Miami Herald

Retrial for the murder of a young couple in the Keys ends with familiar verdict

- BY DAVID GOODHUE dgoodhue@flkeysnews.com

A jury on Tuesday decided that a man being retried for the shooting deaths of a Keys couple over a cocainedea­ling operation is guilty of first-degree murder.

The 12 jurors took 12 hours to deliberate. The case was being retried because a state appeals court ruled that a sworn statement from a jailhouse informant wasn’t allowed to be heard during the original November 2017 trial.

Jeremy Macauley was convicted of shooting Carlos Ortiz, 30, and Tara Rosado, 26, inside Rosado’s Cuba Road home in Tavernier on Oct. 15, 2015. Investigat­ors say the motive was to shut up Ortiz because he was extorting Macauley over a cocainedea­ling business they were both involved with.

Macauley found up to 20 kilos of cocaine in the ocean during the summer of 2015 while he was working as a mate on a charter fishing boat. He and his boss, Rick

Rodriguez, captain of the Sea Horse charter boat, brought the cocaine back to shore, attorneys for both the defense and the prosecutio­n said.

Macauley, 41, enlisted a group of friends who were local drug dealers to sell the contraband. Ortiz was among the group, as was Adrian Demblans.

Demblans, 42, was convicted of driving Macauley to the home the night of the murders. He ended up pleading guilty to accessory after the fact of murder before the original trial and cooperated with police and prosecutor­s in their investigat­ion against Macauley in both the murder case and a traffickin­g case related to the cocaine.

Rodriguez was never arrested or charged in the case and has repeatedly denied to the Miami Herald that he knew about the drugs nor was involved in killing Ortiz and Rosado.

Macauley’s attorney in the retrial, Donald Barrett, argued his client was not present during the murders, citing cellphone records, lack of fingerprin­ts or DNA at the scene or in the car used in the killings and security-camera footage that prosecutor­s say showed Macauley at the scene. Barrett said the video was too grainy to discern anyone on screen.

But prosecutor­s Aleathea McRoberts and Courtney Behar said other evidence pointed directly at Macauley, claiming investigat­ors tied the murder weapon — a

Colt .45 model 1911 with a wooden grip — to him.

The gun was found by a snorkeler a month after the murders. Investigat­ors connected the two spent bullet casings and one bullet found at Rosado’s home to that gun. A witness also told Monroe County sheriff’s detectives that she saw Macauley get into the Toyota RAV4 that delivered the shooter to Rosado’s home.

Most telling, however, according to McRoberts and Behar were text messages between Macauley and Ortiz in the days leading up to and the day of the murders. Ortiz was demanding more of the cocaine proceeds from Macauley, or else he would go to the cops.

The last communicat­ion between the two was a text from Macauley sent about an hour before the shootings, with a photograph of cash, saying he was on his way over to pay Ortiz.

“It defies common sense to think that anybody else is responsibl­e for the murders,” Behar said during closing arguments Monday. “It defies common sense.”

Behar and McRoberts work for the Palm Beach County State Attorney’s Office. They were assigned the case because of a conflict in the case with the Monroe County State Attorney’s Office.

Barrett argued that Adrian Demblans was the mastermind behind the killings and brought someone else other than Macauley to kill the couple. The jailhouse witness whose statement was at the heart of the retrial said Adrian’s twin brother, Kristian Demblans, told him while the two were serving time in Monroe County lockup that he was the one who killed Rosado and Ortiz.

Adrian Demblans testified at the retrial that his brother traveled in different circles than he, Macaulay and Ortiz, and that he had nothing to do with the crime.

Barrett said in an email to the Miami Herald that he would file a notice of appeal at the appropriat­e time.

“I thought the case was replete with reasonable doubt, but I appreciate the jury’s hard work and I respect their verdict.”

Macaulay was convicted and sentenced to two life terms in prison after the 2017 trial. He was also charged with armed robbery for stealing a phone from Rosado’s home the night of the murders. That charge was dismissed before jury deliberati­ons in the retrial.

He is scheduled to be sentenced June 4 in Monroe County Circuit Court. He again faces life in prison.

“There is no leeway on those counts,” said Palm Beach County State Attorney’s Office spokesman Marc Freeman. “Both are life in prison without the possibilit­y of parole.”

In a statement to the Miami Herald, Rosado’s family members said they hoped, that after almost 10 years, the case was finally over.

“This does not get any easier,” the family said. “Please just let it be done, and let [Tara and Carlos] rest in peace.”

David Goodhue: 305-923-9728, @DavidGoodh­ue

 ?? Keynoter file ?? Carlos Ortiz, 30, and Tara Rosado, 26, were killed inside Rosado’s Cuba Road home in Tavernier on Oct. 15, 2015.
Keynoter file Carlos Ortiz, 30, and Tara Rosado, 26, were killed inside Rosado’s Cuba Road home in Tavernier on Oct. 15, 2015.
 ?? ?? Jeremy Macauley
Jeremy Macauley

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