Lawyers for a man convicted in a notorious 1994 triple murder in Miramar say a new witness has come forward with evidence that could prove their client's innocence.
Pablo Ibar, now 54, was convicted in the murders of nightclub owner Casimir Sucharski, Sharon Anderson and Marie Rogers in Miramar.
The shocking crime was dubbed the "Casey's Nickelodeon murders" after the Pembroke Park bar owned by Sucharski.
But now, after spending over 30 years in jail and going through three trials, attorneys for Ibar say a new witness has come forward with evidence that could set him free.
"This is what Pablo has said from the beginning that he did not commit this crime," defense attorney Daniel Tibbitt said Wednesday. "We have a new witness here that can identify people who committed this crime that directly confessed to him. The jury didn’t hear about it in this case and now we strongly believe that if the jury had heard it Pablo would have been found not guilty and would be free right now."
Tibbitt recently filed a 38-page motion that states the witness worked for a Colombian drug organization. The witness, who was not named, claims two other men, identified as "A.N. aka El Loco" and "F.B. aka Loeva," committed the murder as part of a drug-related hit on Sucharski.
"A.N. told the witness that he and F.B. had taken care of Mr. Sucharski and that they had been the ones who had committed the robbery and ultimately the murder," Tibbitt said.
A co-defendant, Seth Penalver, had been convicted and sentenced to die in the case, but his conviction was overturned in 2012 after a new trial.
Ibar was also on death row before he was granted a new trial and sentenced to life in prison.
The case has garnered international attention and been the subject of an HBO documentary called "The Miramar Murders: The State Vs. Pablo Ibar." Ibar was also portrayed by an actor in the Spanish-language series "En el corredor de la muerte."
Tibbitt said the new witness evidence may be the missing piece that could help exonerate Ibar.
"Pablo has always denied involvement in this crime from the very beginning. He says he was not there and did not know anything about it and was not involved," Tibbitt said. "To be able to identify the actual person or two people who committed the crime gives him significant hope but legally it allows him to get back into court via the motion that we filed."
Appellate prosecutors from the Broward State Attorney's Office have 180 days to file a response in court. A hearing on the defense motion is scheduled for Aug. 7.
Source: nbcmiami.com, Amenda Plasencia, July 23, 2025
"One is absolutely sickened, not by the crimes that the wicked have committed,
but by the punishments that the good have inflicted."
but by the punishments that the good have inflicted."
— Oscar Wilde


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