Current:Home > InvestVermont murder-for-hire case sees third suspect plead guilty-LoTradeCoin
Vermont murder-for-hire case sees third suspect plead guilty
View Date:2025-01-11 15:35:53
RUTLAND, Vt. (AP) — One of the last of four men charged in an international murder-for-hire plot that led to the 2018 abduction and killing of a Vermont man pleaded guilty on Wednesday.
Berk Eratay of Las Vegas was expected to go on trial in September along with key suspect Serhat Gumrukcu of Los Angeles. Eratay changed his plea on charges of wire fraud and arranging to have a third man kidnap and kill Gregory Davis, 49, of Danville, Vermont.
Prosecutors said Davis had been threatening to go to the FBI with information that Gumrukcu, a native of Turkey who immigrated to the United States in 2013, was defrauding Davis in a multimillion-dollar oil deal that Gumrukcu and his brother had entered into with Davis in 2015.
Davis’ wife said that on Jan. 6, 2018, a masked man knocked on the door of the couple’s Danville home and told Davis that he had an arrest warrant for him on racketeering charges. She said they left together.
Davis’ handcuffed body was found the following day on the side of a snowy Vermont back road.
After his death, investigators worked for more than four years to connect the four suspects. They determined that the man who had knocked on the door was Jerry Banks of Colorado; that Banks was friends with Aron Lee Ethridge of Las Vegas; and that Ethridge was friends with Eratay. Eratay worked for Gumrukcu, they said.
Ethridge pleaded guilty in 2022 to helping to arrange the kidnapping and killing of Davis. Banks pleaded guilty last year to murder-for-hire and kidnapping conspiracy. They’re awaiting sentencing.
veryGood! (6653)
Related
- Ford agrees to pay up to $165 million penalty to US government for moving too slowly on recalls
- Elmore Nickleberry, a Memphis sanitation worker who marched with Martin Luther King, has died at 92
- Live updates | Israel rejects genocide case as Mideast tensions rise after US-led strikes in Yemen
- Gucci’s new creative director plunges into menswear with slightly shimmery, subversive classics
- Advocacy group sues Tennessee over racial requirements for medical boards
- Pakistan effectively shuts the key crossing into Afghanistan to truck drivers
- Austin ordered strikes from hospital where he continues to get prostate cancer care, Pentagon says
- Former US Sen. Herb Kohl remembered for his love of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Bucks
- Catholic bishops urged to boldly share church teachings — even unpopular ones
- Demi Moore Shares Favorite Part of Being Grandma to Rumer Willis' Daughter Louetta
Ranking
- What are the best financial advising companies? Help USA TODAY rank the top U.S. firms
- Mary Lou Retton's health insurance explanation sparks some mental gymnastics
- Mississippi Supreme Court won’t hear appeal from death row inmate convicted in 2008 killing
- North Carolina Gov. Cooper gets temporary legal win in fight with legislature over board’s makeup
- Wreck of Navy destroyer USS Edsall known as 'the dancing mouse' found 80 years after sinking
- Navy officer who’d been jailed in Japan over deadly crash now released from US custody, family says
- Lawmakers may look at ditching Louisiana’s unusual ‘jungle primary’ system for a partisan one
- Christian McCaffrey, Tyreek Hill, Fred Warner unanimous selections for AP All-Pro Team
Recommendation
-
What Republicans are saying about Matt Gaetz’s nomination for attorney general
-
Missing Mom Jennifer Dulos Declared Dead Nearly 5 Years After Disappearance
-
U.S. warns of using dating apps after suspicious deaths of 8 Americans in Colombia
-
Defamation case against Nebraska Republican Party should be heard by a jury, state’s high court says
-
Mike Tomlin's widely questioned QB switch to Russell Wilson has quieted Steelers' critics
-
2 brothers fall into frozen pond while ice fishing on New York lake, 1 survives and 1 dies
-
The Australian Open and what to know: Earlier start. Netflix curse? Osaka’s back. Nadal’s not
-
Texas is blocking US border agents from patrols, Biden administration tells Supreme Court