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- Nancy Lathams Attempted Murder: Who Tried to Kill Her?
ID’s ‘Forbidden: Dying for Love: A Deadly Divorce’ is an episode that explores the convoluted 2013 murder-for-hire plot targeting Nancy Latham that fortunately never saw the light of day
- Ex-Bank of America executive charged with trying to have his estranged . . .
The alleged contract killing plot was uncovered back in April when Latham's four alleged co-conspirators were arrested and charged with conspiring to kill Nancy Latham
- Banker and mistress busted in murder-for-hire plot against wife
She's a wealthy socialite, married to one of South Carolina's most successful bankers But where these two lives from opposite ends intersect reveals an unbelievably dark and twisted conspiracy to commit murder Nancy Latham thrived in the well-heeled circles of Charleston, South Carolina
- Target of murder-for-hire plot grateful for ex-husbands conviction
Nancy Cannon said she plans to plead to the judge to give her ex-husband the maximum sentence Chris Latham is facing up to ten years in prison, and Wendy Moore is facing up to 30 years behind bars
- Chris Latham, former Bank of America executive, charged with plotting . . .
Nancy Latham has reportedly denied those accusations and says it's hard for her to come to terms with the fact that her one-time husband wanted to have her murdered
- Chris Latham: Where is Nancy Cannon’s Ex-Husband Now?
In April 2013, a routine traffic stop in Charleston, South Carolina, led the police to uncover a cold-blooded murder-for-hire plot that ended in multiple arrests The intended target was Nancy Cannon, who had been estranged from her then-husband, Chris Latham
- Alleged Victim in Murder-for-Hire Plot Was in Nasty Divorce
The court proceedings were called off when officers discovered that three suspects had been hired to kill Nancy Latham All three remain in police custody today, according to jail records
- Ex-Charleston banker Latham, mistress deflect blame in failed . . .
But his mistress, also convicted in the scheme, has blamed Latham himself Those arguments, which Latham and Wendy Moore penned themselves, failed to win a second chance at sentencing
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