Body of woman, 27, found at ex-Anheuser-Busch CEO mansion

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Re: Body of woman, 27, found at ex-Anheuser-Busch CEO mansio

Postby 8bitagent » Mon Jul 18, 2011 6:10 am

bks wrote:What does it take for a mega-wealthy person to become the subject of a criminal investigation? When a woman dies of an overdose of illegal drugs in someone else's house after it has been determined she used cocaine regularly for a year prior, how can there not be some sort of criminal investigation into the persons at the premises where she met her demise?


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As we've learned, usually the only time mega wealthy or elite people get caught doing something bad, it's when they've been intentionally setup or scapegoated. (DSK?)
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Re: Body of woman, 27, found at ex-Anheuser-Busch CEO mansio

Postby MinM » Fri Sep 02, 2011 12:34 pm

sunny wrote:
elfismiles wrote:Not suggesting a connection ... but this thread was what immediately came to mind when I saw this headline:

Nude Woman Found Dead At SoCal Mansion Of Pharmaceutical Firm CEO (Video)
July 15, 2011 9:55 AM
http://losangeles.cbslocal.com/2011/07/ ... -firm-ceo/

SAN DIEGO (CBS) — Investigators on Friday were searching for clues surrounding the mysterious death of a woman at a beachfront mansion in one of Southern California’s most prestigious neighborhoods.

Rebecca Nalepa, 32, was found dead at the historic Spreckels mansion in Coronado, hanging from a balcony in the nude with her hands tied behind her back and her feet bound.



This one will be hard to paint as a suicide or an accident but I have faith that a way will be found.

Rebecca Zahau's Death In Mansion Ruled A Suicide
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By ELLIOT SPAGAT 09/ 2/11 12:04 AM ET

SAN DIEGO -- Investigators have ruled that a woman who was found hanging naked from a second-floor balcony at a historic California mansion with her wrists and ankles bound committed suicide, the woman's sister said Thursday.

Mary Zahau-Loehner said she found investigators unconvincing during a visit to her home Wednesday in St. Joseph, Mo., to break the news.

"It doesn't add up," she told The Associated Press. "Nothing adds up." ...

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/09/0 ... lnk2|92209
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Re: Body of woman, 27, found at ex-Anheuser-Busch CEO mansio

Postby Nordic » Fri Sep 02, 2011 3:05 pm

It's like they don't even care any more. They don't even try.

They feed us whatever bullshit they want to feed us knowing that we have no options, knowing we have no power, and that we have no choice but to accept their crimes.

What ARE we gonna do?

Nothing.
"He who wounds the ecosphere literally wounds God" -- Philip K. Dick
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Re: Body of woman, 27, found at ex-Anheuser-Busch CEO mansio

Postby Marie Laveau » Fri Sep 02, 2011 4:41 pm

Yep.
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That's an awfully suspicious suicide

Postby Freitag » Fri Sep 02, 2011 5:11 pm

Coronado mansion death called suicide; family objects

By William M. Welch, USA TODAY

LOS ANGELES – Investigators have concluded that a woman found dead, hanging naked and bound at a historic Coronado, Calif., mansion in July, killed herself, the sister of the victim said Thursday.

An attorney for the victim's family blasted the finding as "ridiculous."

Mary Zahau-Loehner, the sister of Rebecca Zahau, 32, who died in one of two mysterious tragedies within a few days at the $12 million oceanfront mansion, said she disagreed with investigators and was disappointed with the conclusion.

Anne Bremner, a Seattle lawyer hired by the Zahau family this week, said the San Diego Sheriff's Department's finding "doesn't pass the smell test."

San Diego Sheriff Bill Gore scheduled a news briefing Friday with his investigators, medical examiners and Coronado police to report on their investigation into the deaths at the Spreckels mansion in the wealthy resort community near San Diego.

Zahau, who came to this country about a decade ago from Burma, was found hanging from a makeshift noose, unclothed and with hands bound behind her back and feet bound, in a courtyard at the mansion July 13, the sheriff's department said at the time.

That was two days after 6-year-old Max Shacknai suffered fatal injuries in what the department termed an accidental fall at the same house.


The home is owned by Zahau's boyfriend, Jonah Shacknai, father of Max and CEO of an Arizona-based cosmetic drug company, Medicis Pharmaceutical. Shacknai and Zahau lived in the mansion and maintained homes in the Phoenix area. Her body was found by Adam Shacknai, the owner's brother, who was visiting from Memphis.

Bremner, the attorney, said she and the family met with investigators for more than three hours this week and that the family was distraught over the conclusion. Bremner said there is no precedent for a woman committing suicde in the manner in which San Diego authorities contend.

"This would be the first case in the history of the world that a woman killed herself like this," she said. "It's ridiculous on the face of it."

She complained that the meeting was the first time investigators had met in person to discuss the case with Zahau's relatives, who live in Missouri, and that the San Diego authorities had already reached their conclusions.

Bremner provided some of the first public details of the death scene and investigation.

She said investigators found what they described as a suicide note. Bremner said the family does not believe it was in Rebecca Zahau's handwriting. She said the note was ambiguous in meaning.

"They strongly believe the note found at the scene was not her handwriting," Bremner said.


She said authorities need to have an outside review of some of the evidence, including an analysis of the handwritting in the note, and that polygraph tests should be conducted of "those closest to the victim."

She said Zahau had never displayed depression or signs of suicide, and had not indicated to others that she blamed herself for the accident that led to the boy's death. She had been upbeat in an evening phone call with family before her death, Bremner said.

She said officials explained Zahau's nudity in death by saying she routinely slept without clothing.

Bremner said Zahau was not alone in the mansion when Max had his accident. She said that two of the child's teenage siblings were present as well and that Zahau was in the shower at the time of the accident. Max's mother and Jonah Shacknai were divorced, and Zahau had recently divorced as well.

Bremner said investigators told her that the child had been conducting a trick known as "planking," or lying horizontally in unusual locations, around the staircase when he fell. Planking is a fad popularized with photographs and videos online.

"I really hope they will reconsider and really fully investigate this case," Bremner said. "This department needs to be more measured and careful. … My belief is she did not kill herself."
Last edited by Freitag on Fri Sep 02, 2011 5:20 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Body of woman, 27, found at ex-Anheuser-Busch CEO mansio

Postby Freitag » Fri Sep 02, 2011 5:20 pm

MinM wrote:
sunny wrote:
elfismiles wrote:Not suggesting a connection ... but this thread was what immediately came to mind when I saw this headline:

Nude Woman Found Dead At SoCal Mansion Of Pharmaceutical Firm CEO (Video)
July 15, 2011 9:55 AM
http://losangeles.cbslocal.com/2011/07/ ... -firm-ceo/

This one will be hard to paint as a suicide or an accident but I have faith that a way will be found.


As predicted: Coronado mansion death called suicide; family objects
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Re: Body of woman, 27, found at ex-Anheuser-Busch CEO mansio

Postby MinM » Mon Sep 07, 2015 1:04 am

Image
Surprise Military Reunions At NFL Games Reach Peak Bullshit

Tom Ley
Filed to: st. louis rams9/02/15 11:15am


During last weekend’s preseason St. Louis Rams game, a familiar ritual played out: With a stadium full of fans and a television audience watching, Rams cheerleader Candace Ruocco Valentine was surprised by the arrival of her husband August Valentine, a Marine Corps first lieutenant, who had just returned home from service abroad.

As a series of visuals, shown in the video below, it was a sterling example of the genre. The All-American cheerleader literally drops her pom-poms to run toward her husband, relief written across her face as she does; the happy young couple embraces; and Rampage, an anthropomorphic ram, looks on approvingly at their release from anxiety and fear.

As a set of facts, though, the heartwarming moment was basically bullshit, despite which the viral glurge machine went ahead and ran with the story of a joint triumph for the Valentines, the St. Louis Rams, the NFL, and the Pentagon...

Candace Ruocco Valentine is in fact a cheerleader for the St. Louis Rams. She made her debut this past weekend, at the very game at which her husband surprised her with his return from abroad. She’s several other things as well: a first lieutenant in the USMC (without wanting to scrutinize the gender politics of something that involves Rampage the Ram too closely, one might wonder why no headline writer went with “Husband Surprises Military Wife At Her Job”); a former White House intern who worked under Laura Bush; and a member of the Ruocco family, which is heavily involved in Illinois Republican politics.

August Valentine, meanwhile, is in fact a first lieutenant in the USMC. He made his surprise return to St. Louis, though, not from, say, the anxiety and peril of a security mission in Anbar province, but from a posting in South Korea, where combat operations wound down 62 years ago. He also happens to be not some anonymous leatherneck but a member of the galactically wealthy Busch family, which built the Anheuser-Busch corporation and, years after the sale of the business, retains incredible power in St. Louis. Valentine’s maternal grandfather, Gussie Busch, is generally credited with building the family business into the biggest brewery in the world; the Rams at one point played in a stadium named for the family.

For perspective, the happy couple had their wedding ceremony at the Vatican.
That isn’t to say that rich people don’t deserve nice moments, or that their Rampage-approved emotions are less authentic than anyone else’s, but, along with other basic information about the two, it does slightly complicate the story of a photogenic NFL cheerleader being surprised by her photogenic military husband’s surprise return from service at the football game. So does one of Candace Ruocco Valentine’s Facebook posts, in which she lauds not only the Rams for their efforts to make this reunion happen, but “the mom-with-a-plan: Mrs. Katherine Ruocco.”

Image

Speaking of plans, that would be the same Katherine Ruocco who is running for a state representative’s seat in Illinois, and who now has a patriotic viral video featuring her family—lately seen on Fox News—to share on her campaign’s official Facebook page.

It makes sense that an NFL team would go out of its way to do something special for a member of one of the most powerful families in America instead of, say, a local grunt who’d served in a combat zone, because these reunions really aren’t orchestrated and televised for the benefit of the soldiers and families involved. They are done because cozying up to the military is a good way for the NFL to market itself as a noble civic endeavor while making some extra money, and because the American football-loving public loves a chance to share in a bit of un-earned catharsis—watching two smiling, photogenic soldiers embrace in relief is a great way to forget about all the bodies that have piled up. If a given reunion happens to basically be a viral political ad—and given that Candace Ruocco Valentine is not only the member of two connected families and a former White House intern but has pursued or is pursuing both a JD and a doctorate in public policy analysis, one suspects that this moment may be shared on some campaign page of her own before too long—it’s hard to be too put out. That is, after all, what they all are.

http://deadspin.com/surprise-military-r ... 1727940877

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Re: Body of woman, 27, found at ex-Anheuser-Busch CEO mansio

Postby Nordic » Mon Sep 07, 2015 1:55 am

I'm so glad I cut my cable.
"He who wounds the ecosphere literally wounds God" -- Philip K. Dick
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Re: Body of woman, 27, found at ex-Anheuser-Busch CEO mansio

Postby seemslikeadream » Wed Apr 04, 2018 7:31 pm

[quote="Nordic » Fri Sep 02, 2011 2:05 pm

What ARE we gonna do?

Nothing.


it just takes time Nordic ......things just take time....good thing you were not a Black or a woman waiting for the right to vote


Jury awards family $5M in woman's mysterious Coronado mansion death


PHOTO: Rebecca Zahau was found dead at her boyfriends California mansion on July 13, 2011,l and her death was later ruled a suicide.Courtesy Mary Zahau-Loehner
WatchJury finds brother of millionaire responsible for Rebecca Zahau's death

A civil jury in San Diego Superior Court has found Adam Shacknai responsible for the mysterious death of Rebecca Zahau and awarded her family $5 million in punitive damages.

Zahau's July 2011 death at Spreckels Mansion in Coronado, California, had been ruled a suicide by authorities, but in 2013, her family filed a wrongful-death lawsuit against Adam Shacknai, the brother of Jonah Shacknai, Zahau's then-boyfriend, pharmaceutical tycoon Jonah Shacknai.

Standing with Mary Zahau-Loehner, Zahau’s sister, outside the courthouse, plaintiff's attorney C. Keith Greer said the case was never about money.

"[I] asked Mary at the end of the day, ‘Wow, what do we do? … We got a verdict.’ And she says, ‘We got to get the case reopened, that’s it.’ Our job’s not done yet," he said in a news conference on Wednesday after the verdict.

He said Zahau's family is going to petition the sheriff to "to reopen the case to declassify it as a suicide and reclassify it as an open investigation" and use their resources to investigate Zahau's death. "One thing we were really lacking was resources."

"20/20" has been following the Zahau case for years and most recently reported on it in March.

The mysterious death of Rebecca Zahau: Where this bizarre case stands today as the civil suit goes before a jury
What police found at the scene after woman's mysterious California mansion death

Image
PHOTO: Evidence inside the mansion bedroom Rebecca Zahau entered before her death is pictured here.Courtesy San Diego Sheriffs Department
Evidence inside the mansion bedroom Rebecca Zahau entered before her death is pictured here.
On July 13, 2011, Zahau, 32, was found naked with her feet bound, hands tied behind her back and a shirt stuffed in her mouth, hanging from the second story balcony outside her room. Detectives found a book on a shelf in her room titled "Buckland's Complete Book of Witchcraft," which showed drawings of a rite -- a naked woman with her hands tied behind her back.

A cryptic message -- "She saved him, can you save her" -- was scrawled in black paint in block lettering on the door of her room.

Only she and Adam Shacknai were staying at on the mansion ground the night she died. He said he didn't go into the main house until the next morning, on July 13, 2011, when he discovered Zahau's body. He cut her down from the rope and called 911.
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PHOTO: This message was found on a door when police arrived to the mansion where Rebecca Zahau was found dead.Courtesy San Diego Sheriffs Department
This message was found on a door when police arrived to the mansion where Rebecca Zahau was found dead.
Adam Shacknai had flown in from Tennessee after hearing that his 6-year-old nephew, Max Shacknai, Jonah Shacknai's son, had somehow fallen over a second-floor railing in the house while he was in Zahau's care just days earlier.

Suspicion surrounding Zahau's death immediately fell on Adam Shacknai who took a lie detector test the day she died. The results were inconclusive. Adam Shacknai denied having any involvement in Zahau's death and the authorities cleared him of any involvement in Zahau's death.

Authorities determined that she had tied her own hands and feet, gagged herself and committed suicide after listening to a voicemail from Jonah Shacknai informing her of Max's grave condition. Three days later, Max died in the hospital.

The Zahau family, however, refused to accept the suicide ruling and took the case to the media. The Zahau family exhumed Zahau's remains and renowned forensic pathologist Dr. Cyril Wecht performed a second autopsy.

On "Dr. Phil," Wecht said he found there was enough evidence to suspect foul play.

The Zahaus petitioned the California Attorney General's Office to reopen the case but their request was denied.

PHOTO: Adam Shacknai, the brother of Rebecca Zahaus boyfriend Jonah Shacknai, called 911 after discovering Rebecca Zahaus body.Obtained by ABC News
Adam Shacknai, the brother of Rebecca Zahau's boyfriend Jonah Shacknai, called 911 after discovering Rebecca Zahau's body.
In July 2013, two years after Zahau was found dead, her family filed a wrongful-death suit that named Adam Shacknai, along with Jonah Shacknai's ex-wife and Max's mother, Dina Shacknai, and her twin sister, Nina Romano, as defendants. Jonah Shacknai was not named in the lawsuit.

Dina Shacknai called the allegations made against her in the lawsuit a "disgraceful abuse of the legal system." She told ABC News, "To create this fantastical story and insert us in something like this was beyond the pale of humane."

After hospital footage revealed that Dina Shacknai was at the hospital the night of Zahau's death, the attorney for the Zahau family dropped her and her sister from the lawsuit and publicly apologized.

Adam Shacknai remained named in the family's lawsuit.

On the night of Zahau's death, Adam Shacknai says he never left the guest house. Only Zahau's fingerprints and DNA were found at the scene, according to authorities, even though Adam Shacknai told them he had cut Zahau down from the rope, then performed chest compressions and mouth-to-mouth resuscitation in an effort to revive her.

PHOTO: The mansion balcony where Rebecca Zahau was found hanging is pictured here.Courtesy San Diego Sheriffs Department
The mansion balcony where Rebecca Zahau was found hanging is pictured here.
In his interview for “20/20”, Jonah Shacknai said he believes that his brother is innocent of any wrongdoing and that the lawsuit is outrageous.

"This is all about finding the truth," Zahau-Loehner said in March. "That people understand that my sister did not commit suicide."
http://abcnews.go.com/US/jury-awards-re ... d=54236047
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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