
Curtis Wayne Wright
Curtis Wayne Wright became known in American criminal history after participating in the 2015 murder-for-hire of Dr. Teresa Sievers in Bonita Springs, Florida. A longtime friend of Teresa's husband, Mark Sievers, Wright helped plan the killing before recruiting Jimmy Rodgers to assist in carrying out the attack. Wright later pleaded guilty, cooperated with prosecutors, and testified against both Rodgers and Mark Sievers, making him the key witness in one of Florida's most high-profile murder-for-hire cases.

Jimmy Rodgers
James "Jimmy" Rodgers became one of Florida's most notorious contract killers after participating in the 2015 murder of Dr. Teresa Sievers in Bonita Springs. Hired through a murder-for-hire plot orchestrated by Teresa's husband, Mark Sievers, Rodgers travelled from Missouri to Florida with Curtis Wayne Wright and fatally attacked the victim inside her home. His conviction, along with those of his co-conspirators, brought an end to one of the state's most widely publicized murder-for-hire investigations.

Mark Sievers
Mark Sievers became infamous after orchestrating the brutal murder-for-hire killing of his wife inside their Florida home in 2015. The case shocked the United States because the victim was a highly respected physician and mother, while investigators later uncovered a conspiracy involving Sievers, close friends and hired killers. Authorities described the crime as a calculated and financially motivated murder plot driven by greed, personal dysfunction and manipulation. The investigation later exposed disturbing details involving staged alibis, conspiracy planning and violent execution-style attacks, transforming the case into one of Florida’s most heavily publicized murder-for-hire prosecutions.

Rabbi Fred Neulander
Rabbi Fred Neulander became one of America’s most infamous religious figures convicted of murder after orchestrating the 1994 killing of his wife, Carol Neulander, in a case widely known as “The Synagogue Murder-For-Hire.” A respected rabbi and prominent spiritual leader in Cherry Hill, New Jersey, Neulander shocked the nation after prosecutors alleged he hired hitmen to murder his wife while maintaining the outward image of a devoted husband and community figure. The case generated enormous national attention because of Neulander’s status within the Jewish religious community and the calculated nature of the murder-for-hire plot. Investigators later uncovered evidence involving secret affairs, financial motives, and hired attackers who staged the killing to resemble a burglary gone wrong. The combination of religious authority, hidden double lives, and contract killing allegations made the case one of the most notorious clergy-related murder prosecutions in modern American criminal history.

Rich Hoover
Richard “Rich” Hoover became known in true crime history after participating in the 1985 murder-for-hire killing of 24-year-old Army veteran Rodney Fancher in Nashville, Michigan. Prosecutors alleged Hoover acted as the contract killer in a conspiracy orchestrated by members of Fancher’s future in-laws, turning the homicide into one of Michigan’s most disturbing family-driven murder plots. The case attracted major attention because the murder was allegedly motivated by efforts to prevent Rodney Fancher from marrying his fiancée. Investigators later uncovered a conspiracy involving multiple offenders connected to the victim’s future wife and her parents. The calculated nature of the killing, combined with the betrayal and financial arrangement behind the murder, made the case heavily discussed in true crime media and murder-for-hire case reporting for decades.

Richard Glossip
Richard Glossip is an American man whose murder conviction became one of the most controversial criminal cases in modern U.S. legal history. Convicted in connection with the 1997 killing of motel owner Barry Van Treese in Oklahoma City, Glossip maintained his innocence for decades while facing multiple execution dates. The case drew international attention due to allegations of unreliable testimony, prosecutorial concerns, and questions surrounding the integrity of the conviction. His legal battle became a major focal point in debates over the death penalty, wrongful convictions, and the reliability of incentivized witness testimony.