BENTON COUNTY, Wash. – The Jacksonville Beach woman accused of orchestrating the death of her ex-husband in a murder-for-hire plot now has a warrant for her extradition signed by Florida Governor Ron DeSantis.
The order asks for Shanna Gardner, 36, to be sent back to Florida to face charges connected to Jared Bridegan’s death. However, her attorneys are fighting the transfer, which makes it unclear when Gardner will be back in Duval County.
The State Attorney’s Office confirmed to News4JAX that Gov. DeSantis signed a governor’s order for the extradition of Gardner, who moved to Washington with the two children she shared with Bridegan after her ex-husband’s murder. The order requests the approval from Washington state’s governor, Jay Inslee.
Prosecutors say Gardner played a “key and central role” in the conspiracy to kill 33-year-old Bridegan, who was shot several times at close range around 8 p.m. Feb. 16, 2022. His then-2-year-old-year-old daughter was in the backseat of his SUV near the Sanctuary neighborhood in south Jacksonville Beach. The toddler was not injured, but her presence prompted felony child abuse charges against the suspects.
Gardner is charged with first-degree murder, solicitation to commit first-degree murder, conspiracy to commit first-degree murder and child abuse.
Gene Nichols, a defense attorney not affiliated with the case, said a governor’s extradition warrant is relatively rare and is reserved for serious cases.
“It makes it a lot more difficult for her to stay in the state of Washington,” he said. “She’s going to continue to fight, you’re always going to continue to fight if you’re going back to a state in which they’re potentially seeking the death penalty. So I expect her lawyers to do everything that they can.”
Her husband, 34-year-old Mario Fernandez, who was arrested in March, is facing the same charges. Prosecutors said they will seek the death penalty for both if they are convicted.
Fernandez’s indictment said he plotted the murder within the four months leading to Bridegan’s death, but Gardner’s indictment said she may have been scheming to kill Bridegan as early as May 2015 a few months before their divorce was finalized.
Fernandez pleaded not guilty to the charges against him when he was arraigned in July.
According to his indictment, Fernandez wrote three checks to the confessed gunman, Henry Tenon. Fernandez had been Tenon’s landlord, and investigators say phone records revealed more than 70 calls between the men before and after Bridegan’s murder.
Tenon pleaded guilty to second-degree murder for fatally shooting Bridegan and has agreed to testify against the couple.
“Henry Tenon did not act alone. Mario Fernandez did not plan alone. And Shanna Gardner’s indictment acknowledges her central and key role in the cold, calculated and premeditated murder of Jared Bridegan,” State Attorney Melissa Nelson said when she announced Gardner’s arrest.
Body-worn camera footage shows the moment federal agents took Gardner into custody in West Richland, Washington, on Aug. 17. Investigators brought her out of her home in handcuffs. Inside, officers can hear the 11-year-old twins she shared with Bridegan helping her to find clothes before the police take her away.
Body camera footage from the Orange County Sheriff’s Office also shows the March 16 arrest of Fernandez, who was calm and conversational with deputies as they took him to jail. Judge London Kite said Fernandez’s case is in limbo until the co-defendant, Gardner, is back in Duval County.
The first arrest in the case came in February when police charged Tenon in Bridegan’s shooting death.
The murder received national attention in 2022 when Bridegan was gunned down while trying to move a tire blocking the road on his way home from his ex-wife’s house after dropping off their twins. The shooting took place two miles from Gardner’s home. Police said it was a targeted, cold-blooded attack.
A list of discovery in the case shows search warrants were served for multiple phones, bank accounts and Google accounts, along with DNA swabs from multiple people. Investigators also subpoenaed “Ring” camera data and information from multiple computers. Toll records were even pulled for Fernandez, Gardner, Bridegan and five others. Other documents listed were a Bearded Pig receipt, a Wendy’s receipt and work orders and receipts from Discount Tires.
Discovery also shows Fernandez and Gardner were interviewed on March 1, 2022, and April 15, 2022, a year before their eventual arrests.
The state attorney’s office, the Bridegan family, and Gardner’s defense declined to interview on the governor’s order.
The Washington judge on Thursday continued the case until Oct. 5 pending the governor’s order.