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Inset: David Knezevich. Left: Knezevich allegedly at his estranged wife Ana Knezevich’s apartment in Madrid, Spain. Right: Knezevich at a store in Madrid (FBI).

Evidence in a recent filing in the case of a Florida man accused of traveling to Spain to kidnap and murder his estranged wife includes a note allegedly written by the suspect that federal investigators say provides insight into his mindset in the months leading up to the crime.

David Knezevich is charged in the disappearance and suspected death of 40-year-old Ana Maria Knezevich, who was last seen in February 2024 when she went missing from her apartment in Madrid, Spain. The suspect was indicted last year on charges of kidnapping resulting in death, foreign domestic violence resulting in death and foreign murder of a United States national. Authorities allege David Knezevich flew from Miami to his native Serbia in January 2024, and then drove some 3,200 miles to Madrid where he killed her and disposed of her yet-to-be-found body.

In a motion to oppose bond filed on Jan. 31, the government revealed FBI agents executing a search warrant last May at David Knezevich’s Fort Lauderdale home recovered a notebook where he allegedly wrote down famous quotes. Prosecutors describe these quotes as evidence of the “defendant’s murder mindset.” One quote, attributed to Josef Stalin, said “Death solves all problems. No man. No problem.” There was also a Winston Churchill quote, “When you have to kill a man, it costs nothing to be polite,” according to feds.

David Knezevich quotes

Federal agents recovered this notebook from David Knezevich’s home (DOJ).

Ana Knezevich flew from Miami to Spain in December 2023 to escape her husband, feds say. She reportedly wanted half their assets, something her husband allegedly did not want to give up. The government shared some WhatsApp messages the victim sent to friends discussing her predicament. She wrote that her husband was only offering up 25% of their assets instead of her desired 50%. He eventually verbally agreed to give her half and she demanded that he put it in writing by the end of January 2024 when they filed for divorce, the message said.

The couple had amassed “significant marital assets” during their time together from an IT company they owned and by buying and renting out South Florida vacation properties, according to feds. The assets were “certainly in the millions,” the government wrote. But feds allege David Knezevich killed his wife just a few days after her deadline to split the assets because he didn’t want to share money.

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