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Philip Markoff, Alleged Craigslist Killer, Found DEAD, Commits Suicide In Jail Cell

STEPHEN SINGER   08/15/10 07:56 PM ET   AP

Philip Markoff

A former medical student accused of killing a masseuse he met through Craigslist committed suicide in the Boston jail where he was awaiting trial, authorities said Sunday.

Philip Markoff, 24, was found unresponsive in his cell Sunday morning in the Nashua Street Jail, the Suffolk County district attorney's office said in an e-mailed statement, and he was pronounced dead at about 10:15 a.m.

"Markoff was alone in his cell, and all evidence collected thus far indicates that he took his own life," the statement said.

Authorities will investigate to determine the facts and circumstances surrounding his death, the district attorney said.

Saturday would have been Markoff's first wedding anniversary, but his nuptials were canceled after his arrest.

Markoff, a former Boston University student, pleaded not guilty in the fatal shooting of Julissa Brisman, of New York City, and the armed robbery of a Las Vegas woman. Both crimes happened at Boston hotels within the span of four days in April 2009. Rhode Island prosecutors also accused him of attacking a stripper that week.

His trial in the Massachusetts cases was expected in March.

Markoff's lawyer, John Salsberg, said he was shocked and saddened about his client's death. He would not comment further.

Markoff had met the women through advertisements for erotic services posted on Craigslist, a classified advertising Web site, prosecutors said.

The Boston Police Department crime lab identified two blood stains taken from swabs on a handgun that was seized during a search of Markoff's apartment in Quincy, Mass., said prosecutors, who alleged Markoff used the weapon to bludgeon Brisman before she was shot three times at close range.

Investigators also found several other items in the apartment, including four pairs of women's underwear wrapped inside socks and hidden in a box spring, authorities said.

A lawyer said Brisman's family was "shocked and dismayed" to hear of Markoff's death.

"Their grief for Jullissa is as fresh today as the day over a year ago when Markoff took Julissa away from them," Boston attorney Djuna Perkins said in an e-mail. "The long-awaited criminal prosecution was their only opportunity to confront him, and now he has taken that away as well."

Still, she said, the family will pursue other "avenues to seek justice" and to help ensure others do not fall victim to violence. She said the family has asked a federal prosecutor in New Hampshire to investigate the gun shop used in the crime.

Markoff was engaged at the time of his arrest. His fiancee, Megan McAllister, ended the relationship with Markoff after visiting him in jail, and their wedding, scheduled for Aug. 14, 2009, was canceled.

In April 2009, Markoff, who had been arrested during a traffic stop as he drove to a Connecticut casino, was placed on suicide watch at the jail where he was being held. Newspaper reports said authorities had found shoelace marks on his neck.

Markoff's parents, Susan Haynes and Richard Markoff, didn't speak to reporters about their son at the time but said through his attorney they loved him very much and supported him. The attorney said then the parents were "very concerned about him," but he wouldn't discuss his client's condition.

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07:34 PM on 08/17/2010
Ok guys - which one of you here did it?
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Lorianne
ama vitam
01:21 PM on 08/17/2010
I don't trust Big Media but I trust Big Bureaucracy even less.
Government bureacracies are never nuetral ... NEVER.

When are we going to learn this?

Big Bus loves Big Gov bueaucracy because they can buy it off in ways we can't even imagine and the voting public cannot be nimble enough to combat it. We can't even control all the graft and fraud that is going on with the levels of bureacracy we have now!

In contrast, boycott movements can turn big business practices around on a dime if the public gets niggled enough with them. No waiting around for 2, 4 or 6 years to vote out 20-30 politicians who gave 'special favors' to one business or and then repealing a morass of favoritism laws.

Neither choice is ideal, but relying on a den of bureaucrats to determine 'nuetrality' (with all the behind the scenes big lobbying money from the media giants) is the worst option we could possibly choose.

Either way we'll end up with monopolies, but the question is which one way can monopolies be more easily broken?
01:46 PM on 08/17/2010
This might be off-topic. I think you meant to post this on that thing about Net Neutrality...
12:19 PM on 08/17/2010
A very sad story of 2 deaths with ramifications worth investigating to determine how many crimes were committed and by whom
07:47 PM on 08/16/2010
Make prostitution legal.
Fewer shadows for criminals to lurk.
02:39 PM on 08/17/2010
Yeah, but was it the sex, or the dominance murder holds that empowered this sick individual?
09:45 PM on 08/17/2010
I honestly have no answer to your question. I have no idea what goes through a mind like his and I hope I don't ever know.

My point is that it would make it more difficult for someone like this murderer to find a victim, if the prostitutes were able to be regular law abiding citizens, that had the full protection of contractual law behind them and were able to practice their business as any other butcher, baker or candlestick maker would.
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dwilson424
If you disagree teach me
06:13 PM on 08/16/2010
At least we dont have to pay 52k per a year to keep him in prision
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USNDC
Smartest President ever ? ... not even close.
05:24 PM on 08/16/2010
The summer of punishing painful progress.
04:06 PM on 08/16/2010
Wow, a lot of hateful and vengeful comments here... First of all, Markoff was never found guilty of the crime of which he was accused. Secondly, regardless of his guilt, this is a human life - with parents, siblings, people that probably loved him despite any horrible thing he may have done. Third, the fear and loathing necessary (sorry, Hunter S.) to course through a person's mind to enough to make them take their own life is a nightmare in and of itself. I think the people that are applauding his suicide are suffering from a sickness themselves and need to take a 2nd look at their own humanity.

"Compassion will cure more sins than condemnation" - Henry Ward Beecher
Winedude
Always enjoying fun in the sun...
05:40 PM on 08/16/2010
Sir, you aren't dealing in reality. It is very difficult to be sympathetic to a man that looked up women on Craigslist, called them and then murdered them onsite. Just because he hadn't yet gone to trial doesn't mean he didn't do it. He obviously felt some guilt, enough to put his shoe laces together and kill himself. The living victims, including the parents of the woman (or women) he killed are probably glad that they don't have to sit through a trial and relive the horrors of what this psycho did to their daughters.
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Mister Biggles
06:34 PM on 08/16/2010
Fanned.

You get it.
09:57 PM on 08/16/2010
Yes, you are right, just because he didn't go to trial doesn't mean he's guilty. And even if he were acquitted, it wouldn't mean he wasn't guilty. But the condemnation of people before they are even tried seems pretty much the norm of today's media. Your judgment that because he killed himself automatically=he was guilty of the crime is somewhat flawed. It is perhaps true, yes, but applauding his death -- really?
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TheLightFantastic
06:36 PM on 08/16/2010
Others are free to make their own choices and place their pity with people whom they feel are more deserving of such an emotion. Just because you choose to waste time and pity over this accused murderer does not mean others who choose not to are bad people or have emotional problems.

If you were so worried about humanity, you'd be out volunteering your time or raising money for those in need instead of attempting to admonish people on a website because their hearts don't bleed for some guy who didn't want to answer for his crimes.

Your comment is hypocritical as it is just as judgmental as those you have such a problem with. Couching your comment in a few fifty cent words and adding a quote from dead guy does not make it deep and thoughtful. Get off your high horse.
09:53 PM on 08/16/2010
Wow, I'm not sure you know what hypocritical means...how do you know how I spend my free time, LightFan? I never said I didn't feel, very wholeheartedly, for the victim and her family. And yes, as a matter of fact, my quote does make it deep and thoughtful...

"Copy from one, it's plagiarism; copy from two, it's research"

Also, I'm not sure what 50 Cent words I used...? I don't think I ever said "I ain't got to write rhymes, I got bricks in the hood"...Curtis would be ticked if I plagiarized off him!
10:12 PM on 08/16/2010
Actually, never mind the first part of my reply below...I WAS being a hypocrite and on a high horse. But I still stand by that comment, sometimes you need to get on a high horse...
04:02 PM on 08/16/2010
"Massuese ... what a farce....hooker. Not that it makes a difference but get it right."



Shame on you, If it doesn't make a difference then why did you feel the need to point it out. Hooker or not she didn't deserve this.
03:55 PM on 08/16/2010
I'm still laughing at his fiance with her over-expensive registry and her big fancy wedding. "Good new, I'm marrying a doctor. Bad news. He's a serial killer".
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Captain Crunch
We are sorry, your micro-bio did not meet our guid
09:21 AM on 08/17/2010
But then, the good news again is that she found out the bad news before she's married to him and the great news is that she wasn't killed by him.
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debby6669
02:49 PM on 08/16/2010
At least he gets points for being consistent; always a coward. Going after women, not being able to face the consequences of his actions.

Yup, he was a dependable coward.
11:50 PM on 08/20/2010
Eh, I don't know about that. The cowards all beg and plead to avoid the death penalty or life in prison. I don't think it's necessarily the coward's way out to commit suicide but I do think it was the best option, even though the victims might not get the closure they may want - a chance to confront the killer. But it's better that he didn't waste tax payers' $$ on a trial and lengthy imprisonment. For those who say that they feel for his family and are surprised that so many people are happy he's dead, he wasn't going to see the light of day and he would have been a murderer forever. Yeah, they could visit him but for all intents and purposes he was already gone.
02:00 PM on 08/16/2010
I wonder...was it morality or ethics that got to him.
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yoyodyne666
is it friday yet?
03:35 PM on 08/16/2010
It was bubba the prison guard ...
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01:45 PM on 08/17/2010
or the gun lobbyist that saw where this case was headed had they been allowed to proceed with evidence against the uncertainties of how he was able to obtain a handgun in this shop without proper paperwork or registration which could have come out at the time of trial.
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westphilly726
Just call me Hot Stuff
01:51 PM on 08/16/2010
Unfortunately any money saved by taxpayers will probably go towards a lawsuit against the jail.
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02:05 PM on 08/16/2010
And yes it should go to lawsuit as he was not proven guilty yet and it is the duty of Jail and its personal to make sure everybody is safe.
11:57 PM on 08/20/2010
Come on - so who should a parent sue when an adult who isn't incarcerated commits suicide? It is not up to the prison to babysit every inmate. He was on suicide watch for a reasonable period of time after he was arrested. It's completely preposterous to think that an inmate should be on suicide watch for their entire incarceration. Anyone can become suicide and you wouldn't necessarily know it beforehand. Are you going to hire a guard on each person you know in the off chance that they can become suicidal? He was deemed no longer a suicide threat so was taken off suicide watch. Of course he would be depressed in prison, who wouldn't. That doesn't mean that he will always be suicidal for the duration of his imprisonment and if he were, no amount of babysitting would prevent him from carrying out his suicide eventually.
01:40 PM on 08/16/2010
How can a prisoner on suicide watch have shoe laces?
Seems to me it's been a staple of movies for at least twenty years that prisoners are not allowed to have shoe laces, and certainly not prisoners supposedly on suicide watch.
Perhaps Hollywood has misled me. Still, if I would have thought to take away his shoelaces, I suppose I'd expect professional jailers to think of it.
10:01 PM on 08/16/2010
You'd be amazed at the things they hide in their bums.
01:14 PM on 08/16/2010
Good for him. I call for a encore, if at all possible.
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Donuthole
Fiction writer
12:46 PM on 08/16/2010
Reminds me of Andrew Cunanan and Dr. Harold Shipman. Their suicides were, imo, more to do with their loss of freedom and self-determination, their anger at the system for having the temerity to put any kind of restriction on their behavior, than any hint of remorse for their crimes/victims. Organized psychopaths don't get there because of bad parenting, they are self-created monsters who have channeled their inchoate rage into anti-social outlets through many years of violent fantasizing/visualizing.
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MamacitaOfLove
Micro-bio curious
04:23 PM on 08/16/2010
F&F. Excellent post.
Alonzo
Discount anything I say about myself.
07:03 PM on 08/17/2010
I am not convinced that they are all "self-created" if mean they have asserted their conscious will to become monsters. There is also DNA, cells, brain matter and the great unkown to undertstand, and some of what we call, because we don't know any better, blind luck