Would You Sex The Lone Woman On The FBI’s 10 Most Wanted List If She Wasn’t A Cold-Blooded Killer?

The answer is yes. And I would too. 

The lone woman on the FBI’s 10 Most Wanted list is now in police custody in Mexico after six months on the run.

According to Death and Taxes, 33-year-old Brenda Delgado allegedly orchestrated the murder of 35-year-old pediatric dentist Kendra Hatcher (pictured below) after learning that Hatcher had been dating her ex-boyfriend Ricardo Paniagua, a dermatologist and clinical professor at University of California, San Francisco.

Delgado, who was studying to be a dental hygienist, reportedly became unhinged after she found out that her ex had taken his new beau home to meet his parents and that they had planned a romantic getaway together.

Delgado then hired two people, Kristopher Love, 32, and Crystal Cortes, 24, to kill Hatcher. She offered Cortes $500 to drive the getaway Jeep Cherokee after Love shot her. Love was allegedly promised cash and an endless stream of drugs from a cartel that Delgado claimed she had ties to. Oh ya, and Delgado threatened to kill Cortes and her young son if either snitched.

Love and Cortes reportedly waited for Hatcher in the garage of her Dallas home and fatally shot her back in September. Cortes turned herself in to police two days after the murder, and Love was arrested about a month after the crime. Both were charged with capital murder. And both separately snitched on Delgado.

Authorities questioned Delgado a few days after the murder, but they didn’t have enough evidence to hold her. She then split for Mexico for six months until she was apprehended in Mexico on Friday and is being held in a prison in Mexico City while she awaits extradition.

Still yes? Guilt looks like it does a number on someone.

Ya me too.

[h/t Death and Taxes]

Matt Keohan Avatar
Matt’s love of writing was born during a sixth grade assembly when it was announced that his essay titled “Why Drugs Are Bad” had taken first prize in D.A.R.E.’s grade-wide contest. The anti-drug people gave him a $50 savings bond for his brave contribution to crime-fighting, and upon the bond’s maturity 10 years later, he used it to buy his very first bag of marijuana.