The estranged wife of a University of Central Florida faculty member and former Memphis Grizzlies executive found dead in Orlando last month was charged with fatally stabbing him — and even checked messages on a dating app before calling police, authorities said.
Danielle Justine Redlick, 45, waited roughly 11 hours before calling police on Jan. 12 to report that her husband, Michael Redlick, 65, stabbed himself during an argument that she said started when he spat a piece of a McDonald’s hamburger into her face, according to a charging affidavit obtained by the Orlando Sentinel.
Redlick told authorities she grabbed a serrated knife from the couple’s kitchen before her husband snatched the blade from her and “began making stabbing motions toward himself,” according to a Winter Park police sergeant’s report.
Redlick then ran to a bathroom, she said, and locked the door. She exited the bathroom when she heard her husband of 13 years not making any more noise and found him motionless on the floor. Unable to find a phone, Redlick said, she started slipping on pools of her husband’s blood, prompting her to grab some towels and try to clean up the gruesome scene, records show.
Redlick said she ultimately collapsed next to her husband while trying to revive him, recalling later that she “remembering lying next to the victim thinking ‘what am I going to do,” Winter Park Sgt. Lisa Supat wrote.
Redlick said she awoke the following morning and called police after another crack at cleaning up the couple’s residence, some 11 hours after the violent encounter, according to the affidavit.
But Redlick’s story quickly unraveled, according to detectives, as she somehow managed to find time to check her messages on a dating application called MeetMindful roughly two hours before she called police. She also told authorities that she didn’t call police immediately after the confrontation because she couldn’t find her phone, according to an affidavit.
Police arrested Redlick at the couple’s home on Temple Drive early Wednesday. She asked for an attorney and did not make any statements to police. Court records cited by the newspaper indicate that she filed for divorce from Michael Redlick — UCF’s director of external affairs and partnership relations for the DeVos Sports Business Management Program — in March 2018.
But a judge dismissed the petition in November, ruling that Michael Redlick had not been properly served with divorce papers. Danielle Redlick also sought custody of the couple’s two children, ages 15 and 11, as well as alimony and “exclusive use” of the couple’s home on Temple Drive.
Danielle Redlick — whose occupation was listed as an unemployed communications professional and photographer — also sought to drop Redlick’s surname and revert to her maiden name of Drohan, the Sentinel reports.
Records cited by the newspaper indicate that a friend of the couple told police that they had a “rocky” and “toxic” relationship. Another friend said Danielle Redlick would become volatile and angry when intoxicated.
Redlick also tried to hurt herself after her husband’s death and medical records indicate she had alcohol in her system at the time, which would constitute a violation of her probation from a January 2018 arrest for resisting an officer without violence and disorderly conduct in Seminole County, according to the Sentinel.
Neighbors of the couple, meanwhile, said details of Redlick’s death had been elusive since last month.
“Everyone was concerned and hoping that he had died of natural causes, not what we supposedly heard,” one unidentified neighbor told WREG. “We were all a little worried something could happen in the neighborhood, because it was kind of like a mystery.”
A medical examiner ruled Michael Redlick’s death as a homicide, adding that his stab wounds did not appear to be self-inflicted. Wounds to his face and shoulder were so significant that he would’ve died within five to six minutes, according to the station.
Redlick, who had been employed by UCF since 2013, had also worked for the Memphis Grizzlies.
“Mike helped introduce the Grizzlies to Memphis in 2001, playing an integral role in many aspects of our business including our relationship with key partners and the planning and fruition of FedExForum,” the team’s vice president, John Pugliese, told WREG in a statement. “But Red was more than a coworker; he was a friend whose big smile was only equaled by the size of his heart. I and those who knew Red will miss him dearly. Our thoughts and prayers are with his children during this difficult time.”
Redlick’s UCF biography was no longer available on its website as of Thursday, but the executive had also previously worked for the Indianapolis Motor Speedway and the Cleveland Browns, according to the Orlando Sentinel.
Danielle Redlick remained held without bond as of Thursday at the Orange County Jail on charges of second-degree murder and tampering with physical evidence, jail records show.