Frankfort Lawyer Charged With Trying to Put Hit on Wife
A Frankfort lawyer locked up in the county jail allegedly offered to pay as many as four inmates to kill his wife.
A Frankfort lawyer jailed for allegedly unleashing a brutal beating on his wife in a courthouse hallway was charged with offering to pay at least four fellow inmates thousands of dollars to kill the woman.
It was unclear where attorney Robert Gold-Smith, 50, planned to get the money to pay for his wife's murder, as he told Judge Marzell Richardson he is broke, homeless and unable to pay for an attorney.
Judge Richardson assigned a public defender to Gold-Smith's case during a brief hearing Tuesday afternoon.
Gold-Smith will be back in court Oct. 17—both for the murder-for-hire case and the shocking allegations of viciously beating his wife, Victoria Smith, 45, outside a Joliet courtroom as they left a divorce hearing in November 2010.
Gold-Smith was released on $2,500 bail shortly after his arrest but was locked up again in March 2011 after he allegedly violated his bond by contacting his wife.
Gold-Smith's attorneys have been trying to prove he is psychologically unfit to stand trial for the alleged attack on his wife. While in custody on that case, Gold-Smith made the acquaintance of Brian McDaniel, a 49-year-old Morris man most recently jailed on a charge of domestic battery and a warrant from the Department of Corrections.
Gold-Smith allegedly solicited McDaniel for the murder of his wife, offering him cash for the job last week.
The police had a warrant for Gold-Smith's arrest within days of the alleged cash-for-killing offer to McDaniel. But McDaniel wasn't the first person to tell such a story about Gold-Smith to the police. He wasn't even the third.
Back in August 2011, Richard Williams, 40, formerly of Joliet and now of Pinckneyville Correctional Center, told police he had "numerous" "friendly" conversations with Gold-Smith until the night his fellow inmate told him, "I'll pay you to kill my wife. I want it done clean."
The overture "shocked" Williams, according to a police report. But Williams thought it over "and spoke to his wife, who advised him to notify law enforcement," the report said.
Williams was willing to wear a wire, police said, and so was Richard Bauer, 52, of New Lenox.
Bauer was also locked up with Gold-Smith, and just like Williams, reportedly said Gold-Smith wanted him to kill his wife.
Gold-Smith told Bauer to "'get rid of the b----' and 'I want the b---- offed'" in June 2011 according to a police report.
The report said Gold-Smith blamed Smith for ruining his life, "that he would lose his profession as an attorney, he would lose his house, he already lost his automobile, and that Gold-Smith's wife was having an affair with a black man."
Bauer reportedly told police Gold-Smith offered him $10,000 to take his wife's life, with an uncle paying $5,000 up front and the rest coming when Gold-Smith got out of jail.
A man who lives at the same New Lenox house as Bauer and also happened to be locked up with Gold-Smith said he, too, was asked about killing the lawyer's wife. Much like Williams and Bauer, Sutton told detectives he was "willing to cooperate with the police in any way possible," according to a report.
Reached by telephone Tuesday, Sutton declined to comment.
"I can't talk about this right now," he said.
Sutton also reportedly said that after he was released from jail in April 2011, Gold-Smith gave him power of attorney, had him withdraw $900 from a New Lenox bank, put $200 on Gold-Smith's jail commissary account and pay Bauer $100. He also had Sutton clean out his Frankfort office and the Lockport apartment he moved to after his wife kicked him out of their Homer Glen home.
At Gold-Smith's behest, Sutton and Bauer then went to the Plainfield law office of Robert Kramer and collected two boxes of files, according to a police report. Kramer represented Gold-Smith in his divorce case.
Sutton and Bauer took the boxes of files, which were labeled "Gonzalez," to the Joliet home of Sutton's brother, police said, where they burned them.
Deputy Chief Ken Kaupas of the Will County Sheriff's Department said investigators believe the burned files contained information about Gold-Smith's business dealings.
Kramer, the Plainfield attorney who allegedly held the files for Gold-Smith and turned them over to Bauer and Sutton, failed to return calls for comment.
At least one man wore a wire for police to try to implicate Gold-Smith in the alleged murder plot. Telephone conversations were recorded with Gold-Smith's aunt and uncle, police said, and a recording device was placed in the roof of the county jail in September 2011.
Also in September 2011, an inmate was wired to record a jailhouse conversation with Gold-Smith.
Gold-Smith patted down the inmate wearing the wire but failed to find it, police said.
The inmate still believed Gold-Smith was suspicious, according to a police report, and he apparently got nothing incriminating out of the talk.
According to a police report, while discussing the idea of murdering his wife on the recording, Gold-Smith told the wired inmate: "Everybody has crazy fantasies, you know? In reality, that's all they are."
Flora Dora
7:07 pm on Tuesday, October 9, 2012
You can have a fantasy but to pay someone to fulfill it for you is taking it beyond simple fantasy!
Gerry Wright
11:37 pm on Tuesday, October 9, 2012
They look like the cast of a "B-Movie". Unbelievable. I guess he's miffed at his EX.
They should post HER picture so all the local men know what will drive you this crazy !
Michele V
9:54 am on Wednesday, October 10, 2012
You seriously think SHE was the problem in the marriage? Cause he's so sweet and innocent?
Infamous Steve
10:03 am on Wednesday, October 10, 2012
Yea show her picture...that way everyone would know who he wanted dead. Then all you have to do it try to collect from him.
Opinion 1
7:29 am on Wednesday, October 10, 2012
Why is he smiling in his photo? That tells a lot.
James Madison
7:01 pm on Wednesday, October 10, 2012
Did this guy take his wife's name in the hyphenated Gold-Smith? Or did the patch do this for explanation purposes? Either way, it's weird...
Gerri Knickerson
11:20 pm on Wednesday, October 10, 2012
Robert Gold Smith is his name- robert g smith.
Joseph Hosey
7:17 am on Thursday, October 11, 2012
Really? The why is he registered with the state ARDC as Robert W. Gold-Smith?
http://www.iardc.org/ldetail.asp?id=916817792
Gerri Knickerson
8:33 am on Thursday, October 11, 2012
Hosey-
Bad link: illegal operation
Dude has multiple aliases, multiple sets of books, multiple personalities.
Joseph Hosey
8:37 am on Thursday, October 11, 2012
Gerry—thanks for the tip.
James Madison
9:55 am on Thursday, October 11, 2012
You can't use an alias with the ARDC, unless you've passed the bar twice under each alias, and pay the license fee twice every period. Methinks he took his wife's name, as is the sensitive-guy thing to do nowadays.
Elmer Fudd
11:11 am on Thursday, October 11, 2012
bob added his wife's name to his when he married. Perhaps he wanted a fresh start or perhaps he had debt or bad credit as Robert Gold? But why is his name so relevant? This story is about a talented but deranged and self sabotaging attorney who ruined his life and his family. And as far as publishing his wife's picture, don't you think the poor woman has been through enough?
Lenny Bruce
8:21 am on Friday, October 12, 2012
If he was such a talented attorney and she was such a nice person, how did she end-up with the house in Homer Glen and he an apartment?
Skb
10:29 am on Friday, October 12, 2012
If woman didn't drive us nuts and the courts automatically give them the kids and all our property when we have to divorce them then maybe they wouldn't get killed as much.
Skb
10:31 am on Friday, October 12, 2012
If they didn't get all our property,pensions,and the kids automatically then they probably would get killed less.
Rosie Toes
10:56 am on Friday, October 12, 2012
Joe Hosey/James Madison/Gerri Knickerson/Elmer Fudd-- Here is the FACTUAL information about Robert W. Gold-Smith's name. He is a FORMER close friend of my significant other. The reason he changed his name was that at his first job as an attorney, he worked with a very successful Jewish Lawyer whose name started with Gold. Because he saw how many clients his colleague had, he legally changed his name in order to make it sound Jewish. No more need for speculation on Bob's name. Thank you....
Skb
4:36 pm on Friday, October 12, 2012
I'm sure he changed his name after his law partner. I call BS
Bill Smith
4:51 pm on Friday, October 12, 2012
I happen to be Bob' twin brother. The REAL reason he changed his name is because of a fashion trend.
Do you remember in the 90's all the rappers got those 'Gold' grills in their mouth? Well Bob had one too, and loved to display it. He lost his beloved grill in the divorce.
We can now end all speculation.
Rosie Toes
4:52 pm on Saturday, October 13, 2012
Funny, Bill. Bob doesn't have a twin brother. Joke's on you, I guess.
Skb
6:54 pm on Saturday, October 13, 2012
Lol
Skb
6:55 pm on Saturday, October 13, 2012
I think he likes gold.
Smh
6:36 am on Wednesday, October 17, 2012
Why is everyone more interested in this guys name than the fact he tried hiring people to murder his wife?