By GIOVANNA DELL'ORTO
Associated Press Writer
ATLANTA (AP) -- A finacially strapped owner of a car dealership told
authorities he was under stress when he killed two employees because
they kept asking for pay raises, police said Tuesday.
Rolandas Milinavicius was charged in the shooting deaths of Inga
Contreras, 25, and Martynas Simokaitis, 28. All three are from the
eastern European nation of Lithuania but had been living in Atlanta,
authorities said.
Milinavicius, who was having financial problems, told police he shot the
two Thursday after they kept asking for more pay, said police in East
Point, which is just outside Atlanta.
Milinavicius, 38, turned himself in two days after the shootings and
confessed to the killings, telling them he was under a lot of stress,
East Point police Capt. Russell Popham said.
"As I understand, the employees were not really happy about the pay, and
they had questioned him about it over the course of time," Popham said.
"That morning he said he just snapped."
At a jailhouse hearing Tuesday, Milinavicius listened through an
interpreter as the charges were read against him. He faces two counts of
felony murder and two counts of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon,
and he was denied bond.
Milinavicius' attorney, public defender Elizabeth Markowitz, did not
speak in court. She did not return a call for comment.
Milinavicius, who had been living in Alpharetta, started RM Auto
International two years ago, hoping to meet the demand for American cars
in Lithuania. He began shipping cars and later hired the two victims as
his only employees.
Nobody was at the car dealership Tuesday afternoon. Smashed-up cars with
broken windshields and crumpled hoods were scattered around the back of
the building.
Lisa Maidel, whose management business is two doors done from
Milinavicius' dealership in a strip mall, said Milinavicius' wife came
pounding on their door looking for help Thursday afternoon.
Maidel called 911, and the woman kept asking in broken English if her
husband who was hurt, saying she had seen legs on the floor when she
came to the dealership to visit her husband, Maidel said.
"We just saw the fear and terror in her eyes," Maidel said. "Every time
she tried to describe it, she would just freeze up and hyperventilate."
Contreras and Simokaitis were cremated and an informal memorial service
was held at Simokaitis' cousin's apartment over the weekend. The remains
were to be flown to Lithuania on Tuesday.
"It doesn't make any sense," the cousin, Jaunius Simokaitis, of
Fayetteville, said Monday. "If he was having money problems, these two
would have been the ones to help him get out of debt. They would have
helped him make that money."