CHARLOTTE, North Carolina (AP) -- Police may have ignored a
warning years ago that a woman with five dead spouses was trying to
hire a hit man to kill one of the men, investigators in North Carolina
said Monday.
Authorities charged 76-year-old Betty Neumar last month with one count
of solicitation of murder in the July 1986 death of Harold Gentry.
Gentry's brother had begged investigators for two decades to take another look at the case.
Stanly County sheriff's investigators believe Neumar tried to hire several people to kill Gentry.
Lead detective Scott Williams said Monday his office is looking into
the possibility that one of those would-be hit men went to authorities
before Gentry's death, but no one took him seriously.
"That's another aspect we're looking into," Williams said, declining to elaborate.
Neumar has been married
five times since the 1950s, but each union ended with the death of her
husband. Investigators are urging police elsewhere to look into those
deaths.
Williams said that detectives believe Harold Gentry was
Neumar's fourth husband. She and the third husband, Richard "Dick"
Sills, were living in the Florida Keys when he was shot to death in
1965, Williams said. At the time, police said his death was the result
of a self-inflicted gunshot wound. But Williams said Neumar was the
only person in the room when he died.
"They were having a terrible argument and apparently a gunshot went off and he's dead," Williams said.
After his death, Neumar met Gentry in Florida. The couple married in
the late 1970s in Georgia after he retired from the Army and moved to
the town of Norwood, about an hour east of Charlotte.
Gentry was
found shot to death inside the couple's home on July 14, 1986. Three
years later, she married her fifth husband, John Neumar. He died in
October, and authorities in Augusta, Ga., are investigating whether his
death -- officially listed as listed as sepsis, bacterial infection of
the body's blood and tissues -- might have another cause, such as
arsenic poisoning.
Williams said he's still working to uncover
as much as he can about Neumar's first two husbands, both of whom he
said were from Ohio. One died in 1952, the other in 1955. He's also
trying to piece together her life between her second husband's death
and when she married Sills.
"Keep in mind that it appears that
after each husband, she moved on. So she could just tell any story she
wanted to tell," Williams said. "That's just what happened. She would
come up with some pretty wild stories that she told about herself or
what happened to her husbands."
Neumar is
being held on $500,000 bond in the Stanly County jail. A clerk in the
county clerk of courts office said Monday that Neumar does not yet have
an attorney. Her daughter with Harold Gentry, who also lives in
Augusta, has declined to comment.