LA man held in wife's death during Mexico cruise

AP - This undated photo provided by  California Department of Motor 
Vehicles via The San Diego Union-Tribune ...  

Play Video Video:Winnetka Woman, 55, Murdered On Cruise Ship CBS 2 /  KCAL 
9 Los Angeles 

By GILLIAN FLACCUS, Associated Press Writer Gillian  Flaccus, Associated 
Press Writer - 1 hr 38 mins ago  

SAN DIEGO - The first hint of trouble aboard the Carnival Elation came  
three days into the luxury cruise to Mexico, when a passenger contacted the  
ship's security to express concerns that a woman might be dead.

Crew  members went to Shirley McGill's cabin on Tuesday evening and found 
her body,  but her husband, Robert McGill, was not in the room, said Keith 
Slotter, a  special agent in charge of the FBI's San Diego bureau.

On Thursday,  Robert McGill was taken into custody from the cruise ship 
more than six hours  after it returned to port in San Diego. He will be charged 
in the murder of his  wife, Slotter said.

Slotter wouldn't say why the passenger who notified  security was 
concerned, but said several hours may have passed between the death  and the 
body's 
discovery.
McGill, of Los Angeles, was later detained and held  in the ship's brig 
until the boat docked Thursday morning. The San Diego County  medical examiner 
removed the woman's body about three hours later, said John  Gilmore, a 
spokesman for the Port of San Diego, and the FBI took McGill from the  boat 
Thursday afternoon.

Slotter would not provide details about a  possible motive or how Shirley 
McGill was killed.
"We have suspicions at this  time of how it was conducted but until that 
autopsy is done I can't comment ...  on exactly how it may have occurred," 
Slotter said of the death.
Both the  suspect and victim were in their mid-50s, Slotter said.
The ship is the  length of more than two football fields and carries more 
than 2,000 passengers  and 900 crew members, according to Carnival's Web 
site. The ship traveled for  five days, stopping in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico.

FBI agents leaving the  ship carried plastic baggies and a plastic foam box 
labeled: "Urgent.  Refrigerated evidence enclosed."
McGill will likely make a first appearance  in U.S. District Court in San 
Diego on Friday, although the time of that hearing  was yet known, said Debra 
Hartman, a spokeswoman for the U.S. attorney's  office.

It wasn't immediately known if McGill had an  attorney.

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