An Osceola County jury found a woman accused of luring a Poinciana man to his death in 2013 guilty on two charges Wednesday evening.

After deliberating for more than three hours, jurors found Victoria Rios guilty of first-degree murder and armed burglary.  

"We the jury find the defendent guilty of first-degree murder as charged in the indictment," read the court clerk, on behalf of the jury. "Verdict as to count three: we, the jury find the defendent guilty of armed burglary as charged in the indictment."

Rios was seen crying in the courtroom after the verdict was read.

During Day 2 in the retrial of Rios, the state argued she was the mastermind of the idea to kill Eric Roopnarine during the July 2013 home invasion and robbery.

"She created the seed. She set it up. She's the puppet master," Gabrielle Sanders, with the State Attorney’s Office, told the 12 jurors.

The state said Rios, who cried during testimony Wednesday at the Osceola County Courthouse, may not have hurt Roopnarine, but she let a group into the home by enticing him with the prospect of sex.

"It was her idea. Not Juan's, not David's, not Konrad's. Her idea to sleep with him for money," Sanders said.

The prosecutor was talking about Konrad Schafer, David Damus and Juan Muriel, who have already been convicted in the killing. But the prosecution said Rios was the only one in the group who knew Roopnarine.

"Should we just kill him? Why not? Eric only knows Victoria," Sanders argued. "Why would Victoria want him to stay alive? She knew what was going to happen. She knew they were going to take the money. So of course she wanted to kill him."

The prosecutor said Rios had knowledge of Roopnarine receiving a sum of money from a recent car accident, and she was in need of $300 for rent.

Rios' defense attorney, for his part, said she was just caught up in the plot.

Michael Nichola asked jurors not to consider the testimony of Muriel. The defense attorney said Muriel only testified for a deal in his own case.

"(His) is a made up story in order to get a plea, so he can get 10 years rather than life," Nichola said.

Nichola said that although Rios may have been involved, that doesn't make her a murderer.

"There is no evidence that she, Victoria Rios, ever had hostilities or animosities toward Eric Roopnarine," he added.

As the prosecution left the courtroom, Roopnarine’s grandfather hugged both attorneys thanking them for their hard work.

Roopnarine’s family did not want to speak on camera, but they did tell us they were happy with the guilty verdict, that it had been a very long four years, and they were sad for Rio’s family.  

Rios' first trial ended in a mistrial. Sentencing has been scheduled for June 9.