Background: The residence where Omar Brogdon shot and killed Orhan Hosic during what was supposed to have been a Facebook Marketplace exchange (YouTube/WNEM). Insets, top to bottom: Omar Brogdon, Orhan Hosic (Genesee County Sheriff’s Office/WNEM).
A Michigan man has been handed a life sentence for the fatal shooting of a Facebook Marketplace seller during a transaction gone awry. The tragic incident underscores the potential dangers of online marketplace exchanges.
Omar Brogdon, aged 31, will spend his lifetime behind bars without the possibility of parole after being found guilty of murdering 38-year-old Orhan Hosic. According to Michigan court records, Brogdon was convicted in April on charges including second-degree murder, felony murder, armed robbery, and various gun-related offenses. The Genesee County Prosecutor’s Office made the announcement following the jury’s decision.
The unfortunate sequence of events took place on July 6, 2024, as detailed by local news outlet MLive. Brogdon and Hosic met at the latter’s apartment, where Hosic intended to sell Brogdon two Corvette seats. These seats were later discovered in the Camaro that Brogdon drove to the meeting, highlighting the transaction that had turned deadly.
What could have been a routine sale escalated into tragedy when an argument erupted between the two men over which sports car brand was superior—Mercedes or BMW. This disagreement tragically spiraled into violence.
During his sentencing, Brogdon expressed remorse for his actions, reflecting on the violence that ended Hosic’s life. This case serves as a sobering reminder of the unforeseen risks that can accompany seemingly ordinary online transactions.
At sentencing, Brogdon said he regretted the violence.
“It was an unfortunate event,” he said at the May 18 hearing. “I was scared. I was cornered.”
Genesee County Prosecutor David Leyton said extensive evidence investigators recovered supported the conviction, including digital and physical evidence.
“They found that there had been this Facebook Marketplace business that went on, which put the two people together,” Leyton told WNEM. “They got a witness who said he saw the orange Camaro in the driveway. They matched that car with Brogdon’s vehicle, found at an address in Detroit. I remember at one point, somebody actually called the deceased’s phone, and it got answered in metro Detroit at a motel.”
Sheriff Chris Swanson said investigators used a “red herring” method that helped preserve evidence, explaining that Brogdon did not destroy evidence because he did not think investigators had leads.
The victim’s stepmother gave a victim impact statement in which she recalled the challenges Hosic had during his life, including childhood cancer and facial disfigurement.
“You shot out the only eye he could see out of,” the stepmother said, adding: “This is something you will have to live with for the rest of your life.”