Law enforcement officials work at a crime scene on Harlem Road in Akron, Ohio, where a body was found on Friday, Nov. 25, 2011. The FBI is investigating whether the body found Friday in a shallow grave is a second killing connected to a phony Craigslist job ad that authorities say lured victims into a deadly robbery scheme. (AP Photo/Akron Beacon Journal, Ed Suba Jr.) MANDATORY CREDIT
Law enforcement officials work at a crime scene on Harlem Road in Akron, Ohio, where a body was found on Friday, Nov. 25, 2011. The FBI is investigating whether the body found Friday in a shallow grave is a second killing connected to a phony Craigslist job ad that authorities say lured victims into a deadly robbery scheme. (AP Photo/Akron Beacon Journal, Ed Suba Jr.) MANDATORY CREDIT
Law enforcement officials work at a crime scene on Harlem Road in Akron, Ohio, where a body was found on Friday, Nov. 25, 2011. The FBI is investigating whether the body found Friday in a shallow grave is a second killing connected to a phony Craigslist job ad that authorities say lured victims into a deadly robbery scheme. (AP Photo/Akron Beacon Journal, Ed Suba Jr.) MANDATORY CREDIT
This is an undated hand out photo of Timothy Kern of Massillon, Ohio provided by the FBI. Kern, missing since Nov. 13, interviewed for a Craigslist help-wanted ad that police say was actually a deadly robbery scheme that lured people to a nonexistent farm job in southern Ohio, according to the man?s father, who called the outlook for his son ?pretty grim.? (AP Photo/The FBI)
This undated photo provided by the Summit County Sheriff Department in Ohio shows Richard J. Beasley. Beasley's mother, Carol Beasley, said Saturday, Nov. 19, 2011, her son has "a very caring heart" and was a mentor to a teenager charged in a deadly robbery scheme in which police say victims were lured with bogus help-wanted ads on Craigslist. Carol Beasley told The Associated Press that she spoke to her son Richard and she prays that a newspaper report that he is a suspect is not true. (AP Photo/Summit County Sheriff Department)
CLEVELAND (AP) ? An Ohio woman who answered what police say was a phony Craigslist job ad that lured victims into a deadly robbery scheme says she felt sick to her stomach when she heard about it.
Heather Tuttle, of Ravenna, said Friday that she didn't learn of the potential danger she was in until an FBI agent called her this week.
The FBI says the agent that interviewed Tuttle was one of numerous agents contacting applicants to check on their well-being.
The 27-year-old Tuttle says she applied for the job running a ranch in southern Ohio in early October but never heard back.
A body found Friday in a shallow grave in Akron may be a second killing connected to the phony job listing.
Associated Presskristin chenoweth beanie wells beanie wells dina manzo dina manzo once upon a time once upon a time
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