This is Part 1 of a hidden-camera video of Dalia Dippolito hiring a hit man to kill her husband. They calmly plan the murder as they sit in the parking lot of a CVS pharmacy. But unbeknownst to Dalia, the "hit man" was actually an undercover cop.
Full Video (all three parts): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=177r9eAOZsU
Part 1: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pRri2FQrSAI
Part 2: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nh42gmCzJuQ
Part 3: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9uA0j-AW_CE
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Aug 5, 2009 ... A South Florida woman was arrested Wednesday for allegedly hiring an undercover police officer to kill her husband of six months, authorities said.
Dalia Dippolito, 26, was charged with solicitation to commit first-degree murder and taken to the Palm Beach County jail, Boynton Beach Police Department spokeswoman Stephanie Slater said. Bond had not yet been set and it was unclear if she had an attorney.
Dippolito gave an informant pictures of her husband, 38-year-old Michael Dippolito, and $1,200 for a hit man to purchase a handgun, according to a probable cause affidavit. She also offered to create an alibi for herself and detailed her husband's daily schedule.
An undercover officer posing as a hit man called Dippolito on Monday afternoon and arranged a meeting. The officer asked for $3,000 in cash and a key to the couple's home. The undercover officer later met Dippolito in a pharmacy parking lot and asked if she was sure she wanted her husband killed.
She laughed, according to the according to the affidavit, and said: "I will be very happy."
Dippolito discussed getaway routes, her home's security system, the location of her husband on Wednesday and the fee for the task, and the officer again asked if the woman was sure.
"I'm not going to change my mind," she responded, according to the documents. "I am 5,000 percent sure I want it done. When I set my mind to something, I get it done."
Authorities staged an elaborate crime scene outside the Dippolito home on Wednesday morning, complete with yellow crime tape and several police vehicles.
"The bottom line is, we wanted her to believe without question that when she arrived that her husband was dead," Slater said.
Officers then contacted Dippolito at her gym and told her to come to the house. When an officer told Dippolito that her husband was dead, she broke down in tears, a video of the operation shows.
Dippolito was then taken to the Boynton Beach Police Department, where she was told of the investigation and arrested. Michael Dippolito, who was informed of the case Wednesday morning, was also at the police department, as was the undercover officer who Dalia Dippolito believed was going to kill her husband, according to a police news release.
A call to a telephone number listed for Michael Dippolito connected with a signal that sounded like a fax machine. A call to a cell phone number for Dalia Dippolito was unanswered and a message was not immediately returned.
"It seems like it just hasn't hit him yet," Slater said of Michael Dippolito. "But the more he thinks about it, the more things that have happened over the past couple months are starting to make sense to him."
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Racist, sexist, xenophobic, and homophobic comments will be deleted. Comments about idiotic behavior are thoroughly encouraged.
Did you know that this woman was sentenced to 30 years in jail, but got out on bail for $500,000 3 months into her sentence. She is now under house arrest only 3 miles away from her ex-husband.
nrdify 4 months ago
@nrdify She was actually only sentenced to 20 years. But most of what you say is correct.
nathanjamesbaker 4 months ago
@nathanjamesbaker I saw the entire "Dateline NBC" of this womans story last Friday night. The judge sentenced her to 30 years (and gave her a piece of his mind). Although either way it it still ridiculous
nrdify 4 months ago
@nrdify I doubt Dateline said 30 years, because that's wrong. I've been following the case from the beginning, and I guarantee the judge sentenced her to 20 years. There's even a video about it here on YouTube: watch?v=vg4PreCu4zY
nathanjamesbaker 4 months ago
@nathanjamesbaker She actually was sentenced to 20 years & she received credit for time served.
cdiesel1208 1 month ago
@cdiesel1208 I looked this up and you're right, but at the moment her case is on appeal and she is still on house arrest at her mother's house. I wonder how exactly the time she's currently spending on house arrest will count as "time served" when she eventually has to go to jail. One day on house arrest shouldn't equal one day in jail.
nathanjamesbaker 1 month ago