BALTIMORE — A Providence native whose death last year was blamed on an attack by a panhandler was actually killed by her husband and his adult daughter, police said Sunday.

Keith Smith, 52, had told police that his wife, Jacquelyn, an engineer from Harford County, was trying to give money to a panhandler at a traffic light when she was robbed and fatally stabbed.

Her death attracted national attention and prompted many to regard panhandlers warily. Even Oprah Winfrey, whose early career included several years covering Baltimore news, commented that she would "think twice" about giving to panhandlers after reading about Jacquelyn's death.

But at a news conference Sunday, Police Commissioner Michael Harrison said the panhandler story is not true. He announced first-degree murder charges against Keith Smith and his daughter, Valeria Smith, 28.

Both were arrested in Harlingen, Texas, near the Mexico border. Harrison said the two were preparing to leave the country.

Harrison did not explain at the brief news conference what specific roles police attribute to Keith and Valeria Smith, nor did he articulate a possible motive. He said at the news conference that the concocted story took advantage of negative perceptions of Baltimore crime and credited detectives for their work in solving the crime.

When Jacquelyn's Dec. 1 death was initially reported, police said she lowered her car's front passenger side window to give $10 to a young woman who appeared to be holding a swaddled infant and a cardboard sign reading: "Please help me feed my baby." It was then that a man supposedly approached the car and struggled to take her wallet. He then supposedly stabbed her and ran off along with the female panhandler.

After his wife died, Keith Smith gave numerous media interviews and lobbied the city to pass legislation to ban panhandling at city intersections. He said he wanted the law to be named for his wife.

It wasn't immediately known if Keith Smith and Valeria Smith had attorneys who could comment for them.

Jacquelyn Smith graduated from Classical High School in Providence in 1982 and earned a degree in electrical engineering from North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University. She worked for a time at the Naval Underwater Systems Center, a forerunner of the Naval Undersea Warfare Center in Newport, before landing a job at an Army research facility outside Baltimore.

Her funeral took place at St. Patrick's Church in Providence.

Her brother, Marcel Trisvan of Havre de Grace, Maryland, told the Baltimore Sun that several members of Jacquelyn Smith’s family had questioned the story from the beginning.

“I already know it's Keith,” he said. Trisvan said police have provided no information to the family, but that detectives had increasingly been asking the family about his sister’s relationship with her husband.

“All the questioning has been specific to Keith. That kind of sums it right there,” he said. “It never made sense. I told (detectives) from the very beginning there are no suspects out there.”

Trisvan said Keith Smith moved out of his sister’s Aberdeen house two weeks ago, handed the keys over to Trisvan and told the family he was moving to Florida. Trisvan said his sister owned the home.

He said Keith Smith removed all the appliances from the home.