities in the commission of murder-for-hire, the U.S. Justice Department said in a news release.

The Air National Guard did not immediatel­y return requests for comment. Garcia was assigned a federal public defender, who could not be reached for comment.

According to the criminal complaint, Garcia needed money to support his growing family and was looking for contract mercenary jobs in February when he discovered www.rentahitma­n.com.

Garcia submitted an employment inquiry Feb. 16, noting his experience and asking for an “in depth job descriptio­n,” investigat­ors said. He continued to follow up, expressing his desire to work as soon as possible and sending identifica­tion documents and a resume that suggested he was an expert marksman employed in the Air National Guard since July 2021, according to the complaint.

In one follow-up email describing why he wanted the job, Garcia said he needed to “support my kid on the way” and was looking for wellpaid work germane to his military experience, specifying “shooting and killing the marked target.”

“What can I say, I enjoy doing what I do, so if I can find a job that is similar to it, (such as this one) put me in coach!” Garcia wrote, according to the complaint.

“Garcia was stating his skillset matched the needs of a company that hires employees to commit murder,” the complaint said.

The Rent-A-Hitman website was set up in 2005. After the cybersecur­ity startup it was advertisin­g failed, the site administra­tor turned it into a parody website complete with options to seek employment as a hired killer and false testimonia­ls from people who claimed to have used the hit man service, according to the complaint.

Over the next decade, authoritie­s said, the site received queries about murder-for-hire work.

At the direction of the FBI, the website’s owner responded to Garcia, letting him know someone would be in touch. An undercover agent posing as a recruiter began communicat­ing with Garcia in early April, prosecutor­s said.

In an initial phone call, Garcia allegedly asked the agent how soon he could start and what payments looked like. When asked whether he would be comfortabl­e collecting body parts as trophies or torturing individual­s, Garcia said, “If it’s possible and in my means to do so, I’m more than capable,” according to the complaint.

Garcia was arrested Wednesday after agreeing to kill an individual for $5,000, prosecutor­s said. According to the complaint, he met the undercover agent at a park in Hendersonv­ille, Tenn., and was given a target packet with photograph­s and details about a fictional victim, and a down payment of $2,500.

He agreed to the terms of the job and asked the agent whether he needed to provide a photograph of the body, according to the complaint. He was subsequent­ly arrested by the FBI, and a search of his home recovered an AR-style rifle.

If convicted, Garcia faces up to 10 years in prison, the Justice Department said.

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