Acting Attorney General John J. Hoffman announced that a Pennsylvania woman pleaded guilty today to charges that she attempted to hire a hit man to kill her daughter’s ex-boyfriend in New Jersey and two other people close to him.
The New Jersey State Police foiled the murder-for-hire plot, which the woman planned as an act of revenge because she claimed that the boyfriend was abusive and caused her daughter to have a miscarriage years ago when she was pregnant with twins.
Denise Marie Nagrodski, 52, of Easton, Pa., pleaded guilty today to an accusation charging her with the first-degree crimes of attempted murder and conspiracy to commit murder before Superior Court Judge Robert Reed in Warren County.
Under the plea agreement, the state will recommend that she be sentenced to 10 years in state prison, including 8 ½ years of parole ineligibility under the No Early Release Act.
In pleading guilty, Nagrodski admitted that she conspired with an undercover detective of the New Jersey State Police – who she believed was prepared to act as a hit man for her – to have him kill not only her daughter’s ex-boyfriend, but also the boyfriend’s sister and the sister’s boyfriend. She asked that the boyfriend be burned alive and that the other two intended victims be killed first and then burned.
She told the detective that all three victims lived together in a residence in Somerset County. The attempted murder charge relates to the boyfriend, and the charge of conspiracy to commit murder relates to all three intended victims.
Judge Reed scheduled sentencing for Nagrodski for Oct. 16.
NYPD Intelligence alerted the New Jersey State Police in October 2014 that Nagrodski wanted to hire a hit man. A member of the State Police Violent Organized Crime Control South Bureau posed as a hit man, and on Nov. 21, Nagrodski met him at the Phillipsburg Mall in Lopatcong, to outline how she wanted him to kill all three victims. Regarding her daughter’s ex-boyfriend, she told the detective to “burn him alive” and make sure he knew she was responsible.
She asked that the boyfriend’s sister and the sister’s boyfriend each be shot twice in the forehead, “one for each twin” miscarried by her daughter.
Ultimately, she agreed that the purported hit man should instead “bash in” the heads of those two victims and set their house on fire, because she could not provide him with a gun. She paid the detective $500. Before she left, he said, “Once you step out of the car, this is on.” She replied, “I need it done.”
Nagrodski was arrested about 7:30 p.m. on Nov. 25, 2014 on Route 22 as she drove away from a second meeting with the undercover detective at the Phillipsburg Mall.
At the second meeting, Nagrodski provided the detective with photos of the intended victims, drew him a map to the house where she believed all of the victims lived, and paid him $500, which was the balance of the $1,000 she had agreed to pay him. Both meetings were secretly recorded.
Nagrodski has remained in the Warren County Jail since her arrest with bail set at $2 million, cash only.