A California woman known for a pair of high-profile business failures alongside her husband has been charged with trying to hire someone to kill him in San Diego County.
Sometime between July 1 and Aug. 2, Tatyana Remley, 42, allegedly tried to hire a hitman, according to a criminal complaint.
She faces felony charges of solicitation of murder and carrying a concealed weapon without a permit. Prosecutors also charged her with a misdemeanor count of carrying a loaded gun in public.
Both firearms charges were linked to a July 2 incident, although court documents did not provide many specifics. She allegedly had an illegal handgun hidden in her car and then got out with it in public.
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On July 11, the suspect filed for divorce from her 57-year-old husband Mark Remley, court records show.
Less than a month later, she was in court again – this time with her freedom on the line.
She has been held without bail at the Las Colinas Detention Facility since Aug. 2, jail records show.
The couple lived a life of luxury in Southern California, according to Tatyana Remley's Facebook profile, which contains images of her posing on horseback, doing yoga at the side of a pool and beaming next to European sports cars.
One photo shows her in a black bikini and designer heels lounging on a stone bench with a tattoo of her husband's name and a heart visible on her hip.
Mark Remley could not immediately be reached for comment. But he told The Coast News, a local newspaper, that a mutual friend revealed the alleged plot to him in early July.
The friend claimed that Tatyana Remley had allegedly offered him $2 million to kill her husband. He also told the paper his house burned down a few days later.
And the local paper, citing court documents in the divorce case, reported that she had been seeking payments of $15,000 a month, down from her marital allowance of $50,000, to cover her expenses of $12,000.
The divorce filing also reportedly alleged Mark Remley once held a gun to his wife's head and chased her around their $5 million California home with a knife on another occasion.
Before the couple's marriage soured, they reportedly took part in a pair of expensive business ventures that failed.
First was "Valinar," a $10 million series of horse shows at the Del Mar Fairgrounds that flubbed after its first four performances in 2013, according to FOX 5 San Diego. The second was a luxury Solana Beach cycling studio that abruptly shut down in 2016, surprising its members.