Crime & Safety

No Bail For Man Accused Of Plot To Kill Victim, Mother

Scott Smith, 38, of Salisbury, would have lived with his mother in Danvers had he been released.

SALEM, MA -- A Salisbury man accused of offering to pay $30,000 to his two accusers and one of their mothers in a child rape case was ordered held without bail Monday. Scott Smith, 38, of Salisbury, is expected to be indicted on the additional charges, prompting his attorney to hold off on the bail revocation hearing that had been scheduled for Monday.

Smith, according to prosecutors, believed his two victims "screwed up [my] life" and was trying to arrange to pay someone $30,000 to kill the teenage girl and her mother. He was moments away from being released on bail earlier this month when prosecutors filed an emergency order to have him held as the plans to hire a contract killer came to light. Investigators say Smith discussed the plans with another inmate at the Middleton Jail where he was being held in June.

Massachusetts State Police filed a charge of solicitation to commit murder against Smith. Smith was arrested earlier this year on child pornography charges, prompting two teenage girls to come forward to say they had been sexually abused by him.

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Smith told another inmate wanted the girl's death to look like a drug overdose and her mother's death to look like a car accident. He was trying to arrange the murders before he was even charged with child rape, according to court documents.

Smith was cleared to live with his mother in Danvers on $1,000 bail and with a requirement to wear a GPS monitoring bracelet by Salem Superior Court Judge Timothy Feeley. The allegations that Smith tried to hire someone to kill his victims while in the Middleton jail came after last month's hearing where Feeley set bail. But Feeley released Smith despite agreeing with prosecutors that he still posed a danger.

Find out what's happening in Danversfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Monday's hearing had been reassigned from Feeley to another judge. Feeley has been under fire for a string of decisions this year that were seen as being too lenient, including a case in May when he ignored a prosecutor's request to impose a jail sentence for a convicted drug dealer.

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Patch file photo via Shutterstock.

Dave Copeland can be reached at dave.copeland@patch.com or by calling 617-433-7851. Follow him on Twitter (@CopeWrites) and Facebook (/copewrites).

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