“Hey Shayne hows it going,” Lytle wrote, according to a probable cause statement. “You remember you said that you would help me kill my wife. I’m going to take you up on that offer.”

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It’s not clear whether Lytle has an attorney.

Lytle wrote in the text message that he would split his wife’s life insurance payout, which he said was worth $1 million. If the hit man wanted a bonus, Lytle wrote, he could also kill the 4-year-old girl, whose policy was worth $500,000.

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“I go to work 5 in the morning,” Lytle wrote, according to court records. He reportedly added that his wife “goes to work at 2:00pm so if you can make a robbery gone wrong or make it a accident she works at walmart she gets off at 11:00.”

“I’ll split everything with the insurance 50/50,” he said.

Lytle was arrested last week and charged with two counts of felony criminal solicitation for the crime of murder in the first degree, according to the court records.

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Authorities said Lytle first denied communicating with anyone about a plan to kill his wife and child but later admitted that he had written the message as a way to “vent” during an argument he had with his wife about his talking with another woman, according to the court documents. He told investigators that he had saved the message on his phone and that his daughter must have sent it, police said.

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Lytle also denied knowing anyone named “Shayne,” saying it was “just a name” he used when he wanted to “vent,” according to the court documents.

He told police that he often expresses his frustrations in text messages and then deletes them but had no intention of hurting his wife and daughter.

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Debbie Willis, a public information officer for the Monroe Police Department, which is investigating the incident, said Tuesday that investigators have not found an insurance policy on anybody in the family.

She said they are still waiting to serve a search warrant on Lytle’s cellphone.

German Ellano, who CBS affiliate KIRO identified as Lytle’s roommate, told the news station that the text message could have been a misunderstanding, saying, “He’s not going to do something like that.”

According to the probable cause statement:

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A person is guilty of criminal solicitation when, with intent to promote or facilitate the commission of a crime, he or she offers to give or gives money or other thing of value to another to engage in specific conduct which would constitute such crime or which would establish complicity of such other person in its commission or attempted commission had such crime been attempted or committed.

It states that Lytle “admits to authoring a text communication to which appears to be to another person with the intent to facilitate the killing of his wife and daughter for financial gain.”

Lytle is being held on $1 million, according to booking records. He is due back in court March 3, according to online court records.