Naples man, 26, accused of hammer threat at home, hit list on co-workers

Osvald Milo, 26, charged with three counts of aggravated assault with intent to kill.

A reported domestic violence incident turned into a public safety concern when a former employee with Korunda Medical Institute in Naples was accused of creating a "hit list" on his colleagues. 

Osvald Milo, 26, who lives in Naples, was charged with three counts of aggravated assault with intent to kill. His bond was set at $900,000, according to the Collier County Sheriff's Office. 

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The charges stem from a May 19 domestic incident involving Milo, his mother, girlfriend and her 11-year-old son, an arrest report states. Milo was accused of threatening them with a hammer and throwing it at them, deputies said.  The hammer missed them and they fled the home that night.

Milo then walked to his job at the medical institute and smashed holes in several windows, the report states.

His mother agreed to pay for the damages so the facility wouldn't press charges. 

Milo was fired after the incident, but deputies were called by Korunda staff again three days later to investigate allegations made against Milo by several employees, including his girlfriend, a nurse at the facility, the report states. 

His girlfriend told deputies she found a disturbing entry in a journal before the reported domestic incident. In the journal entry, Milo wrote his intent to harm colleagues and a hit list with employee names, the arrest report states. His girlfriend said he was being treated for depression at the time, the report states. 

She also said he behaved oddly and wasn't taking his prescribed medications. Milo would find it relaxing to research mass shootings and watch movies about death,  she said. He often talked with her about suicide and homicide, she said, according to the report. 

Other employees told deputies Milo talked about recent mass shootings, glorifying the suspects, the report states. He also would talk about his research into other area medical facilities to check their armed security. 

Milo was arrested Thursday and held under Florida's Baker Act due to "the seriousness of the allegations, his overt act of anger and damage toward the workplace, as well as a demonstrated propensity to cause harm to himself or to others," the report states.

The Florida Department of Children and Families was contacted to investigate the reported domestic incident.