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Video records the panic of Tamarac's mother while finding trackers on the car – months before she was murdered – NBC 6 South Florida

A month after Mary Gingles received an injunction against him in February 2024, her husband Nathan calculated his American Express card for something from a company called HAPN 702 US dollars.

Seven months later, in which the financial documents were checked in their divorce, Mary was curious, researched Hapn and learned that according to Sheriff's investigative reports GPS tracking devices.

At the urge of her lawyer, she went to her home in Tamarac, switched on the camera of her phone and recorded what she found in the passenger side well from her 2023 Mitsubishi Outlander: A Hapn GPS tracker.

“It is in the back of the car,” she hears with a panicked voice in video that was preserved on Friday by NBC6 Investigates.

“Take a photo,” she continues.

This afternoon she took several pictures, including a video about the “No Handling Contact” Heur, who drove a judge in force, who was parked her “exclusive use” of the property in whose driveway her car (with which only in her name) was parked.

This arrangement that the judge wrote was “enforceable by law enforcement authorities” and said that neither she nor Nathan Gingles could “stalk, harass, harass (or) annoy”.

The videos from a copy of this order to the device that Mary removed from her car, she told an investigator she believed that he was planted by Nathan in violation of Nathan's order.

She reported it to the Broward Sheriff on this day, October 29, 2024, and told them she feared that the man from whom she was divorced would kill her.

On February 16, he supposedly did: stirring into the house to shoot Mary's father David Ponzer in his head and pursue Mary when she searched for security in the house of a neighbor, where he and the neighbor Andrew Ferrin shot her to death.

Toted for the crimes, video surveillance videos show the neighborhood: 4-year-old seraphine that the police informed that she saw everything.

On more than 100 pages of e -mails published by BSO on NBC6, there is no evidence that Detectives have tried to connect the tracker to Nathan until after December 29, as Gingles to find information that she had hidden in her garage: adhesive tape, zipper, plastic film, Rubber gloves and other objects that could be used in a crime.

A deputy sent an e -mail to the leading detective in November and claimed that he tried to call Mary because of the tracker -but her number was “separated”. This contradicts a jury that Mary made when she was looking for a second injunction in December, in which she stated that she tried several times to contact this deputy by e -mail and phone, but he never replied.

Mary sent the videos, photos and on January 2nd the device himself to the sheriff's office, as the sheriff's records show, but nobody arrested Nathan.

Both the deputy, who was not related to Mary and the main detective, were exposed to an internal investigation – as well as six others who were either involved in the case of domestic violence or reaction to the murders.

When Sheriff Gregory Tony assumed responsibility for failures in the case, he pointed out the tracker report as a missed opportunity and said in February: “It is clear that we could probably have done more in this element.”

A judge in Broward heard arguments in a case in which a 4-year-old girl who experiences a 4-year-old girl who experienced the murder of her mother, grandfather and neighbor in Tamarac in February. Tony Pipitone from NBC6 reports

After the December report on the articles found in the garage, he added: “There was enough where we could possibly have followed an affidavit for the likely cause so that we could arrest it and take it off the street.”

One of the documents published by BSO includes a search command of January 16 for the electronic content of the tracker. The attached affidavit said it was used to find evidence that Nathan committed crimes.

However, this copy of the document does not contain the signature of a judge, and it is never recorded. After NBC6 broadcast his report on this case on Friday, the public prosecutor's office of the Broward Prosecutor published copies of all copies of all with the tracker in connection with the tracker – and everyone is dated the murder.

Nathan Gingles was arrested and Seraphine was saved about five hours after the shootings after BSO had followed her on a Wal-Mart parking lot. He is charged with the first degree murder and the state has announced that he was looking for the death penalty. He did not know his guilty.

As she is called, Nathan tries to have a cousin that lives in Idaho, while Mary's sister asks the same dish to give her custody of the girl who remains in a temporary nursing home, as the case leads his way through the Broward Family Court.

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