Fred Tokars, the Atlanta lawyer who hired a hitman to murder his wife in front of their two young sons, dies in prison aged 67

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An Atlanta lawyer, who hired a hitman to kidnap and kill his wife in front of their two young sons, has died in prison at the age of 67.

Fred Tokers masterminded his wife’s murder in 1992. He was convicted of the murder in 1997 while he was already serving a life sentence for racketeering.  

Tokars died of natural causes over the weekend at a prison in Pennsylvania after experiencing fever for several days, according to his attorney, Jerry Froelich.

Froelich said Tokars suffered from a host of health issues including multiple sclerosis, and hadn’t walked in 10 years.

Tokars maintained his innocence in his wife’s murder up until his death. 

Sara Tokars was kidnapped at her home in Marietta on Thanksgiving weekend in 1992, along with her children Ricky and Mike, who were six and four at the time.   

Fred Tokars, the Atlanta lawyer who hired a hitman to murder his wife in front of their two young sons, dies in prison aged 67

The kidnapper, later identified as Curtis Rower, forced her to drive her SUV down the street and then killed her with a shotgun blast to the head in front of the boys.  

Prosecutors said that Tokars had instructed another man to hire Rower to orchestrate the hit after Sara discovered that he was using his law practice for drug dealing and money laundering and threatened to turn him in.  

The kidnapping and murder took place just as Sara and her sons were returning from a family trip to Florida. 

Her husband had come back earlier but was not at home at the time.  

Fred Tokars, the Atlanta lawyer who hired a hitman to murder his wife in front of their two young sons, dies in prison aged 67

At a news conference before his arrest, Tokars choked back tears as he told reporters: “I emphatically deny any involvement in my wife’s murder. 

“I became very depressed, and started to think of the lifestyle that I was losing. Not only my wife, but my, my whole lifestyle.”

He was eventually sentenced to multiple life terms in prison – both for the murder and for federal racketeering charges. 

After his death, his lawyer, Froelich told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, “You know, he said he didn’t do it.”

The attorney added that he always accepted the juries’ verdicts even though Tokars never did. 

The couple’s younger son Mike died last month after suffering from depression

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