‘It’s in the back of the car!’: Women found GPS tracker on car months before estranged husband murdered her and took kidnapped 4-year-old to Walmart, police say

Woman killed in triple homicide tried to report GPS tracker before death

Background: Footage obtained by WTVJ of Mary Gingles finding a GPS device on her vehicle in 2024 (WTVJ). Inset: Mary Catherine Gingles (Broward County Sheriff’s Office).

A Florida woman who was killed in a triple homicide allegedly committed by her estranged husband tried to report that he was tracking her — a violation of a court order that could have landed him in jail.

Local NBC affiliate WTVJ reported on Friday that newly obtained court documents showed that months before 34-year-old Mary Catherine Gingles was allegedly shot to death by her estranged husband, 43-year-old Nathan Gingles, she found a GPS tracker affixed to her vehicle. In an Oct. 29, 2024, phone call to her attorney, the video of which was obtained by WTVJ, Mary Catherine Gingles can be heard saying to her attorney, “It’s in the back of the car!”

Prior to the discovery, Mary Catherine Gingles had gotten a “no harmful contact” order from a judge, who said that the tracker violated that order. She reported her find to the Broward County Sheriff’s Office that day, telling deputies that she feared for her life.

Just months later, she was dead.

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WTVJ reported that Mary Catherine Gingles had been going through the couple’s financial records and found a suspicious $702 purchase made by Nathan Gingles in March 2024 at a company called HAPN. She later found that the company sells GPS trackers.

Just one month before that purchase, Mary Catherine Gingles had taken out a restraining order against her husband.

But despite that apparent violation, the Broward County Sheriff’s Office seemingly took no action in response, WTVJ reported. Mary Catherine Gingles contacted law enforcement again on Dec. 29, 2024, after finding duct tape, zip ties, plastic wrap, rubber gloves, and other items in the home’s garage. On Jan. 2, she brought the tracker and the photos and videos she took when she found the tracker to the sheriff’s office.

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