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Undercover colleague helped nab suspect in bizarre case

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Engel would then try to extort the victim at Club Med while Manning drove the victim’s car to the victim’s home, leaving the cellphone on so it would ping off towers and throw off law enforcement later looking into the victim’s disappearance, authorities said.

“How do you know he’s telling you where the money is?” the complaint quoted Individual A as asking about the victim, whom authorities did not identify by name.

Manning allegedly expressed confidence that Engel would make the victim “spill the beans.” According to the complaint, Manning covered his eyes with his hands to indicate the victim would be blindfolded. He then allegedly let out several “simulated cries of pain.”

On Oct. 4, Manning and Individual A were recorded on a visit to Club Med. Individual A asked for “direction” on the renovations, authorities said, and Manning said he wanted it outfitted with a big sink like in “an old-fashioned laundry room.” He also asked that a sturdy enough counter be installed “so you could put a couple hundred pounds on there,” according to the charges.

Manning allegedly expressed concerns that the renovations might attract undue attention since the building was between two businesses. “I don’t want this to become a neighborhood talked about ... what’s going on here?” the complaint quoted him as saying.

Peter McCarthy, executive chef of Moher Public House, a restaurant next to Club Med, said he quickly noticed something strange about the renovation work. He watched as contractors came and went at all hours without any permits being posted, he said. Many of the windows were painted over or covered with paper, but when he peeked through the front door, McCarthy saw that workers had erected a makeshift interior wall that blocked the view of the back of the office.

One day, McCarthy looked on as workers unloaded an industrial-size, triple-compartment sink — the kind used in restaurants — from a beat-up pickup truck, he said.

“I knew something was up,” McCarthy said. “ ... What were they doing putting a sink like that in an office?”

Things got even more bizarre in mid-October. Two 12-foot-long church pews were installed in the front of the office, and several religious pictures, including the Last Supper, had been propped up on them, McCarthy said. Stenciled on the front door in ornate lettering were the words “Christian Consulting. By appointment only.” But there was no phone number, McCarthy said.

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