Colorado man's wife, dead in fall from cliff, insured for millions

spaminator

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Colorado man's wife, dead in fall from cliff, insured for millions
Keith Coffman, Reuters
First posted: Thursday, November 13, 2014 01:01 PM EST
DENVER - A Colorado man accused of killing his wife by pushing her off a cliff two years ago stood to reap millions of dollars from life insurance benefits, prosecutors said on Wednesday, as homicide investigators delved separately into the 1995 death of his first spouse.
A federal grand jury indicted Harold Henthorn, 58, on first-degree murder charges last week in the slaying of Toni Henthorn, 50, who plunged 50 feet to her death in Rocky Mountain National Park in September 2012.
Henthorn pleaded not guilty on Wednesday during a hearing in which federal prosecutors shed new light on the motive they suspect was behind the killing of his wife, a Denver-area ophthalmologist.
In arguing that Harold Henthorn should remain jailed without bond, prosecutors said he was beneficiary for $4.5 million in life insurance policies he had taken out on his wife before her death, according to a spokesman for the U.S. Attorney's Office.
The couple were hiking in the Deer Mountain area of the park when Toni Henthorn fell to her death, the National Park Service said at the time. Recovery teams located her body about 3 miles off a trailhead in steep, rugged terrain.
Separately, homicide detectives with the Douglas County Sheriff's Office are now investigating the death 19 years ago of Henthorn's first wife, Sandra Lynn Henthorn, police said.
She and her husband were changing a flat tire outside the town of Sedalia, about 40 miles southwest of Denver, when the car slipped off its jack and crushed her to death.
Sandra Henthorn's death was ruled an accident, but the case was reopened after Harold Henthorn's second wife was killed, police spokeswoman Deborah Sherman said.
"It is an open and active investigation," she said, adding that criminal charges have not been filed in that case.
If convicted in the federal murder case, Henthorn faces a mandatory life sentence without the possibility of parole and a fine of up to $250,000.
Harold Henthorn, 58, and wife Toni Henthorn, 50. (Facebook photo)

Colorado man's wife, dead in fall from cliff, insured for millions | World | New

double wificide. :shock:
 

spaminator

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Map had 'X' on spot where woman fell to her death
Keith Coffman, Reuters
First posted: Thursday, November 20, 2014 06:39 AM EST | Updated: Thursday, November 20, 2014 06:54 AM EST
DENVER - A Colorado man accused of killing his wife by pushing her off a cliff had a map with an "X" marking the spot where she fell to her death, unsealed court records show.
Harold Henthorn, 58, was indicted this month for first-degree murder in the slaying of his wife, Toni Henthorn, who plunged 120 feet (37 metres) to her death at Rocky Mountain National Park in Sept. 2012. He pleaded not guilty last week.
The existence of the map was disclosed in an arrest warrant affidavit unsealed on Wednesday, a copy of which was published online by Denver TV station KCNC. Federal agents found the map in the couple's vehicle, and when confronted, the husband was "at a loss for words" to explain it, the affidavit said.
At a hearing last week at a federal court in Denver, when Henthorn was denied bond, prosecutors disclosed he had taken out three life insurance policies on his wife, worth a total of $4.5 million.
Court records unsealed on Wednesday said Toni Henthorn, a Denver-area ophthalmologist, was the family breadwinner, and that financial records showed her husband had no steady income.
Authorities have re-opened an investigation into the 1995 death of Henthorn's first wife, Sandra Henthorn, who was killed while changing a tire with her husband in a remote area about 40 miles (64 km) southwest of Denver. She was underneath the car when it slipped off its jack and crushed her.
The death was ruled an accident, and Henthorn collected a $496,000 life insurance policy, federal prosecutors said. He is set to go on trial in the federal murder case in May.
Map had 'X' on spot where woman fell to her death | World | News | Toronto Sun
 

Sal

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I watched this or one very similar unfold on Date Line awhile ago but they had not mentioned the death of his first wife. Probably hadn't probed it deeply enough at that time which is kind of surprising because those shows usually pick up on anything they can that looks murky.

Guess the half mill from the first wife was long gone. He did better at setting up the money for the second wife.

I think it was a rescue worker who went down after her who first thought it looked suspicious. He apparently returned to the bluff over and over measuring the angle of fall and it just didn't feel right to him. Then there was the fact that buddy didn't hang at the scene while they tried to find her, he went with the cops without protest. Who would just go along when your spouse has had a headed over a cliff. They also said he showed zero emotion which he later tried to attribute to shock.