Rameau said she’d spoken with Henao by phone hours before she went missing and she had not mentioned meeting a man.
Concern grew when Henao did not show up at a Madrid train station for the trip as planned. Spanish firefighters entered her apartment for a welfare check and she was nowhere to be found, court documents said. Her phone, laptop and chargers were also missing.
Now federal officials allege the text messages sent from her phone actually came from her husband. And they were written with the help of another Colombian woman Knezevich had met on a dating app months earlier, court documents said.
On February 3 — the day after Henao was last seen alive — Knezevich sent the woman several English sentences to translate into “perfect Colombian,” according to the criminal complaint. He told her it was for a friend in Serbia writing a script that had a Colombian character.
The message he sent to the unidentified Colombian woman to translate was the same one sent from Henao’s phone saying she’d met a new guy, court documents said.
Investigators also identified other clues
Investigators on both sides of the Atlantic searched for clues on what happened to the missing woman and who entered her building that day — and who might have abducted her.
Then everything started coming together. Spanish investigators identified the brand of spray paint used to tamper with the camera and learned that a Madrid retailer had sold the same paint, along with two rolls of duct tape, to a man who resembled Knezevich the same day Henao was last seen, the criminal complaint said.
And in a twist of fate, the woman Knezevich met on a dating app told her mother in Bogota about her new suitor, leading to yet another revelation.
The woman’s mother Googled his name and saw news reports about his missing wife. She notified her daughter, who realized that the text attributed to Henao before she vanished matched the exact wording of the message she’d helped Knezevich put together, court documents said.
Knezevich’s next court hearing is scheduled for Friday. But a key question remains: What happened to his wife?
CNN’s Pau Mosquera, Denise Royal and Carlos Suarez contributed to this report.