A man accused of killing a Washington yoga instructor and actress who went missing on Christmas Day told police that the victim killed herself after they had sex, according to court documents.
Adrian Duane Johnson, 27, was arrested late on Monday night after police said he was found to be using a car belonging to the victim, 46-year-old Tricia McCauley.
McCauley’s body was found inside the small vehicle, wedged between the rear and front seats and concealed from view, according to documents filed on Wednesday in Washington Superior Court.
Police said McCauley was strangled and beaten to death. She also had injuries to her genital area, according to the documents, which do not state whether she was raped.
Johnson, whose criminal history includes multiple theft charges, had been ordered to wear a GPS monitor in the days before the slaying, and a judge had requested a mental health evaluation, court records show.
He has been charged with first-degree murder and was ordered held without bail on Wednesday afternoon.
Johnson told police that he met McCauley on or around Christmas Day, when she offered him a ride. According to the documents, he told police that she offered to have sex with him and that they had sex “on a curb somewhere.”
He told police that after the sexual encounter, she became despondent and said she wanted to kill herself.
MISSING
Johnson told police that McCauley hanged herself inside her car, although he was unable to say what she used to hang herself, the documents show.
According to the documents, he also told police that she told him he could use her car, money and credit cards, at one point asking, “If someone is suicidal and gives you all their stuff is that illegal?”
He also told police that he picked up a prostitute and drove around the city with McCauley’s lifeless body in the back seat, the documents state.
Johnson had injuries to his hands and jaw when he was arrested, police said.
Johnson’s public defender did not immediately return a message on Wednesday.
McCauley was reported missing after she did not show up to a Christmas party hosted by friends in Washington’s theater community.
Washington Stage Guild executive director Ann Norton said there was evidence that McCauley had left her apartment with the Brussels sprouts she planned to bring to the dinner.
McCauley had roles in several Washington Stage Guild productions, most recently last year in On Approval, a British comedy from the 1920s.
She also worked at a yoga studio where friends gathered on Tuesday evening for a vigil.
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