Quinn Gray, pictured here in a Facebook photo, went missing on the Friday before Labor Day weekend in 2009 from her $4 million home in Ponte Vedra, Fla. A ransom note was found on the front door.
"There are three men holding me right now, and they want $50,000 cash. Stay at the house NO COPS! Keep your cell phone on you. Keep the kids with you. Please do this honey, please!" the note, written in 37-year-old Quinn Gray's handwriting, stated. Gray is shown here with her husband, Reid Gray, in a Facebook photo.
But as the story unfolded, police found that the mother of two had not been kidnapped, but had concocted a hoax with her lover, 25-year-old Jasmin Osmanovic, here in his mug shot, who worked at a local gas station.
Police say that Florida mother of two Quinn Gray, pictured here in her mug shot, faked her own kidnapping with the help of her lover and tried to extort $50,000 from her wealthy husband. Her husband, Reid Gray, has stood by his wife, and says she was tricked into committing the extortion and was in a compromised mental state.
Quinn Gray, 37, and her husband, Reid Gray, appear to be a happy couple in numerous Facebook photos like this one. However, court documents detail a troubled marriage full of drinking and cheating. In one document, Reid Gray said, "Quinn was out of control, partying all the time and dating men 10 years younger than her."
Reid Gray has said he is supporting his wife, pictured here, both emotionally and financially. He has hired a legal team for Quinn Gray, 37, as she undergoes treatment at a mental health facility in Georgia.
Jasmin Osmanovich, 25, who Reid Gray claims forced his wife, Quinn Gray, pictured here, to participate in the fake kidnapping, has been charged with extortion and is being held in the St. Johns County Jail near Jacksonville, Fla.
Court documents show that one night, Reid Gray, pictured here, said his wife didn't come home until the middle of the night. When Quinn Gray walked in, he said she was "intoxicated" and had her underwear in her purse. He said she admitted to going home with another man.
Quinn Gray's attorney, Mark Miller, told CBS affiliate WTEV that her past doesn't mean she is capable of committing a crime. "When this is all said and done, it's going to come to the surface, that she was kidnapped and held in captivity for four days," says Miller.
CBS affiliate WTEV has obtained the two ransom notes police say Quinn Gray, 37, wrote to her husband and to her mom over Labor Day weekend 2009. In one of the letters, she pleaded for money, saying "If anything goes wrong, I'm dead."
Court paperwork shows that Reid Gray, shown here in a Facebook photo with his wife, Quinn Gray, took out two life insurance policies right before she disappeared over Labor Day weekend in 2009.
Quinn Gray, pictured here in a Facebook photo, went missing on the Friday before Labor Day weekend in 2009 from her $4 million home in Ponte Vedra, Fla. A ransom note was found on the front door.
"There are three men holding me right now, and they want $50,000 cash. Stay at the house NO COPS! Keep your cell phone on you. Keep the kids with you. Please do this honey, please!" the note, written in 37-year-old Quinn Gray's handwriting, stated. Gray is shown here with her husband, Reid Gray, in a Facebook photo.
But as the story unfolded, police found that the mother of two had not been kidnapped, but had concocted a hoax with her lover, 25-year-old Jasmin Osmanovic, seen here in his mug shot, who worked at a local gas station.
Police say that Florida mother of two Quinn Gray faked her own kidnapping with the help of her lover and tried to extort $50,000 from her wealthy husband, pictured here. Her husband, Reid Gray, has stood by his wife, and says she was tricked into committing the extortion and was in a compromised mental state.
Quinn Gray, 37, and her husband, Reid Gray, appear to be a happy couple in numerous Facebook photos like this one. However, court documents detail a troubled marriage full of drinking and cheating. In one document, Reid Gray said, "Quinn was out of control, partying all the time and dating men 10 years younger than her."
CBS affiliate WTEV has obtained the two ransom notes police say Quinn Gray, 37, wrote to her husband and to her mother over Labor Day weekend 2009. In one of the letters, she pleaded for money, saying "If anything goes wrong, I'm dead."
Reid Gray has said he is supporting his wife, both emotionally and financially. He has hired a legal team for Quinn Gray as she undergoes treatment at a mental health facility in Georgia.
Quinn Gray's attorney, Mark Miller, told CBS affiliate WTEV that her past doesn't mean she is capable of committing a crime. "When this is all said and done, it's going to come to the surface, that she was kidnapped and held in captivity for four days," says Miller.
CBS affiliate WTEV has obtained the two ransom notes police say Quinn Gray wrote to her husband and to her mom over Labor Day weekend in 2009. In one of the letters, she pleaded for money, saying "If anything goes wrong, I'm dead."