Current:Home > reviewsFormer Louisville pediatrician pleads guilty in murder-for-hire plot to kill ex-husband -Horizon Finance School
Former Louisville pediatrician pleads guilty in murder-for-hire plot to kill ex-husband
View
Date:2025-04-14 20:23:40
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — A former Louisville pediatrician will be sent to federal prison after pleading guilty and admitting to stalking her ex-husband and attempting to hire someone to kill him.
The trial of Stephanie Russell was set to begin Monday morning in U.S. District Court in downtown Louisville and expected to last six days, but instead wrapped up in less than two hours with Russell accepting a plea agreement. If Judge David Hale agrees to the prosecution's recommendation, Russell will be sentenced to at least eight years in federal prison.
Had she gone to trial, Russell faced up to 15 years, along with up to a $500,000 fine and three years of supervised release.
Russell, who is now 53, previously ran the popular Kidz Life Pediatrics in Louisville before being arrested at her office in May 2022. Her arrest was one day after an undercover federal agent posing as a hitman picked up $3,500 from a lockbox outside of her office that Russell had given him the code to open, prosecutors said.
The cash had been agreed upon as half of the total payment to the agent, whom Russell told to make her ex-husband's killing look like a suicide.
When agents executed a search warrant at her home, they found another $2,400 in cash inside a shoe box, which they said would go toward the hitman's fee. As part of the plea agreement, Russell agreed to forfeit those funds.
Prosecutors: Russell's attempts to find a hitman started in 2021
There was a small delay in Monday's proceedings early on after Russell became lightheaded and collapsed in front of a table, hitting her chin on it as she went down. Judge Hale ordered a recess and a medical professional checked Russell's vitals before all parties determined she could continue.
Prosecutors said Russell's attempts to find someone to kill her ex-husband started after a family court judge awarded permanent, sole custody of their two children to their father in April 2021.
Developing into the night:For an update later tonight, sign up for the Evening Briefing.
About three months later, Russell began telling multiple people, including some employees, that she wanted to get "rid of her former husband by hiring someone to kill him." Included in their evidence was a recording of a former employee and Russell speaking at a Starbucks, where the employee gave Russell the number of a hitman in Chicago, who was an undercover agent.
The case against her also includes burner phones, another individual hired by Russell who began stalking her ex-husband, and a purported healer who told Russell she had an "85% death rate" for a spell she could cast on the man.
After the couple separated in 2018, Russell filed multiple emergency protection orders against her ex-husband that year, and Russell's attorneys said she believed he was abusing her children — an allegation that a family court judge found was groundless.
Hale will decide her sentence during a July 31 hearing.
Contributing: Andy Wolfson, The Courier-Journal
Contact Krista Johnson at [email protected].
veryGood! (1845)
Related
- Chuck Scarborough signs off: Hoda Kotb, Al Roker tribute legendary New York anchor
- Three things to know about the Hollywood Writers' tentative agreement
- How much does it cost to raise a child? College may no longer be the biggest expense.
- Cricket at the Asian Games reminds of what’s surely coming to the Olympics
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- 3 northern Illinois sheriff’s deputies suffer burns in dynamite disposal operation
- Trump lawyers say prosecutors want to ‘silence’ him with gag order in his federal 2020 election case
- Pilot dies in crash of an ultralight in central New Mexico
- B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
- Canadian auto workers to target General Motors after deal with Ford is ratified
Ranking
- Average rate on 30
- Sophie Turner, Joe Jonas reach temporary agreement over children amid lawsuit, divorce
- Pakistani raid on a militant hideout near Afghanistan leaves 3 militants dead, the military says
- Climate change is making climbing in the Himalayas more challenging, experts say
- Small twin
- Transcript: Sen. Mark Kelly on Face the Nation, Sept. 24, 2023
- 'Sweet' Texas grocery store worker killed when gun went off while trying to pet dog
- Leaf-peeping influencers are clogging a Vermont backroad. The town is closing it
Recommendation
South Korean president's party divided over defiant martial law speech
Rare tickets to Ford’s Theatre on the night Lincoln was assassinated auction for $262,500
San Antonio Police need help finding woman missing since Aug. 11. Here's what to know.
US offers Poland rare loan of $2 billion to modernize its military
Elon Musk's skyrocketing net worth: He's the first person with over $400 billion
Transcript: Ukrainian first lady Olena Zelenska on Face the Nation, Sept. 24, 2023
North Carolina to launch Medicaid expansion on Dec. 1
Amazon invests $4 billion in Anthropic startup known for ChatGPT rival Claude