Posts Tagged ‘Raymond Marc Zachry’

An award from a dear follower

Carrie Reimer, who blogs at Lady With A Truck has nominated Justice For Raymond for the award, Very Inspiring Blogger Award.  Thank you Carrie for your continued encouragement and support during these many years we have searched for the source of the lethal poison that caused the death of my son Raymond Marc Zachry.vibloggeraward

Raymond Marc Zachry

Raymond Marc Zachry

Thank you so much Carrie for your encouragement.

God Bless You and all the WordPress family of bloggers in 2015.

Ray’s Mom

Seven years ago today Raymond Marc Zachry was discovered by a neighbor , unresponsive

Ray smiling 2


Raymond Marc Zachry in happier days.

It has been seven years since I received that dreaded phone call

telling me my son, Raymond Marc Zachry was dead.

His widow, Darlene Miller Zachry (they had been married 18 months) had little information, and in these past seven years has refused to cooperate, refused to disclose her whereabouts, refused to talk to Ray’s family – share information how, why, when did he get so much poison into his system?  Where did the barium poison come from?

Darlene Miller Zachry served 25 days in jail in Montgomery County PA after being convicted of forgery, perjury and a long list of other felonies against her late husband and his family.  But, remained silent when asked about the circumstances of his death.  She is now enjoying life in a style she had never experienced prior to meeting Ray Zachry.

Raymond Marc Zachry received a death sentence in return for his generosity to loving care of her and her family.

Today, we remember Ray.

Ray’s Mom

Raymond Zachry hiking in the mountains of Tennessee

Raymond Zachry hiking in the mountains of Tennessee

Ray in his favorite element - hiking a mountain trail.  Here Ray was on a hiking trip to Arizona and New Mexico

Ray in his favorite element – hiking a mountain trail. Here Ray was on a hiking trip to Arizona and New Mexico

 

Ex-attorney for county linked with forged wills (NC)

Ex-attorney for county linked with forged wills (NC).

LUMBERTON — A Superior Court judge this week ruled that two wills naming former Robeson County Attorney Hal Kinlaw as executor were forgeries.

Judge Mary Ann Tally, during a hearing in Robeson County Superior Court, ruled in favor of petitions submitted by Jessie McFadyen Tolar, of Red Springs, requesting that the wills of her mother, Louise B. McFadyen, and father, Robert Lewis McFayden, be “removed and set aside” and authentic wills be substituted in their place.

The Robesonian has been told that Kinlaw as well as his late father had business relationships for many years with Lewis McFayden. According to the petition filed by Tolar, Kinlaw resigned as executor of both of her late parents wills on March 26, 2013.

The petition to the court said that on the same day Kinlaw resigned as executor of the estates, Tolar was appointed administrator of her parents’ estates and executor of their wills. After her appointment, according to the petitions, she discovered that Louise McFadyen’s 2009 will naming Kinlaw executor was “in fact a forgery and never executed by the decedent.” She also found the 2005 will of Lewis McFadyen to be a forgery.

According to the petitions, Kinlaw would not have received anything of value in either of the forged wills.

A court official confirmed that the action taken Monday did not include any criminal charges. It was unclear Friday, however, if further action will be taken in criminal court. An assistant to Tolar’s attorney, Hilton T. Hutchens Jr. of Fayetteville, told The Robesonian that Hutchens would “not make any comment at this time.”

Editor’s note:

Raymond Zachry hiking in the mountains of Tennessee

Raymond Zachry hiking in the mountains of Tennessee


Raymond Marc Zachry, the subject of this blog is an example of a forged will that was filed for probate in Montgomery County Pennsylvania .

The widow Darlene Miller Zachry, conspired with her sister Annetta Frackman and friends Lisa and William “Bill” Werneke to compose the document they called a will and file it for probate to acquire his assets that were located in Conowingo, Maryland and Souderton, Pennsylvania.
Ray’s mother, author of this blog and his sister Katharine Mackie paid fees and expenses that totaled over $70,000 to prove the will a forgery. (Documents are available to view at the website http://www.denied-justice.com

The sudden, unattended death of Raymond Marc Zachry has never been investigated even though his blood toxicology from two Pennsylvania laboratories contain huge quantities of two lethal chemicals.

How many more deaths from heavy metal chemicals

Guidelines for safe school chemistry laboratories

Guidelines for safe school chemistry laboratories

Death from heavy metals; a reality.

Today we remember our loving son, Raymond Marc Zachry, not because of another outstanding accomplishment – rather it is the six-year anniversary of his sudden, unattended death.

Six years; and only denial from the coroner who claims he died from a heart attack…with 1950 mcg/L of barium in his blood toxicology.  Enough, says toxicologist Dr. Woody Hartgrove, to have rapidly caused his death.  It would cause his heart to stop…paralyze his limbs… and reduce the available potassium to cause his heart to stop according to Center for Disease Control material safety data report.  The amount was nearly equal to the amount Marie Robard, a student in Texas, took from her high school chemical laboratory to poison her father.

Montgomery County Pennsylvania does not find it important enough to investigate the source of the lethal, heavy metal that caused Raymond Zachry’s death.

Heavy metal contamination found in Florida soil, as reported in Miami Herald.

Miami Herald reported this story of a contaminated site that was being closed to residents due to several hazardous chemicals found in the soil.  Barium was included in  that sampling.

City, county to meet over soil samples around contaminated site

By Jenny Staletovich

Last month, the city and the county’s Department of Environmental Resources Management (DERM) widened testing sparked by the discovery of lead, barium and other toxic metals more than two years ago at the site of the city’s fire training facility at 3425 Jefferson St. in Coconut Grove.

 Barium

Barium is a metal used in oil and gas industries and to make paint, bricks, ceramics, glass and rubber. It poses risks to the cardiovascular system, digestive tract and reproductive health.

Warning signs, fencing and rangers keep visitors away due to the hazardous chemicals found on the site, according to the article…

Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/09/24/3648595/miami-to-test-all-parks-after.html#storylink=cpy

Montgomery County Pennsylvania – does not care where this chemical came from, how it caused one residents death, and the possibility that it could cause more unsuspecting citizens death.

Shameful neglect, disregard for environmental hazards, Pennsylvania, could be the next Miami, Florida disaster.

Related articles

Standing In Death’s Shadow (justiceforraymond.wordpress.com)

Marie Robards: Dorothy Marie Robards paroled in 2003

Montgomery County Pennsylvania coroner refuses to allow a death investigation, although it is commonly known that barium is easily available in school laboratories. I have an inventory sheet proving that barium was available in Pennsylvania high schools in September 2007 when Raymond Marc Zachry suddenly collapsed and died – just like the father of Dorothy Marie Robards

The Matter of Life and Death

See on Scoop.itCorrupt elected officials, unqualified coroner

Marie Robards, also known as Dorothy Marie Robards, confessed to poisoning her father, Steven Robards, with barium acetate after she listened to a reading of Ha

Shirley Sanservino‘s insight:

Barim poiso was also found in the blod toxicoloy or Raymond Marc Zachry fllowing his sudden, unattended death.  However, Montgomery County Pennsylvania Coroner refuses to allow a death investigation.

See on www.examiner.com

View original post

Wives who murder husbands for money

Lack of investigation has been an ongoing obstacle to solving the real mystery of how Raymond Zachry could suddenly, collapse and die, alone attempting to get into his truck.

Since September 25, 2007 when Ray Zachry was discovered by a neighbor after he suddenly collapsed and died in souderton, Pennsylvania. Ray’s family has searched, investigated, applied for documents through public information requests and still the District Attorney and local corner refuse to allow an  investigation into his strange and untimely death, and the source of the lethal quantity of barium in his blood toxicology.

More weird stories of strange deaths surface almost daily.  The following story, originally posted here December 31, 2012, is one for the records.fe4b672505478624240f6a706700189a.jpg

 

Secrets of a 79-year-old woman who left 5 dead husbands in 5 states may have died with her

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/us/2012/12/23/secrets-7-year-old-woman-who-left-5-dead-husbands-in-5-states-may-have-died/?intcmp=obinsite#ixzz2Gf7tAJ2c

ROCKWELL, N.C. –  Al Gentry is running out of time to find his brother’s killer.

After years of chasing leads, he thought he’d found the person responsible for the 1986 murder — an elderly Georgia widow who was married to his brother and left a decades-long trail of five dead husbands in five states.

Betty Neumar was charged in 2008 with three counts of solicitation to commit first-degree murder in the death of Harold Gentry.

But weeks before her trial in 2011, Neumar, 79, died of cancer.

That hasn’t stopped Gentry from continuing to press law enforcement authorities for answers. But the stress of living years with the case has taken a toll. In the last year, Gentry’s had a heart attack and a stroke, and is tethered to a portable oxygen tank.

“The question I have is, who killed my brother?” said Gentry, 67, of Rockwell, N.C. “That person is still out there. I’m going to fight to my last breath until I find out who killed him.”

Stanly County Sheriff Rick Burris said the case is no longer active, even though it’s still open.

“We’re really at a dead-end,” Burris said.

Gentry spent much of his adult life pushing law enforcement authorities to solve the slaying. He always believed that Neumar — a diminutive Georgia grandmother with a shock of white hair who operated beauty shops, attended church and raised money for charity — was responsible. The case was finally reopened in January 2008 after he asked Burris, then the newly elected sheriff, to look into it.

When investigators did, they found Neumar’s trail of dark secrets.

Authorities discovered Neumar had been married five times since the 1950s and each union ended in her husband’s death. Investigators in three states reopened several of the cases but have since closed them.

Burris said his department still wants to solve Harold Gentry’s homicide.

“But we don’t have any leads,” he said. “If we get any new information, we’ll investigate. We want to bring closure to Al.”

However, Burris and Al Gentry acknowledge that the mysteries in Neumer’s past may never be solved.

From the beginning, law enforcement authorities told The Associated Press they had struggled to piece together details of her life because her story kept changing. But interviews, documents and court records provided an outline of her history in North Carolina, Ohio, Florida and Georgia, the states where she was married.

Her first husband was Clarence Malone. They married in Ironton, Ohio, in 1950, but it’s unclear when their marriage broke up. They had a son, Gary, who was born in 1952.

Malone remarried twice. He was killed with a gunshot in the back of the head outside his auto shop in a small town southwest of Cleveland in November 1970. His death was ruled a homicide.

Gary was adopted by Neumar’s second husband, James Flynn, although it’s unclear when she met or married him. She told investigators that he “died on a pier” somewhere in New York in the mid-1950s. She and Flynn had a daughter, Peggy.

In the mid-1960s, Neumar, then a beautician in Jacksonville, Fla., married husband No. 3: Richard Sills, who was in the Navy. In April, 1967, police found his body in the bedroom of the couple’s home in Big Coppitt Key, Fla. Neumar told police they were alone and arguing when he pulled out a gun and shot himself. Police ruled his death suicide.

But after Neumar was charged in North Carolina, Florida authorities took another look.

They uncovered Navy medical examiner documents revealing Sills may have been shot twice — not once, as Neumar told police. One bullet from the .22-caliber pistol pierced his heart, while a second may have sliced his liver. No autopsy was performed.

Florida investigators planned in 2009 to exhume Sills’ body for an autopsy, but then determined a statute of limitations applied to the case. Investigators have said Florida law sets a time limit on prosecution of some categories of homicide, including involuntary manslaughter, but not on premeditated — or first-degree — murder.

After Florida authorities closed the case, Richard Sills’ son, Michael Sills, asked the Naval Criminal Investigative Service cold case squad to investigate. They did, but the investigation ended with Neumar’s death.

In January, 1968, Neumar married Harold Gentry, who was in the Army. The couple moved to Norwood, N.C., about an hour east of Charlotte, in the late 1970s after he retired.

Al Gentry said the couple fought constantly and, just before his brother’s murder, she had asked Harold to move out. After his death, Neumar collected about $20,000 in insurance money.

Authorities said Neumar had tried to hire three different people to kill Gentry in the six weeks before his bullet-riddled body was found in his rural North Carolina home. If it was a hired killing, the perpetrator has never been identified.

She also had a life insurance policy on husband No. 5, John Neumar, who died in October, 2007. She met him when she moved to Augusta, Ga.

Georgia authorities three years ago closed their re-examination of the death of John Neumar, saying they had no evidence his widow was involved. His family has criticized the conclusion.

At the time, John Neumar’s family said she isolated him from the rest of the family, and they didn’t know he had died until his obituary appeared in the local newspaper. When they visited the funeral home, they discovered he had been cremated.

Meanwhile, Gentry said he hopes someone will come forward with new information in his brother’s case. “It’s consumed my life. I know that. But I can’t give up.”

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/us/2012/12/23/secrets-7-year-old-woman-who-left-5-dead-husbands-in-5-states-may-have-died/?intcmp=obinsite#ixzz2Gf82KJjX

Coroners attempt to limit access to

Safe guidelines for school chemical storage and security

Safe guildelines for school chemical storage and security

 Jan Murphy recently authored a report in The Patriot of Central PA that re-counted an effort by Pennsylvania Coroner Association to limit access to autopsy reports to cause and manner of death of the victim.

Proponents of the bill dismiss arguments that public health threats wouldn’t be disclosed.They say most coroners around the state bring issues of community concern to the public’s attention when they notice a trend, such as deaths related to the synthetic drug known as bath salts.” writes Jan Murphy.

However, at issue is the family who anguished for years due to the denial of information regarding the death of their loved one.

  • How did they die? 
  • What really caused a sudden, unattended death? 
  • Is the death from an illness that could be hereditary? 
  • Was the death really murder?

These questions and more haunt the family after a tragic death incident.

“Two men were found dead in their Hollidaysburg apartment in September 2009.

But it wasn’t until five months later, when the Blair County coroner released her annual report, that the public learned the causes of death were prescription-drug overdoses. That report by Coroner Patricia Ross helped sharpen the focus on a growing problem of prescription-drug abuse in that county.

Long delays in the release of information about community problems could become more commonplace, said Deb Musselman, the government affairs director for the Pennsylvania Newspaper Association.”

An editorial opinion in Post-Gazette, published March 29, 2012 under the title Threat of secrecy: Pennsylvania coroners’ records must stay public clearly defines the injustice sought by the Pennsylvania Coroner Association who, according to the opinion piece are arguing for the ability to keep public records from “inspection by the public and media”.

“Coroners do have discretion to release more information but, if they don’t want to, they no longer would have to.  Coroners are not elected to be grief counselors, though, and their (coroners) job is not to shield family members from potentially embarrassing or unsettling details when a loved one dies, especially by withholding important information from the public.

If the bill (House bill 2477) becomes law, it also would prevent Pennsylvanians from looking over their coroners’ shoulders to make sure they are properly conducting the public’s business.”

Fortunately, governor at the time, Governor Rendell, did not sign the bill and demonstrated that he “still believes in strong citizen access to public records”.

Another opinion, Ruling may return autopsy issue to Pa. Legislature, by Mark Scolford of the Associated Press argues that privacy is important in  the case of NASCAR driver Dale Earnhardt who was killed in a crash during a Daytona 500 race in 2001.  The press was scrambling for the photos of Earnhardt following the autopsy.  The family asked the records remain private due to concerns that only the gory photos would be published throughout the world as ‘news’. 

“Privacy issues related to autopsies arose nationally after the death of NASCAR driver Dale Earnhardt during the 2001 Daytona 500. There were questions about whether his safety equipment had been inadequate, and news organizations sought his autopsy photos.”

Earnhardt’s family requested Florida legislature rule on the case.

“Earnhardt’s widow fought the release, (of photos) and the Florida Legislature subsequently passed a law that precluded public inspection of autopsy photos.”

Understandably there are times when discretion must be used.  Earnhardt’s family could have asked a judge to rule on the issue and seal the record.  But this would and should not preclude the family from receiving the autopsy record.

We have written extensively in this blog and posted documents at http://www.denied-justice.com supporting the self-serving actions of Montgomery County corner Walter Hofman who refuses to release results from additional testing he promised in August 2011 from the autopsy of Raymond Marc Zachry who suddenly collapsed and died in Souderton. Pennsylvania on September 25, 2007.  The family has spent multiple thousands of dollars on lawyers and experts, still Hofman refuses to cooperate or explain the redacted and altered toxicology reports that are posted at http://www.denied-justice.com

A ruling allowing coroners and medical examiners to hide their work from public scrutiny there would be no recourse for the innocent who were wrongly convicted, the guilty that are allowed freedom to continue their criminal acts without discovery. It would seem encouragement of family input would be more relevent in death investigations.  Who knows the victim better than the parents, siblings and in some cases spouse?

Your opinion is welcome and encouraged in the comment section.

The judge has spoken – part 2

Today it was confirmed that the widow, Darlene Zachery a/k/a Zachry has begun to serve her sentence of 30 days to one year followed by four years of supervised probation for forgery of a document she claimed was the will of Raymond (Ray) Zachry, her deceased husband and my son.

Perhaps the widow will have some quiet time to consider talking about the day Ray Zachry died, and why she refused to “return home” when the responding officer Kurt Scherzberg of the Souderton police department called her on her cell phone and told her she should come home.

Wives who murder husbands for money

Lack of investigation has been an ongoing obstacle to solving the real mystery of how Raymond Zachry could suddenly, collapse and die, alone attempting to get into his truck.

For five years Ray Zachry’s family has searched, investigated, applied for documents through public information requests and still the District Attorney and local corner refuse to allow an  investigation into his strange and untimely death.

More weird stories of strange deaths surface almost daily.  Today the following story is one for the records.fe4b672505478624240f6a706700189a.jpg

 

Secrets of a 79-year-old woman who left 5 dead husbands in 5 states may have died with her

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/us/2012/12/23/secrets-7-year-old-woman-who-left-5-dead-husbands-in-5-states-may-have-died/?intcmp=obinsite#ixzz2Gf7tAJ2c

ROCKWELL, N.C. –  Al Gentry is running out of time to find his brother’s killer.

After years of chasing leads, he thought he’d found the person responsible for the 1986 murder — an elderly Georgia widow who was married to his brother and left a decades-long trail of five dead husbands in five states.

Betty Neumar was charged in 2008 with three counts of solicitation to commit first-degree murder in the death of Harold Gentry.

But weeks before her trial in 2011, Neumar, 79, died of cancer.

That hasn’t stopped Gentry from continuing to press law enforcement authorities for answers. But the stress of living years with the case has taken a toll. In the last year, Gentry’s had a heart attack and a stroke, and is tethered to a portable oxygen tank.

“The question I have is, who killed my brother?” said Gentry, 67, of Rockwell, N.C. “That person is still out there. I’m going to fight to my last breath until I find out who killed him.”

Stanly County Sheriff Rick Burris said the case is no longer active, even though it’s still open.

“We’re really at a dead-end,” Burris said.

Gentry spent much of his adult life pushing law enforcement authorities to solve the slaying. He always believed that Neumar — a diminutive Georgia grandmother with a shock of white hair who operated beauty shops, attended church and raised money for charity — was responsible. The case was finally reopened in January 2008 after he asked Burris, then the newly elected sheriff, to look into it.

When investigators did, they found Neumar’s trail of dark secrets.

Authorities discovered Neumar had been married five times since the 1950s and each union ended in her husband’s death. Investigators in three states reopened several of the cases but have since closed them.

Burris said his department still wants to solve Harold Gentry’s homicide.

“But we don’t have any leads,” he said. “If we get any new information, we’ll investigate. We want to bring closure to Al.”

However, Burris and Al Gentry acknowledge that the mysteries in Neumer’s past may never be solved.

From the beginning, law enforcement authorities told The Associated Press they had struggled to piece together details of her life because her story kept changing. But interviews, documents and court records provided an outline of her history in North Carolina, Ohio, Florida and Georgia, the states where she was married.

Her first husband was Clarence Malone. They married in Ironton, Ohio, in 1950, but it’s unclear when their marriage broke up. They had a son, Gary, who was born in 1952.

Malone remarried twice. He was killed with a gunshot in the back of the head outside his auto shop in a small town southwest of Cleveland in November 1970. His death was ruled a homicide.

Gary was adopted by Neumar’s second husband, James Flynn, although it’s unclear when she met or married him. She told investigators that he “died on a pier” somewhere in New York in the mid-1950s. She and Flynn had a daughter, Peggy.

In the mid-1960s, Neumar, then a beautician in Jacksonville, Fla., married husband No. 3: Richard Sills, who was in the Navy. In April, 1967, police found his body in the bedroom of the couple’s home in Big Coppitt Key, Fla. Neumar told police they were alone and arguing when he pulled out a gun and shot himself. Police ruled his death suicide.

But after Neumar was charged in North Carolina, Florida authorities took another look.

They uncovered Navy medical examiner documents revealing Sills may have been shot twice — not once, as Neumar told police. One bullet from the .22-caliber pistol pierced his heart, while a second may have sliced his liver. No autopsy was performed.

Florida investigators planned in 2009 to exhume Sills’ body for an autopsy, but then determined a statute of limitations applied to the case. Investigators have said Florida law sets a time limit on prosecution of some categories of homicide, including involuntary manslaughter, but not on premeditated — or first-degree — murder.

After Florida authorities closed the case, Richard Sills’ son, Michael Sills, asked the Naval Criminal Investigative Service cold case squad to investigate. They did, but the investigation ended with Neumar’s death.

In January, 1968, Neumar married Harold Gentry, who was in the Army. The couple moved to Norwood, N.C., about an hour east of Charlotte, in the late 1970s after he retired.

Al Gentry said the couple fought constantly and, just before his brother’s murder, she had asked Harold to move out. After his death, Neumar collected about $20,000 in insurance money.

Authorities said Neumar had tried to hire three different people to kill Gentry in the six weeks before his bullet-riddled body was found in his rural North Carolina home. If it was a hired killing, the perpetrator has never been identified.

She also had a life insurance policy on husband No. 5, John Neumar, who died in October, 2007. She met him when she moved to Augusta, Ga.

Georgia authorities three years ago closed their re-examination of the death of John Neumar, saying they had no evidence his widow was involved. His family has criticized the conclusion.

At the time, John Neumar’s family said she isolated him from the rest of the family, and they didn’t know he had died until his obituary appeared in the local newspaper. When they visited the funeral home, they discovered he had been cremated.

Meanwhile, Gentry said he hopes someone will come forward with new information in his brother’s case. “It’s consumed my life. I know that. But I can’t give up.”

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/us/2012/12/23/secrets-7-year-old-woman-who-left-5-dead-husbands-in-5-states-may-have-died/?intcmp=obinsite#ixzz2Gf82KJjX

NY man pleads guilty to murdering brother-in-law for insurance money

Tony Ondrusek | Blogs, Trade TalkTony Ondrusek | Blogs, Trade Talk

This story by Tony Ondrusek was published in IFA News today.  It has a resemblance to the situation of  Raymond Marc Zachry,  the cause of this blog, Justice For Raymond.

NY man pleads guilty to murdering brother-in-law for insurance money.

Jung Min Jun, 69, of Fresh Meadows, N.Y., pleaded guilty to the 2011 murder of Kwang Sup Hur, 75, of Dale City, Va. Jun killed the man to collect on a $1 million insurance policy that would have been paid out to Jun’s son, authorities said. If the judge accepts the plea, Jun will receive a 45-year prison sentence with 25 years suspended. Scheduling is set for February.

Jun’s wife, Jung OK Jun, and son, Ho Young Jun, also were arrested in relation to the murder. Jung OK Jun initially faced a murder charge, but recently pleaded guilty to obstruction of justice. She received a six-month jail sentence with all the time suspended. Prosecutors said she was not involved with the murder.

Court records show the son obtained the $1 million life insurance policy several years before the murder. His trial has been pushed back until April 2013.

Hur’s wife found him dead on Sept. 1, 2011, at their apartment in Dale City. Police arrested Jun a few days later at the Newark, N.J., airport, where he was preparing to board a plane to Beijing, China.

Ho Young Jun then tried, unsuccessfully, on Sept. 6, 2011, to collect on the insurance policy.

The insurance company, New York Life, has filed a petition to have the assets from the policy put into the court’s custody.

New York Life Insurance Company took the same steps and filed in Philadelphia Federal Court to have the assets of Raymond Zachry’s life insurance policy put into court custody when his widow, Darlene Miller Zachry (a/k/a Darlene Zachery) filed a false claim for a policy that she was not the beneficiary and had never been the beneficiary.

The widow, Darlene Zachry filed a forged letter with the court that the widow claimed  was sent to New York Life Insurance Company by her late husband, Raymond Marc Zachry, changing the beneficiary to her.

Only, one slight problem in this story.  New York Life Insurance Company did not receive this letter until six months after Mr. Zachry suddenly died.

When a huge amount of poison was discovered in his blood toxicology, the coroner  refused to allow an investigation.

The widow was subsequently arrested and charged with insurance fraud and 50 other charges four years after her husband’s death.  However, the DA is allowing a plea deal that will dismiss the insurance fraud, and all but one charge of perjury.

“She didn’t receive any money”, claims Assistant District Attorney, John Gradel when asked by the victim’s mother, Shirley Sanservino, why would the insurance fraud case be dropped when Pennsylvania claims to be so hard on insurance fraud.

I suppose it just depends on who, where and when you decide to defraud the state and the estate of your family member, and how much money is involved.

You think?

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